The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Exams under way for 127,000 Scottish pupils

Tests will continue until Friday June 2

- sTeWarT alexander

The exam period for thousands of pupils across Scotland is getting under way.

More than half a million individual exams will be sat by more than 127,000 candidates in 470 schools and colleges across the country.

Dr Janet Brown, Scottish Qualificat­ions Authority (SQA) chief executive and Scotland’s chief examining officer, said: “I’d like to wish everyone sitting examinatio­ns and taking qualificat­ions at schools and colleges the best of luck between now and the end of the term.

“After months of hard work and hours of study, many thousands of young people throughout Scotland are preparing to complete their qualificat­ions and take the next step in their education or into work.”

Along with those sitting exams over the next four-and-a-half weeks, candidates who have undertaken National 1, National 2, National 3, National 4, Skills for Work Courses and awards, which are continuall­y assessed throughout the year, will be among the 139,822 pupils and students who will receive their results on Tuesday August 8.

The examinatio­n schedule for candidates studying National 5, Higher, and Advanced Higher courses started with National 5 and Higher Philosophy at 9am yesterday.

The exam period will run through to Friday June 2.

Dr Brown added: “At all levels, our qualificat­ions provide candidates with the opportunit­y to demonstrat­e the knowledge and understand­ing they’ve acquired and prepare them for further study, employment or training.

“Our qualificat­ions are robust, relevant, and designed to equip young people with a wide range of skills.”

Each year SQA’s in-house team of assessment experts is supported by 15,000 “appointees” who help to set, invigilate, and mark more than one million exam scripts, and quality-assure the internal assessment­s.

The exam body was urged to step up its quality control procedures last year after a report found a number of “typographi­cal and coding errors” in a computing paper. Last summer’s National 5 computing science exam was criticised by some teachers, who warned there had been issues with questions.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Bonhams’ Raphaelle Benabou looks at an Art Deco statue valued at $1,000-$1,500 at the auction house’s London offices, part of its sale of Jackie Collins’ estate which will take place in Los Angeles later this month.
Picture: PA. Bonhams’ Raphaelle Benabou looks at an Art Deco statue valued at $1,000-$1,500 at the auction house’s London offices, part of its sale of Jackie Collins’ estate which will take place in Los Angeles later this month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom