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Boss would have ‘forced’ GCSE English grade change

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Wednesday, September 12, 2012
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Western Daily Press

Ofqual boss Glenys Stacey admitted yesterday she would have forced one of England’s biggest exam boards to alter its GCSE English boundaries to avoid grade inflation.

The regulator has the power to direct grade boundary changes and would have done so if Edexcel had not revised them, she suggested.

The disclosure came as new figures showed that at least 143 secondary schools are set to fall below the Government’s floor target for pupils achieving at least five Cs including English and maths as a result of the GCSE English fiasco – putting them at risk of being considered failing.

Leaked letters published yesterday showed that Ofqual pressurised Edexcel to alter its GCSE English grade boundaries just two weeks before results were published last month.

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The news comes after the Somerset Association of Secondary Headteachers warning on Monday that it will take collective action and encourage headteachers, teachers and parents to take individual action to win regrading for students whose futures have been jeopardised by grade boundary changes for GCSE English.

Appearing before the Commons education select committee yesterday, Ms Stacey was asked what Ofqual would have done if Edexcel had stuck to its first response to the regulator, and insisted that its proposed grade boundaries were fair.

“If they had done so, then the legislation provides that the regulator can direct grade boundary changes,” Ms Stacey said.

Pushed on whether Ofqual would have done this, she added: “I think we would have done, yes.”

The leaked correspondence, seen by the Times Educational Supplement (TES), shows that Ofqual wrote to Edexcel on August 7 amid concerns that there would be a rise in C grades, calling on them to act quickly to produce results that were closer to predictions for the subject.

The board responded a day later, saying it believed its proposed grade awards were “fair” and there was no justification for further changes.

It added that Ofqual still wanted an alteration, that the board could move the minimum requirement for a C grade for one of the English units up to 65 marks out of 96 – 10 marks higher than in January when it stood at 55.

Ofqual replied on August 9, with a letter from Mr Opposs that stated Edexcel is obliged to ensure its results are consistent with other awarding bodies, whose results were close enough to predictions.

Alex Cunningham, Labour MP for Stockton North, asked Ms Stacey why Edexcel had changed its mind, saying “was it the fact that you adopted a strong-arm tactic to tell them ‘you must ensure that these grades are downgraded’?”

Ms Stacey replied: “What changed was, that we knew, looking at that, that there would be a six or seven per cent increase, grade inflation, that we did not think to be right or justifiable. We therefore wrote to Edexcel pointing out that they needed to bring the qualification in appropriately. They reflected on that and it’s quite right and proper that they should have done.”

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