Understanding the Power of Literacy and Ontario’s Literacy Education: A Critical Analysis of the EQAO and its Definition of Literacy Practices

dc.contributor.advisorShanahan, Theresa
dc.contributor.authorGodin, Neil
dc.date.accessioned2018-01-23T19:36:10Z
dc.date.available2018-01-23T19:36:10Z
dc.date.issued2017-08-16
dc.description.abstractInitially introduced through the Royal Commission on Learning and later created through legislation, the Education Quality and Accountability Office (EQAO) is a publically funded, crown agency that determines the quality and effectiveness of the Ontario’s education system1. Administered by the EQAO to students at the Grade Ten level, the Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test (OSSLT) provides education stakeholders with accurate information regarding the degree to which the students are able to properly demonstrate their understanding of how to utilize certain literacy skills and participate in society once graduated (EQAO, 2007, p.9). Framed by a Foucauldian framework that critiques a technical rationalist understanding of education, this MRP will contribute to the growing research regarding the OSSLT and discuss the potential implications that the literacy assessment may have on students, as well as an individual’s understanding of literacy and their own academic and non-academic capabilities. Using a qualitative research method to perform a critical analysis on the Royal Commission on Learning’s report, For the Love of Learning (Royal Commission on Learning, 1995), the 1996 Education Quality and Accountability Office Act (EQAO Act, 1996; EQAO, 2013), the Ontario Curriculum: Grades 9 and 10 – English (Ontario Ministry of Education, 2007), the EQAO’s Framework: Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test document (EQAO 2007) and the “OSSLT Sample Assessment Booklet: New Layout” (EQAO, 2015a; EQAO 2015b), findings reveal that the EQAO disregards the complexity of literacy practices. The EQAO constructs its own definition of literacy practices to simultaneously reproduce the definitions of literacy and illiteracy. The illiterate individual is constructed by the EQAO as one to be feared and isolated from the social and economic activities that occur outside of the school. The EQAO establishes literacy practices as a mechanism that can be measured and evaluated, but not challenged, critiqued, nor used to criticize society, or the economy within a society.en
dc.identifier.citationMajor Research Paper (Master's), Faculty of Education, York University
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/34192
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.rights.uriThe copyright for the paper content remains with the author.*
dc.subjectEQAOen_US
dc.subjectLiteracyen_US
dc.titleUnderstanding the Power of Literacy and Ontario’s Literacy Education: A Critical Analysis of the EQAO and its Definition of Literacy Practicesen_US
dc.typeMajor Research Paper

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