Junior Cert technical graphics: ‘Even the most gifted students were caught for time’

Higher-level candidates report a lack of time to complete the paper

Technical graphics: many Junior Cert students found themselves under “extreme time pressure” to complete today’s higher-level exam. Photo: iStock
Technical graphics: many Junior Cert students found themselves under “extreme time pressure” to complete today’s higher-level exam. Photo: iStock

Many Junior Cert students found themselves under "extreme time pressure" to complete today's higher-level technical-graphics exam.

Some teachers said even the most gifted students found it difficult to complete the three-hour paper, in which students were asked to complete a series of detailed and technical drawings.

Seamus Cahalan, a teacher at St Joseph's Patrician College, in Galway, said: "A lot of the questions in section B were difficult to complete within half an hour. It would take an exceptional student to do it. I've already had calls from two other teachers today saying they felt the questions were unnecessarily long."

Mr Cahalan added: “It’s already the longest exam in the Junior Cert, at three hours, so to be caught for time is a little unfair. Many of my students came out saying they couldn’t finish it on time. They were disappointed; they were good students.”

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Michael Leyden, a teacher at Abbey Vocational School, in Donegal, also said the questions in section B would have pushed some candidates for time. "Section B was pitched at an appropriate level, and well-prepared candidates would have fared well. The questions would have kept candidates busy right to the end of the exam. Question 2 in particular would have exercised candidates for quite some time – they were required to draw two separate rotations."

Mr Cahalan was also critical of repetition in some questions. He said questions 2 and 6 in part B of the paper required students to draw parabola twice, for example. “An exam is there for a student to demonstrate their knowledge. In that case they had to do it all over again, without showing any new skills,” he said.

Overall, however, he said the first half of the paper was representative of the syllabus and posed a good test for candidates.

Mr Leyden agreed and said the higher-level paper was well structured and would have rewarded candidates who were given wide exposure to the syllabus. Question 12 in section A, in particular, provided candidates with a good test of their spatial-reasoning skills.

He said the ordinary-level paper, meanwhile, was fair and followed the layout of previous years. “Question 2 in section B required a lot of work, and some candidates may have found it quite challenging to complete. Overall it was well pitched for the ordinary-level candidate.”

Mr Cahalan also said the ordinary-level paper was well within the capability of students, which allowed well-prepared pupils to give a good demonstration of their knowledge.

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien is Education Editor of The Irish Times. He was previously chief reporter and social affairs correspondent