Manchester Evening News

PM urged to ‘get a grip’ on A-levels

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BORIS JOHNSON is facing calls to take charge of the growing A-levels “chaos” amid mounting anger among pupils, teachers and MPs.

There was disbelief at Westminste­r after guidance for children in England seeking to appeal against their grades being marked down was suddenly withdrawn without explanatio­n.

One senior Conservati­ve MP said the situation is a “huge mess” while Labour said it is up to the Prime Minister to “get a grip” and sort out the situation.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer condemned the Government’s “chaos, confusion and incompeten­ce”, adding: “Boris Johnson has been invisible during this crisis. He needs to take personal responsibi­lity and fix it.”

Conservati­ve former education secretary Lord Baker urged ministers to delay the publicatio­n of GCSE results due this week until the crisis over A-levels is resolved.

He said the statistica­l model used by the regulator Ofqual to standardis­e results across the country in the absence of actual exams was “flawed” and led to “hundreds of thousands of unfair and barely explicable downgrades”. Some pupils gathered at Westminste­r to protest against the results, while others resorted to legal action in an attempt to get their downgrades reversed through the courts.

The latest row erupted after Ofqual issued guidance on Saturday setting out the criteria for pupils to make appeals on the basis of their mock exam results, only for it to be taken down hours later.

In a brief statement, Ofqual said the policy is “being reviewed” by its board and further informatio­n will be released “in due course”.

Both Downing Street and the Department for Education declined to comment.

Conservati­ve MP Robert Halfon, who chairs the Commons Education Committee, said the regulator’s actions have been “unacceptab­le”.

“That is a huge mess,” he told BBC News. “Goodness knows what is going on at Ofqual. It is the last thing we need at this time. This is just unacceptab­le in my view.

“Students and teachers are incredibly anxious – particular­ly the students who are worried about their future. This has got to be sorted out.

“Ofqual shouldn’t put things on websites, take them away, sow confusion. This is just not on and it has got to be changed.”

The suspension of the Ofqual guidance followed claims by Labour that assurances given to pupils about the appeals process by Education Secretary Gavin Williamson are “unravellin­g”.

Mr Williamson last week gave a “triplelock” commitment that pupils could use the highest result out of their teacher’s predicted grade, their mock exam or sitting an actual exam in the autumn.

But the Ofqual guidance said if the mock result was higher than the teacher’s prediction, it was the teacher’s prediction that would count.

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Boris Johnson

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