The Scotsman

Exams body spent £140k on firms

- By CHRIS GREEN

Scotland’ s exams authority spent almost £140,000 of taxpayers’ money drafting in private companies to help with the remarking of this year’s disastrous exam results.

The Scottish Qualificat­ions Authority (SQA) paid for the services of two firms to assist with the moderation of results, which resulted in 75,000 pupils being downgraded. The controvers­ial system sparked an immediate backlash and was scrapped entirely a week later, with Ni cola Sturgeon and John Swinney both apologisin­g to the young people affected.

The original moderation scheme resulted in 124,564 of

the 511,070 grades awarded by the SQA being cut, with children from the poorest parts of the country particular­ly badly hit.

It can now be revealed the taxpayer-funded body paid out a total of £139,290 to Alphaplus and SAS for their assistance in setting up the system before it was scrapped.

Data released following a Freedom of Informatio­n request showed it paid statistica­l soft ware company SAS £119,232 for its expertise, while Alphaplus was paid £20,058.

On results day, the exams authority said SAS had helped it with “formulatin­g a robust and deliverabl­e approach for moderating estimates”.

It added that Alphaplus had been involved “at each step in the process” of moderation.

Scottish Labour’s education spokesman Iain Gray said: “The SQA have serious questions to answer about why they felt the need to spend money on private companies to do what is their core business.”

 ??  ?? 0 Iain Gray: ‘SQA have serious questions to answer’
0 Iain Gray: ‘SQA have serious questions to answer’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom