The government and the exams regulator are being threatened with legal action as pressure mounts for a rethink over the awarding of A-level grades.

Around 280,000 students saw their A-level grades fall by one grade or more from their predicted results following the introduction of a new “moderation” algorithm, which was put in place after the coronavirus lockdown led to exams being cancelled.

Further confusion was added to the row on Saturday night when Ofqual, the exams regulator, suddenly suspended its own policy for students wishing to appeal their results.
Just hours after Ofqual published its criteria for mock exam results to be considered as the basis of an appeal, the guidance was withdrawn and the regulator said it was reviewing the policy.
“Earlier today we published information about mock exam results in appeals,” Ofqual said in a statement.
“This policy is being reviewed by the Ofqual Board and further information will be published in due course.”

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson had been accused of abandoning his promise of a “triple lock” for students following the announcement of Ofqual’s criteria for using mock exams in appeals.
He has said pupils can use their mock results, resit exams in the autumn, or accept the grade they had been awarded

The Ofqual guidance said that if the mock result was higher than the teacher’s prediction, it was the teacher’s prediction which would count.
Conservative MP Robert Halfon, the chair of the House of Commons’ Education Committee, branded Ofqual’s actions “unacceptable” as he called for the “huge mess” to be sorted out.

Many other unhappy Tory MPs were said to be making their views known to the party’s whips.
Labour claimed the A-level results row was a “fiasco turning from tragedy to farce” as they called on Prime Minister Boris Johnson to “get a grip”.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the NAHT head teachers’ union, said it was “quite clear that the rules are being written and rewritten on the hoof” and that thousands of students were “suffering” as a result.He called on the government and Ofqual automatically to review the 25,000 results which were two or more grades below their teachers’ predictions.

Students have been left furious by the new system, with many losing their places on their chosen university courses after not meeting the required grades.

School leavers entering a highly-competitive jobs market are also fearing the impact of their predicted results being downgraded.

Campaigners have promised to begin High Court proceedings against Mr Williamson and Ofqual this week unless they perform a climbdown on the use of the algorithim.
Jolyon Maugham QC, who heads the Good Law Project, told Sky News: “This morning we sent a letter to Ofqual, copying in Gavin Williamson.
“We make three points in that letter; we say, firstly, the absence of an appeal system – a meaningful appeal system – for individual students is unlawful.
“Second, we say the system – taken as a whole – is so unfair as also to be unlawful.
“And thirdly, we point to Ofqual’s statutory obligation to ensure that accurate grades are delivered and we say that its failure to do that, again, is unlawful.”

Ofqual has defended its moderation of A-level grades, saying that some schools and colleges had submitted “implausibly high” A-level predictions.
But Mr Maugham argued the regulator “hasn’t really paid enough attention to the quality of individual students”.
He accused Ofqual of “embedding structural inequality” following widespread criticism that the regulator’s algorithm disproportionately penalised students from schools in disadvantaged communities.

The Sunday Times reported other students and parents are considering legal action, including Curtis Parfitt-Ford – a student whose petition calling for a fairer system has now been signed by more than 225,000 people.
Meanwhile, The Observer reported more than 4.6 million GCSEs in England – about 97% of the total – will be assigned solely by Ofqual’s algorithm.
Lord Baker, a former Conservative education secretary, called for the postponement of the publication of GCSE results for two weeks due to the “unfair and barely explicable downgrades” of A-levels.
He told the PA news agency: “I urge the education secretary to instruct Ofqual not to release the GCSEs results this Thursday as their algorithm is flawed.”
Natalie Perera, executive director of the Education Policy Institute think tank, told the newspaper: “We will almost certainly see a repeat of the many problems seen with A-levels, only with GCSEs they could be more severe.”
A Department for Education spokesperson said: “Ofqual has a robust model in place to ensure results this year are fair for pupils despite them not having been able to sit exams this year.
“Standardisation ensures grades are fair for students and without it, we would see results that are substantially inflated, significantly undermining their value.”

The government has confirmed schools in England will be able to appeal against A-level and GCSE grades for free.
State-funded schools and colleges will also be able to claim back the cost of unsuccessful appeals as well as fees for autumn exams, the Department for Education said.

Students in Wales will also be able to appeal against their A-level grades if they are lower than teachers’ predictions.

The Welsh government announced the plan following an outcry over 42% of all A-level grades in the country being lowered during the moderation process.

Please let us know your experiences in the Comments section below.

To report this post you need to login first.
Previous articleNigel Farage supporters are amongst the most charming, educated and sensitive people I have ever met
Next articlePotential attempted child abduction incident in Poole
Dorset Eye
Dorset Eye is an independent not for profit news website built to empower all people to have a voice. To be sustainable Dorset Eye needs your support. Please help us to deliver independent citizen news... by clicking the link below and contributing. Your support means everything for the future of Dorset Eye. Thank you.