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Exam system hit by record appeals | Exam system hit by record appeals |
(40 minutes later) | |
The exams system in England is unwieldy and becoming unsustainable because of a record number of pupils challenging their results, head teachers warn. | The exams system in England is unwieldy and becoming unsustainable because of a record number of pupils challenging their results, head teachers warn. |
Last year 45,000 pupils - one in 14 GCSE students - queried a result. | Last year 45,000 pupils - one in 14 GCSE students - queried a result. |
And the National Association of Head Teachers (NAHT) says the extra work and the cost of the appeals is pushing the exam system towards collapse. | |
The Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) denies the claims insisting it is fair on all pupils. | |
Last year, one in four of all the 45,000 GCSE pupils who challenged their exam mark ended up being upgraded. | |
The QCA said the number of marks regraded was relatively small, given that six million GCSE papers were marked last year. | |
'Unstable' system | 'Unstable' system |
NAHT Deputy General Secretary Carole Whitty said: "If one in four are getting regraded then it does make you wonder if there are a load of students who - had they put their papers in for remarking - whether they might have been regraded too. | |
If you had a system with well designed examinations and strong marking there shouldn't be any appeals at all, or maybe just a tiny handful NAHT | |
"And this is an important message that is getting back in to the system. It's a very destabilising situation." | "And this is an important message that is getting back in to the system. It's a very destabilising situation." |
She added: "If you had a system with well designed examinations and strong marking there shouldn't be any appeals at all, or maybe just a tiny handful," she said. | She added: "If you had a system with well designed examinations and strong marking there shouldn't be any appeals at all, or maybe just a tiny handful," she said. |
"We're really creating a system which is very unstable." | "We're really creating a system which is very unstable." |
Meanwhile, Richard Cairns, headmaster of Brighton College, expressed concerns about "the increasing number of children who seem to be getting marks that are out-of kilter with what we anticipate". | |
"We're having to go through those marks very carefully with the children concerned and lodge more and more appeals," he said. | "We're having to go through those marks very carefully with the children concerned and lodge more and more appeals," he said. |
The BBC's Cathryn Curran said critics claim more mistakes are being made at the marking process because of the growing number of exams. | The BBC's Cathryn Curran said critics claim more mistakes are being made at the marking process because of the growing number of exams. |
There are also concerns over the cost of an appeal - on average it costs £45 to appeal against a GCSE result, and up to £35 for each A-level unit. | There are also concerns over the cost of an appeal - on average it costs £45 to appeal against a GCSE result, and up to £35 for each A-level unit. |
Our correspondent also says some schools have told the BBC they do not appeal because they cannot afford the costs involved. | Our correspondent also says some schools have told the BBC they do not appeal because they cannot afford the costs involved. |