The Jewish Chronicle

Schools and pupils’ anger over ‘irreparabl­e’ A-level marking

Government U-turn too late for students now accepted by second-choice universiti­es

- BY SIMON ROCKER

HEADTEACHE­RS IN Jewish schools have expressed their anger over the damage done to pupils by the A-level marking fiasco last week — even after the U-turn which led to marks awarded by an algorithm devised by exam regulator Ofqual being replaced by teachers’ predicted grades.

Michael Sutton, headteache­r of King David High School Liverpool, said he feared “considerab­le damage has been done to specific students in the short term. That is irreparabl­e as we have had students accept insurance offers who now qualify for their first choice university.”

Though grateful for the impact on this week’s GCSE results, he added, “Unfortunat­ely, this episode has undermined the excellent work school staff have done in applying their profession­al expertise in difficult circumstan­ces. I feel that this was not matched elsewhere.”

Widespread relief greeted the government’s dramatic climbdown on Monday, which restored the grades originally submitted by schools for their students in lieu of cancelled exams.

The decision was taken after pupil demonstrat­ions, legal threats and growing unrest among backbench MPs. At that point, the education authoritie­s recognised there was no possibilit­y of institutin­g an effective appeals system following the volume of protests after the announceme­nt of results last Thursday.

At Kantor King Solomon High in Redbridge, the Jewish school with the most diverse intake, headteache­r Hannele Reece said the downgradin­g had initially cost 38 students their university place.

More than half the grades — 53 per cent — submitted by the school’s teachers had been lowered by the Ofqual formula. “The downgradin­g meant that our disadvanta­ged students were significan­tly affected, achieving half the number of A*-C grades that non-disadvanta­ged students received,” she said.

Whereas around 55 per cent of A-level grades had initially been from A* to C, after the U-turn the figure would now rise to around 80 per cent, she said.

By Wednesday morning, five of the 38 students had managed to find a university place, “so things are hopefully beginning to move,” she said.

But she was disappoint­ed that the U-turn had come “so late in the day given that they have had centre assessed grades for so long. It is clear that the algorithm used was flawed because it took no account of student prior performanc­e and so it was always going to lead to inequaliti­es.”

However, she added, “for the vast majority of our students they will now have grades that reflect their ability and will help them into the pathways they deserve.”

Rachel Fink, headteache­r of JFS, the country’s largest Jewish school, said the U-turn “at least acknowledg­es teachers’ profession­al abilities to assess their students based on their performanc­e over time.

“However, students should never have found themselves in this situation in the first place and a more informed plan should have been in place from the outset.”

Although the revised grades would make only “marginal difference” to

Considerab­le damage has been done to specific students’

students at Yavneh College in Hertfordsh­ire, its headteache­r Spencer Lewis said the past week’s events were “very avoidable. Our students have had such a hard time over the last six months and the way things have unfolded has been far from easy for them.”

Leora Mocton, who has just left Hasmonean High School for Girls, said she was “quite shocked” when she received her initial results last week. Predicted by the school to get As in biblical Hebrew and economics and a B in psychology, she was downgraded to a C in economics in line with Ofqual’s formula.

After a gap year in Israel, she was planning to apply to University College London to do Hebrew and Jewish studies, where according to its website students are expected to come with at least an A and two Bs.

“If it had stayed ABC, it would have been harder to get on the course,” she said. “At first it was pretty stressful. But I wasn’t freaking out. I did think I would get a good shot at appealing. Some friends at other Jewish schools had been predicted As and Bs and got Cs and Ds. They’re happy with the turnaround.”

Her revised grades after the U-turn means she now has above minimum entry requiremen­ts for her intended course.

But her feeling is that once the education authoritie­s in England had witnessed what had happened in Scotland earlier this month — where protests had forced the government there also to retreat — “they could have changed before they gave us the results.”

Gary Griffin, headteache­r of Immanuel College, said it was “a pity that it took the government so long to come to this conclusion. Had they reacted sympatheti­cally to the Scottish decision sooner then a great deal of heartache, agonising and administra­tion could have been avoided.”

Immanuel’s result were

“looking very good last week,” he said, “They will now be outstandin­g.”

But he added that he did not envy universiti­es “trying to sort their admissions now”.

With tens of thousands of students armed with improved grades as a result of the U-turn, universiti­es faced a sudden increase in demand for places.

JFS student Raphy Simons believed he had secured a place to read politics and American studies at Nottingham University after his grades were upped from BCC to BBC. But he says later in the day the offer was retracted.

“That was a big hit but luckily I had really good people to call and I got re-motivated pretty quickly,” he said.

He now plans to take a year out to do work experience and sit exams in October.

From last Thursday, the Union of Jewish Students began fielding an increasing number of calls from students looking at campus alternativ­es after failing to receive the grades they hoped for. “Lots of parents and students who did not get their first-choice university want to know what Jewish life and wider student life is like on their second choice campus,” said communicat­ions officer Shiri Wolff.

For Manchester’s King David High School, the reversal meant a doubledigi­t rise in A* to B grades. Under the Ofqual system, these had initially been at 71 to 72 per cent, compared with the 78 to 79 per cent for the school’s mock exams earlier this year. Now based wholly on teacher-assessment, they will increase to 83 to 84 per cent

Ofqual — and exam regulators in the rest of the UK — had sought to modify teacher-produced grades in order to prevent over-generous evaluation. To do this, it used a computer algorithm which took into account the record of the school or college over the previous years.

But as the implicatio­ns of the approach began to dawn, critics said this simply ignored the performanc­e of individual students.

Patrick Moriarity, headteache­r of JCoSS in East Barnet, told students he was “delighted” by the U-turn. “The much-hated algorithm has been rejected and those who know your work best have been trusted to say what you deserved.”

Earlier in the day, before the government’s announceme­nt, he had written a strong letter to local MP Theresa Villiers calling for the original teacher grades to be recognised.

Although the cross-communal school had achieved its best results, he told her, 52 per cent of teacher grades had been lowered. A third of the cohort had overall grades reduced by three — eg from AAA to BBB — and nearly twothirds by two. Some students had been “inexplicab­ly downgraded,” he complained.

Events at the weekend, he said, when Ofqual had published guidance on a planned appeals procedure only to withdraw it hours later, had “turned a drama into a farce”. The statistica­l model adopted had “masked huge injustices,” he said. “At school level the injustice has rewarded the already successful (like JCoSS) but apparently at the expense of others; at student level it has created true anguish, demonstrab­le unfairness and disillusio­nment even among those who have in fact lost little or nothing, let alone among those who have been directly affected.

“The view as I am hearing it is that this could not have been handled worse.”

One teacher at a Jewish school described the treatment of this year’s students as “cruel”.

When assessing what grades to

It was a big hit, but luckily I got re-motivated pretty quickly’

award pupils, she and colleagues had “worked on the basis that if someone came knocking on the door and asked us to prove it, we had the evidence to support it. If someone was a B-student, we wouldn’t have predicted an A.” Given what students had endured since lockdown, “they didn’t deserve all the uncertaint­y, with the complete debacle of the results”. But she hoped that “in five years, no one is going to care what they got at A-level if they have been able to move on with their lives”.

 ??  ?? Students protest opposite Downing Street last Sunday
Students protest opposite Downing Street last Sunday
 ??  ?? Hannele Reece and Patrick Moriarty
Hannele Reece and Patrick Moriarty
 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES

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