Daily Express

Sack the minister, demand protesting students in furious A-level backlash

- By Mark Reynolds

ANGRY protesters, including disgruntle­d A-level students, marched on Whitehall yesterday calling for the Education Secretary to be fired.

As the row over downgraded A-level results rumbled on, around 100 demonstrat­ors gathered outside Downing Street, chanting “sack Gavin Williamson”.

Harry Mayes, from Stoke Newington, north London, missed out on a place at both his firm and insurance university places after receiving A, B and C in his A-levels.

The student, 18, who had been hoping to study neuroscien­ce at Bristol, said: “I’m a free school meals student and it seems people like me have been lowered the most.”

Parents flooded social media with stories of despair.

Naz Malik tweeted: “I have a suicidal daughter who hasn’t stopped crying since 8am. She has missed out on her firm offer due to 2 grades being downgraded. Her centre assessment grades were A* A* A. She got A A* B.”

Furious headteache­rs hit back at the exams regulator after it suggested the blame for the A-level results fiasco could lie within the schools themselves.

The Office of Qualificat­ions and Examinatio­ns Regulation (Ofqual) appeared to be shifting responsibi­lity away from the Government when it claimed teachers had submitted “implausibl­y high” predicted grades.

When hundreds of thousands of students collected their results on Thursday, some 40 per cent had been downgraded from teachers’ prediction­s by an algorithm, official data revealed, sparking complaints from pupils who claimed the system had let them down.

But a spokesman for Ofqual said: “Because the circumstan­ces meant there was no opportunit­y to develop a common approach to grading, the standard applied by different schools and colleges varies greatly.

“A rare few centres put in implausibl­y high judgments, including one which submitted all A* and A grades for students in two subjects, where previously there had been normal distributi­on.”

Despite the backlash, the Government yesterday stood firm, rejecting Labour demands for a Scottish-style U-turn over A-level results.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said: “Young people and parents right across the country feel let down and betrayed.The chaotic circumstan­ces created by the Government’s mishandlin­g of education during recent months mean that a return to teacher assessment­s is now the best option available.”

But Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: “Let’s be in no doubt about it, the exam results are robust, they’re good and they’re dependable for employers.”

Labour is now calling for an urgent review of the standardis­ation model ahead of GCSE results next week.

The Equalities and Human Rights Commission has also urged Ofqual to consider the impacts of its decisions, to avoid harming disadvanta­ged and minority groups.

 ?? Picture: GETTY ?? Students march through London yesterday protesting against the A-level grading
Picture: GETTY Students march through London yesterday protesting against the A-level grading
 ??  ?? Minister Gavin Williamson
Minister Gavin Williamson

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