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Posts Tagged ‘Sats’

Guardian Daily: MPs attack Balls over Sats

Ed Balls, the children’s secretary, was partly to blame for last year’s Sats fiasco, according to a report by MPs on the children, schools and families select committee. Barry Sheerman, who chairs the committee, says government interference caused confusion in the body responsible for regulating the exam system.

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Balls contributed to Sats fiasco – MPs

• Exam body thwarted over reforms, committee says
• Ministers knew of test problems at earlier stage

Ed Balls’s interference increased the likelihood of the collapse of the Sats system, according to MPs in the first report to officially accuse the schools secretary of playing a significant role in the fiasco.

His department micromanaged the system and prevented the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) from reforming the tests, the report says. But ministers later claimed that they had not been involved and could not be blamed when the tests failed.

The parliamentary committee responsible for schools said Balls and his ministers knew of the problems earlier than has been acknowledged and established a testing system on a scale that made it vulnerable to failure every year. The marking of Sats – taken by 1.2 million children in England – collapsed last year under the auspices of the American firm ETS, which had its contract terminated.

An independent inquiry commissioned by the Department for Children, Schools and Families and the exams watchdog Ofqual, led by Lord Sutherland, said ETS was ultimately responsible, but heaped blame on the QCA for failing to prevent the escalation of the problems. Balls subsequently scrapped all tests for 14-year-olds and science papers for 11-year-olds.

Ken Boston, the then chief executive of the QCA, had his offer of resignation refused and was eventually fired after Sutherland reported last December. Boston accused Balls of being more involved than had been acknowledged and “sexing up” evidence against him when he appeared before the select committee in April. The report largely backs his version of events.

Barry Sheerman, the chairman of the children, schools and families select committee, said: “The whole process got muddled because there wasn’t a clear line of responsibility. This led to a situation where this [the QCA] was clearly not an independent organisation.

“It’s too easy for Ed Balls and Jim Knight [the then schools minister] to say ‘It wasn’t me, guv, it’s an independent body’. QCA wasn’t independent. If someone is looking over the QCA’s shoulder all the time watching and observing them, even if it’s informally, quietly, beneath the radar, you can’t claim it’s independent.

“Ed Balls and Jim Knight were ultimately responsible for the quality of these bodies. In a system of ministerial responsibility, Ed and his ministerial team can’t escape totally.”

The report attacks the DCSF’s parachuting of observers into bodies such as the QCA, after evidence that they regularly instructed bodies about ministers’ opinions. Observers should be banned from Ofqual, and non-governmental bodies should have a memorandum to establish lines of responsibility, it recommends.

However, it also suggests that leaders of quangos should be better prepared to stand up to ministers.

Boston said the report was fair and balanced. “The key issues are the need for an NDPB [non-departmental public body] … to be given a clear and broad remit and then allowed to deliver that remit against agreed objectives.”

The schools minister Vernon Coaker said: “We are pleased that the select committee has endorsed Lord Sutherland’s independent inquiry, which shows that the test contractor, ETS, was responsible for the disruption to the 2008 tests, and that there were also failings in the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority.

“Major changes have now been made … with a new test contractor for the 2009 test cycle, a new chief executive, a new remit in place and, most importantly, 99.9% of test results were returned to schools on time this year.

“It’s now time to draw a line under 2008 and get on with the important job of making sure our assessment system is the best it can possibly be.”

A statement from the DCSF said: “We have already acted on Lord Sutherland’s recommendation that we clarify the role of DCSF observers in QCA meetings.

“It is central to Ofqual’s credibility and effectiveness that it is, and is seen to be, independent of ministers. But the department has a close interest in Ofqual and its work, because what Ofqual does impacts on delivery of government policy.

“It is therefore right that DCSF and DBIS [Department of Business, Innovation and Skills] officials should attend the Ofqual committee … as observers and be able to advise the committee, when requested, about the government’s views.”

This week the QCA became the Qualification and Curriculum Development Agency, after its watchdog responsibilities were devolved to Ofqual. A spokesperson said: “QCDA remains committed to working with the DCSF and our various partners to ensure that accurate information is available on each child’s achievements.”

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Pupils lose marks for not dotting ‘i’s

Headteachers urged to complain to exam boards about inconsistent marking in this year’s school tests for 11-year-olds

Eleven-year-olds lost marks for not dotting their ‘i’s in school tests taken across England this summer, headteachers said today.

Other pupils’ Sats papers were marked down for correctly spelling words and demonstrating a flair with language, the National Association of Headteachers (NAHT) argued.

One headteacher phoned a helpline to report that a pupil had been violently sick over her paper 34 minutes into a 45-minute exam.

The head was asked if he knew what question the girl had reached. He was told she could start a fresh paper, but had 11 minutes to complete it. The girl had been taken home.

The union is encouraging its membership of 28,000 school leaders to write to the head of England’s exams watchdog, Ofqual, to complain about inconsistent and sloppy marking in this year’s Sats.

One headteacher in Staffordshire told the NAHT that in some cases markers refused to award marks on spelling tests when pupils had not put dots over the ‘i’s, while others used their own red pen to put the dot in and gave the mark anyway. “Where’s the consistency in that?” she said.

Examiners were given a “formulaic marking scheme which did not give recognition for flair and creativity”, the NAHT said.

The union’s assistant secretary, Ian Foster, said: “The bureaucracy and stress surrounding these outmoded tests, compounded by clear examples of poor or inadequate marking, can be dispiriting for pupils and parents, and can potentially put school leaders’ careers on the line. “

An Ofqual spokeswoman said: “This year there have been significant changes to national curriculum tests. As regulator, Ofqual will be listening to schools about any concerns that they might have.

“Every year, schools raise issues with us regarding national curriculum tests and we are currently considering some of the comments we have received this summer. We will also continue our wider work into the marking quality of this year’s tests with the aim of reporting later this year.”

An investigation into the marking of Sats by the government’s own exams agency in March revealed that nearly half of grades awarded for some papers were wrong.

The Qualification and Curriculum Authority found that in English writing tests taken at aged 14, 44% of grades awarded were wrong, in reading up to a third were faulty and in science up to one in six were wrong. Maths tests were found to be accurate, and the tests taken by 11-year-olds were not included in the study.

The schools secretary, Ed Balls, scrapped Sats for 14-year-olds last October, and the science test for 11-year-olds will be abolished from next year.

The NAHT and the National Union of Teachers plan to ballot over boycotting next year’s tests if maths and English Sats continue.

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Sats results delivered on time

QCA confirms marking of schools tests complete to meet today’s government target

The results of this year’s Sats tests are complete and available to schools, meeting today’s deadline set by ministers, the government’s testing agency has confirmed.

The private firm Edexcel, which was brought in to administer the marking of 5.2m papers after the system collapsed last year, met its deadline today despite struggling in the early stages when it was forced to skip some quality checking procedures to remain on target.

Schools are now invited to log on to a secure website where they can retrieve their results and check them for accuracy.

Andrew Hall, the acting chief executive of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, said: “I am pleased to confirm the successful publication of these results, which I know are so important to schools, parents and pupils. I would particularly like to thank test markers, who are mostly practicing or recently retired teachers, and all of our contractors for the hard work, commitment and professionalism which have contributed to this success.

“The successful delivery of over 1.7 million results in three subjects, all marked during a six-week window, has been the result of close team working and a commitment to ensuring accurate and timely information is available on each child’s achievements at the end of their primary education.”

The QCA said that 99.9% of results were complete today beating the target of 99.7%. Schools now have until 17 July to appeal if they think results are inaccurate. Results of reviews will be returned to schools by 11 September.

At the end of May the Guardian reported concerns about problems with quality checks which meant that very senior and experienced markers had been barred after false concerns were raised about the effectiveness of their marking.

Days later, the QCA, the agency largely blamed for failing to prevent the collapse of last year’s Sats, was forced to admit it had provided flawed dummy papers to check how accurately markers were grading papers. The problems caused large numbers of markers to be rejected, triggering a recruitment shortfall.

Examiners who were suspected of having been wrongly barred were reviewed by testing managers and allowed to continue marking if their past record suggested they were experienced enough. The move side-stepped one layer of quality checks raising concerns about the quality of the marking.

Last year the marking process collapsed spectacularly under the auspices of an American firm ETS, which was subsequently fired by the government. The problems triggered a fundamental overhaul of the Sats system and led to the decision by the schools secretary Ed Balls to scrap tests for 14-year-olds. An independent review of the fiasco said ETS was ultimately responsible for the problems, but also heaped blame on the QCA for failing to prevent them. Ken Boston, the chief executive of the QCA at the time, resigned amid bitter accusations that ministers were more involved than had been publicly acknowledged.

The exams watchdog Ofqual said it would be monitoring this year’s results to ensure the marks are fair. Kathleen Tattersall, the chair of Ofqual, said: “I am pleased that this year 99.9 percent of results have been received by schools on time. Following the problems experienced last year, the timely delivery of results will be welcomed by schools, parents and pupils.

“As regulator, Ofqual is continuing to monitor the quality control of the marking of this year’s papers, and we will be listening to schools about any concerns that they might have. Building on research already done by QCA we will do some further work into the marking quality of this year’s tests with the aim of reporting later this year.”

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