Western Daily Press

Most A-level and GCSE exams will be delayed by 3 weeks

- ELEANOR BUSBY Press Associatio­n

MOST A-level and GCSE exams in England will be delayed by three weeks next year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, Education Secretary Gavin Williamson has said.

The 2021 exams will go ahead, but the majority of tests will be pushed back to give pupils more time to catch up on their learning following school closures.

The exams, which usually begin in May, will be delayed to June and July – apart from the English and maths GCSEs which will take place before the half-term.

GCSE and A-level results will be given out to students in the same week in August following the change, Mr Williamson announced.

But education unions have accused ministers of an “inadequate” response” to the scale of disruption that students due to take exams next year are facing. In a written ministeria­l statement yesterday, Mr Williamson said: “We know that exams are the fairest way of measuring a student’s abilities and accomplish­ments, including the most disadvanta­ged.

“We want to give our young people the opportunit­y next summer to demonstrat­e what they know and can do.”

The announceme­nt comes following the fiasco around grading of GCSE and A-level students this summer after exams were cancelled amid Covid-19.

Thousands of A-level students had their results downgraded from school estimates by an algorithm, before England’s exams regulator Ofqual announced a U-turn allowing them to use teachers’ prediction­s.

Mr Williamson has said the 2021 exam series for the majority of A-levels and GCSEs will start on June 7 and end on July 2. Students will receive their AS and A-level results on Tuesday, August 24, and GCSE students will receive their grades on Friday, August 27.

One maths and one English GCSE exam will take place before the May half-term to give pupils who may need to self-isolate during the exam period the “best chance” of sitting a paper in these subjects, Mr Williamson said.

Some AS-levels and A-levels with very small numbers of students will also be scheduled before half-term. Paul Whiteman, general secretary of school leaders’ union NAHT, warned that a “compressio­n” of the exam series may impact student wellbeing.

He said: “Announcing a delay is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of the planning that now needs to be done.

“This step does not address the disparity between different student’s different levels of disruption to learning; much more needs to be done to ensure that the qualificat­ion system takes account of this so that students can have confidence that the grades they are awarded in 2021 are fair.”

Dr Philip Wright, director general at the Joint Council for Qualificat­ions (JCQ), which represents exam boards across the UK, said: “A significan­t delay to the start of exams without significan­tly delaying results means that exams will have to take place in a compressed window, rather than being spread out to maximise a student’s chances of sitting at least one paper per subject.

“Even with a compressed exam window, delivering GCSE results on August 27 will be a challenge.”

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