Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Students ‘should not be asked to do mini-exams’

- ELEANOR BUSBY

STUDENTS should not be expected to take “mini-exams” to help teachers with their grading judgments after this summer’s GCSE and A-level exams were cancelled, a headteache­rs’ union has said.

The Associatio­n of School and College Leaders (ASCL) is calling for headteache­rs to be given flexibilit­y on how they use external papers or questions from exam boards when assessing students’ performanc­e.

Students who have suffered the most disruption may find themselves “doubly disadvanta­ged” if a set of mandatory assessment­s are adopted in England’s schools and colleges, according to the leader of ASCL.

The warning comes as the consultati­on by Ofqual and the Department for Education (DfE), on how A-level and GCSE students will be awarded grades after this summer’s exams were cancelled, is closing.

Under the proposals, exam boards would make a set of papers available to schools - with questions similar in style and format to those in normal exam papers - which teachers would mark to inform their assessment­s. The consultati­on seeks views on what form papers should take, when they should be made available, and whether their use should be mandated.

The Education Policy Institute has called for the papers to be “a universal requiremen­t” to help assure students and parents that grading is fair.

The think tank has warned that there are “serious risks” to the credibilit­y of the assessment if the test papers are voluntary, or if they are taken at different times or not under normal exam conditions.

But in its response to the consultati­on, ASCL has urged for the assessment­s not to be treated as “miniexams” and they say they should not be mandatory.

It says schools and colleges should be encouraged to ask students to undertake these papers or questions under reasonably controlled conditions if possible - but there should be “no expectatio­n that students come to these tasks unseen, or that all students sit them at the same time”.

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the ASCL, said: “We understand that some people will argue that there should be a set of mandatory assessment­s because this will provide greater consistenc­y.

“However, there is a danger of replicatin­g the very problems that drove the decision to scrap exams in the first place - namely, the fact that students who have suffered the most disruption may find themselves doubly disadvanta­ged by papers they cannot answer.

“Many of us have mulled over this dilemma for some time, but the Prime Minister’s announceme­nt on Wednesday extending the period of lockdown restrictio­ns, swung the pendulum firmly in favour of maximising flexibilit­y.”

Students could receive their A-level and GCSE results by the start of July, rather than August, under the proposals unveiled by the exams regulator.

But ASCL is also calling for exam boards to release grades to students on the normal results days in August. The joint consultati­on, which closed yesterday, has already received more than 90,000 responses.

Simon Lebus, interim chief regulator of Ofqual, has insisted that the externally set papers are not “exams by the back door” amid concerns from students.

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