The changes to GCSE grade
boundaries mean that at least 140 schools have missed the Government's minimum
exam target. They are now facing the possibility of closure or conversion to
academies.
The stark figures, which reveal the true cost of
attempts to keep a lid on grade inflation, emerged as the Welsh Government
ordered English GCSEs in Wales to be regraded, meaning that pupils in England
could end up with a lower grade for the same work as pupils across the border.
The figures have been published by the Association
of School and College Leaders (ASCL), which found that in total 143 schools in
England which has previously been confidently predicted to meet the target for
GCSE passes had now failed to do so. The figures do not include those schools
that were already expected to fall short.
In addition,
earlier this year it emerged that Ofqual, the exams regulator, had told the
Edexcel exam board that it should raise the boundary for a C-grade pass,
against the wishes of its examiners. The exam board eventually caved in and
raised the boundary by 10 marks.
Glenys Stacey,
chief executive of Ofqual, confirmed to MPs that she had been prepared to use
her powers to force Edexcel to comply.
She also revealed
that Ofqual had approached a second exam board, the Welsh WJEC, to ask it to
raise its grade boundaries. She said she was worried that the board was
reporting increases in the pass rate in 43 out of 46 different subject areas.
However, WJEC has
now been ordered by Welsh Education Minister Leighton Andrews to re-grade
pupils in Wales who were marked down for their English exams. The board, which
had more candidates sitting its paper in England than in Wales but has been
instructed only to re-grade the latter, said it had been placed in a
"difficult and unexpected position".
In a written
submission to MPs, Ofqual admitted that the whole affair had had a
"serious impact on perceptions of fairness" in the exams system.
This, it argued, stemmed from the "generous" results awarded to
students who sat the exam in January.
Ofqual said there
had been a greater variation in schools' results than expected, with the result
that many achieved a far lower pass rate than they had predicted.
Amanda Spielman,
who chairs Ofqual, told the committee: "While some schools are good at it
[predicting results], it is clear that a lot aren't. We would have expected in
the face of a new qualification schools to have been a bit more cautious about
their predictions and brought them down a bit."
News Source: The
Independent Education News