Teach or Check? Daily Assessment in Icelandic Schools in Late 19th/Early 20th Century

The immediate object of the present study is a document: the log book of a student at the Reykjavík Latin School (Lærði skólinn) 1885–1886. The booklet, containing inter alia numerical grades for the student´s performance every single time he was selected for individual questioning by a teacher, sho...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Netla
Main Author: Kjartansson, Helgi Skúli
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Icelandic
Published: Menntavísindasvið Háskóla Íslands 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.hi.is/netla/article/view/3300
https://doi.org/10.24270//netla.2020.13
Description
Summary:The immediate object of the present study is a document: the log book of a student at the Reykjavík Latin School (Lærði skólinn) 1885–1886. The booklet, containing inter alia numerical grades for the student´s performance every single time he was selected for individual questioning by a teacher, shows in detail the application of traditional “daily assessment” which tended to restrict the role of the teacher to evaluation rather than instruction. A part of the system was the ordering of students by performance, revised every month or two, visibly reflected in the seating arrangement in the classroom.This style of daily assessment at the Latin School was controversial and subject to some variation, yet basically unaltered until abolished in 1904 as part of a radical overhaul of the school, thenceforth known as the Reykjavík Grammar School.Said log book shows a somewhat flexible application of the system of daily assessment. A “monthly” summary is calculated only three times over the school year; “weekly” written compositions (or translations) are assessed about every other week; and the frequency of questioning varies between subjects, indicating that some classes – particularly in Icelandic language and literature – were devoted to instruction rather than evaluation.The ordering of students by performance, reflected in the classroom seating arrangement, was common in other schools, both elementary and secondary, based either on daily assessment or periodical examinations. Alphabetical student registers are rarely seen until introduced in the Grammar School as of 1904. Even the Lutheran state church in its rite of confirmation reflected the practice of the schools, with the confirmands receiving their first communion in the pecking order established by their mastery of the catechism.While rural Iceland retained a system of traditional home schooling, increasingly assisted by itinerant teachers, permanent elementary schools were established in the towns and larger villages. These mainly adopted a system of daily ...