Yorkshire Post

Exam grading ‘ could address lost education’

Minister’s concern at lockdown effects

- GERALDINE SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ■ Twitter:

GRADING FOR next year’s GCSE and A- level exams could address the “lost education” students have suffered due to school closures amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, a Minister has suggested.

SchoolsMin­isterNickG­ibbhas told MPs he is concerned about the “unfairness and unevenness” between pupils who have missed out on different amounts of schooling due to lockdowns or self- isolation.

But Mr Gibb ruled out cutting the school holidays to give pupils more time to catch up as he said “teachers have been working phenomenal­ly hard” during the pandemic and they “need a break”.

When asked what would happen with 2021 exams if pupils missed more learning, he said: “There are two issues – one is the issue across the country as a whole, the lost education all students

will have suffered as a consequenc­e of schools being closed to most students from March until the summer.

“And we will have more to say about this in the next few weeks, butthatwil­lbedealtwi­ththrough issues such as grading that Ofqual and the exam boards are working through.”

Addressing the Education Select Committee, Mr Gibb acknowledg­ed that some students will have suffered greater lockdowns and “greater propensity to be self- isolating” than students in other schools.

“That does worry me and I’ve discussed this in great detail with the regulator Ofqual to see what more we can do to address this issue,” he said.

There is a “disparity” between the way schools react when there is a confirmed case of coronaviru­s in a “bubble”, Mr Gibb told MPs.

His comments came ahead of Government figures yesterday afternoon which showed nearly half of secondary schools had one or more pupils self- isolating due to potential contact with a case of Covid- 19 inside the school.

Jonathan Gullis, Conservati­ve MP for Stoke- on- Trent North, said he is worried that the Government’s tutoring programme and a delay to the 2021 exam timetable will not be enough for pupils to catch up

He said: “My fear is that it’s still

not going to be sufficient time to cover the breadth, and most importantl­y the depth of the curriculum that is required in order for

students to take those exams and achieve as well as they could do.”

Addressing the committee, Mr Gibb acknowledg­ed that the three- week delay in next summer’s exams in England will lead to “constraine­d marking time”.

He said the Department for Education ( DfE) will speak to the exam boards and schools about being able “to release more teachers to be able to mark” to ensure results are released in time.

When asked whether he thought Covid- 19 cases will fall or rise during the October halfterm holiday, Mr Gibb said that it seemed to him students were safe.

He said: “Students are safe, you could argue safer, in the school environmen­t than they are outside that environmen­t.”

He added: “But in terms of those kind of projection­s I am not really qualified to answer those questions.”

I’ve discussed this in detail with Ofqal to see what more we can do. Schools Minister Nick Gibb.

 ?? PICTURE: GARETH FULLER/ PA ?? ISSUES: Exam boards are looking at grading for next year’s GCSE and A- levels.
PICTURE: GARETH FULLER/ PA ISSUES: Exam boards are looking at grading for next year’s GCSE and A- levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom