Daily Mail

UNIVERSITY PLACES IN PERIL AMID EXAM CHAOS

Thousands of A-level pupils face race against time to win appeal if marks are downgraded

- By Josh White Education Reporter

A-LEVEL pupils whose marks are downgraded by computer face missing out on university places while exam boards sift through a flood of appeals, experts warned last night.

This year’s exams were cancelled because of coronaviru­s so marks will be based on teachers’ estimates of what entrants would have achieved.

But exam boards are expected to lower nearly 40 per cent of grades using a computeris­ed marking scheme to ensure results are not significan­tly higher than previous years. This means tens of thousands of pupils will not achieve the marks they had hoped for when they get their A-level grades on Thursday.

As a result, they may not be able to attend their first-choice university unless they successful­ly appeal.

Those who appeal must be awarded a higher grade by September 7 to attend the university they have chosen. But the Daily Mail has

learned that exam boards, which are in charge of appeals, have refused to commit to this timeframe. Instead, they have given themselves 42 days to resolve complaints – meaning the university term will have started before most cases are dealt with.

Many pupils, teachers and parents in England are nervous about this year’s results after last week’s debacle over the Scottish Higher exams.

In Scotland, 124,000 grades awarded by teachers were lowered, with the poorest entrants getting their marks downgraded at more than double the rate of the richest.

Last night Tory MP Robert Halfon, chairman of the education select committee, said: ‘Our select committee report predicted a potential Wild West system which favours the well-heeled and the sharpelbow­ed, and doesn’t appear fair.

‘It is absolutely vital that the appeals system is done quickly and efficientl­y, in the space of a couple of weeks, to ensure that students get their fair grades so they can progress to university.’

Pupils in England who are unhappy with their grades must rely on their schools to mount appeals for them, based on stringent criteria, potentiall­y adding to the delays. Last night none of the ‘big three’ exams boards – AQA, OCR and Pearson Edexcel – provided assurances that it would be able to meet the September 7 deadline set by university admissions body Ucas.

The Joint Council for Qualificat­ions (JCQ), which represents the exam boards, said its members were ‘committed to completing appeals as quickly as possible’.

But it admitted grade appeals may take six weeks or longer. This means a complaint lodged on A-levels results day – and most will come later than this – does not have to be dealt with until September 24.

‘The awarding bodies aim to complete initial reviews within 42 calendar days of the receipt of the applicatio­n,’ a JCQ handbook for head teachers states.

Neil Roskilly, chief executive of the Independen­t Schools Associatio­n, which represents more than 500 private schools, said: ‘Forty-two days is disappoint­ing because the process will be simple.’ He said the JCQ had ‘buried’ this crucial detail at the foot of the document – and warned that the delay could also see youngsters who miss out on their grades fail to enrol in time for fresh exams in the autumn.

Those who are challengin­g their marks are encouraged to contact their university’s admission department­s as soon as possible to discuss their position.

But Mr Roskilly said he was worried that middle-class ‘pushy parents’ would find it easier to negotiate than those from poorer background­s. ‘The universiti­es... don’t have the set-up to fully consider a student’s academic record,’ he added.

In a recent consultati­on on appeals, one exam board warned England’s exams watchdog Ofqual: ‘While each initial review may not take a significan­t time to resolve, the volume of appeals may mean that the response to an appeal may not be swift.’

Labour education spokesman Kate Green said she was worried the appeals process was not ‘robust enough’.

Ofqual has admitted that ‘high ability’ students at poor schools stand to get worse-than- deserved results this year because ‘they fall outside the pattern of results’ the computer model relies on.

The proportion of teachers believing their A-level and GCSE students are likely to get a ‘fair deal’ has fallen from 39 per cent to just 24 per cent, a poll published by TES revealed. One teacher said: ‘I do not believe awarding results based on the historic performanc­e of a school is fair. Year groups will have different abilities, and some cohorts will be stronger than previous cohorts.’

Children’s Commission­er Anne Longfield said her ‘real worry that the most disadvanta­ged children will be the ones that will miss out and those in schools that have not been faring well, or indeed those with a history of poor achievemen­t, will be downgraded by the algorithm’.

Schools minister Nick Gibb defended this year’s system, saying it was the ‘fairest and best system that we could devise’.

An Ofqual spokesman said: ‘Exam boards are committed to completing appeals as quickly as possible.’

 ??  ?? Anger: A pupil protest in Glasgow
Anger: A pupil protest in Glasgow

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