News Review and Commentary
ALARM AT RISING DROP-OUT RATE FOR STUDENT TEACHERS

ALARM AT RISING DROP-OUT RATE FOR STUDENT TEACHERS

7/25/2008 7:04:00 AM

  

The Independent 25 July

 The drop-out rate for would-be teachers is rising – with modern language and maths courses among those with the worst record.A report out today shows that 15 per cent of all trainees drop out before the end of their course (up from 14 per cent last year) with 28 per cent failing to take up a teaching post once they graduate.The report, an annual survey of teacher training courses by Alan Smithers and Pamela Robinson from the University of Buckingham's Centre for Education and Employment, shows fewer modern languages trainees go on to work in the classroom than any other subject – with just 63 per cent ending up in teaching. Classics has the best rate, at 93 per cent.On drop-out rates during the course alone, only 6.9 per cent quit in classics compared with 17.6 per cent in modern languages, 18.5 per cent in maths, 18.7 per cent in religious education and 20 per cent in citizenship.Those who apply for a science or language teaching post are more likely to have lower degree passes than English, history or classics teachers.

Independent

FEW NEW TEACHERS GO FOR ECONOMICS

 

FT 25 July

 Only three graduates in England chose teacher training courses in economics in 2006-07, compared with 84 the previous year. The finding comes from a study by Buckingham university. Professor Alan Smithers said the subject seemed to be "dying out". The government disputed his conclusion, but the low figure will stoke education experts' fears that state schools do not have enough teachers who are expert in the subject. David TurnerCopyright The Financial Times Limited 2008FT

Lead Story | General

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AUTHORS UNITE AGAINST DRIVE FOR TODDLER LITERACY

AUTHORS UNITE AGAINST DRIVE FOR TODDLER LITERACY

7/24/2008 6:56:00 AM

 

Nursery teaching framework sets more than 500 development milestones

 

The Times 24 July

 A powerful lobby of leading authors and educationists accuse the Government today of setting children up for failure.

In a letter to The Times they say that ambitious education targets – including using punctuation before a child turns 5 – are unrealistic and risk harming pre-school children by setting back their development.

 

They accuse Beverley Hughes, the Children’s Minister, of ignoring her advisers and shelving research commissioned by her department because it contradicted policy. Philip Pullman and Michael Morpurgo, the children’s authors, Susie Orbach, the sociologist, and Steve Biddulph, the psychologist, have joined dozens of academics to demand that the reforms be scrapped or turned into a voluntary code before they come into force this autumn.

 Children as young as 4 are expected to write in sentences and use punctuation under the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) framework – widely described as a “toddlers’ curriculum”.

The Times     

  

'EARLY LEARNING POLICIES SHOULD NOT BE IMPOSED'

 

Letter; The Times 24 July

 

Literacy goals are far too advanced for 4-year-olds

 

Sir, Children as young as 4 will be encouraged or even required to write in sentences and use punctuation under the Government’s statutory framework, the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS), being introduced in England this autumn — but resisted elsewhere in the UK. Key aspects of this highly contentious legislation have been widely criticised across the field, with even the Government’s own advisers urging reconsideration, in a letter extracted under the Freedom of Information Act.

 

The department has also recently “shelved” its own commissioned research, which casts large doubts on aspects of the strategy.

 

Beverley Hughes, the Children’s Minister, has now made two alleged “concessions”, but these fail to address the concerns. She has ignored calls to scrap or suspend literacy goals, which are widely deplored as being far too advanced for many young children.

 Her other “concession” — the 34-page exemption process purporting to enable childcare providers to opt out of some of the “learning requirements” — is expertly camouflaged, labyrinthine and bureaucratically complex, appearing to have been intentionally designed to deter anyone from applying.

Until recently, the very idea that practitioners and parents would have to apply for exemption from state educational policies imposed on pre-school-age children would have been quite unthinkable.

 We continue to campaign for the compulsory learning requirements being changed to voluntary guidance; for EYFS to be extended until the end of the school year when children turn 6; and for no achievement targets to be imposed on local authorities before then.

Parents should have the right to choose how their pre-school children are cared for and educated. Young children should also have the right to be protected from an imposed system which harnesses their development to prescribed targets, and which may well force them into inappropriate early learning.

  

Dr Richard House
Senior university lecturer in psychotherapy

 

Graham Kennish
Teacher trainer

 

Kim Simpson
Counsellor/Parent coach/ Montessorian

 all for the “Open EYE” Campaign Steering Groupwww.savechildhood.org   

PRE-SCHOOL CHOICE

 

The Times 24 July

 

The Government has started a furious debate on early years education. It must now find the courage to listen carefully and change tack

 

Despite vehement criticism from experts, parents and practitioners, the Government is pressing ahead with a scheme to standardise pre-school teaching and childcare so that all under-5s are assessed against the same broad range of educational goals.

 

The Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) becomes law in September, in private as well as state-funded nurseries. Ministers could ignore the outcry they have provoked and force parents to go along with the scheme, even though there is strong evidence that it will harm precisely those children whom it is meant to help. Or they could relent, put the children first, and let parents keep the choice in pre-school education that they already enjoy. It would take a major policy reversal, but it is not too late.

 

This scheme is well intentioned. It is also far more radical than the Government admits: the EYFS aims to give all children a comparable start in life regardless of family background. Dickens and Gladstone would have approved, even if neither would have believed it possible.

 Ed Balls, the Minister for Children, Families and Schools, does believe that it is possible, but only through the earliest possible intervention by the State. “Gaps open very early on between children from richer and poorer backgrounds,” as he has said. A four-year-old from an affluent home is likely to have heard three times as many words and vastly more complex sentences than one from a poorer family. That means a larger vocabulary and better speaking, listening and social skills. Hence the exhaustive list of goals (69) to which all children will be expected to aspire by the time they are 5, and the “developmental milestones” (500) they will be expected to pass.

The goals invite mockery. Who honestly expects four-year-old children to “understand what is right, what is wrong and why” or to understand “that there need to be agreed values and codes of behaviour for groups of people ... to work together harmoniously”? But the real problem with the EYFS is not its ambition, but its method.

 

Ministers insist that the programme involves aspirations rather than targets, to be pursued through play rather than conventional teaching. Yet it is goal-driven, mandatory and requires continuous written assessments by teachers and childminders. This has a profound bearing on the atmosphere and ethos of an early-years classroom, and a growing body of research suggests it may actually limit rather than boost later academic attainment: children pushed to read too young often lose their appetite for learning later on. By contrast, a major comparative survey of ten countries indicates the more genuinely free play that children are allowed at pre-school age, the faster their language skills develop.

 Formal schooling already starts a year earlier in England than in most of the rest of Europe, with no obvious effect on standards. The move to impose a national template even earlier in children's lives is hard to rationalise except as a bold piece of social engineering - which itself is likely to fail. Educationally, there are more risks than benefits. Organisationally, it presents childminders with a new administrative challenge so daunting that many have left the profession. Ethically, it limits choice for parents committed to informal educational philosophies such as those of Steiner and Montessori schools. In principle they can now opt out of the EYFS system, but only through a complex application process and only on a trial basis.No child should be left behind. Equally, no government can tell parents what or whether their toddlers should be learning. The EYFS should be made voluntary, not mandatory, leaving the most important decisions about young children to those who know them best.Times 

Lead Story | Foundation

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STATE SCHOOLS JOIN THE REVOLT AGAINST 'TOO EASY' A-LEVELS

STATE SCHOOLS JOIN THE REVOLT AGAINST 'TOO EASY' A-LEVELS

7/23/2008 7:17:00 AM

 

The Independent 23 July

 Fifteen schools yesterday became the first state schools to ditch A-levels in favour of a more traditional rival. A total of 50 schools – including 15 state-maintained schools and colleges – will offer pupils the new Cambridge Pre-U, designed along the lines of the pre-coursework A-levels with tougher essay-style questions, when it becomes available for the first time in September.The new exam poses a threat to the Government's A-level reforms, which will see the introduction of an A* grade for the first time for students starting their course in September. Supporters of Pre-U claim the reforms are "too little, too late".One school, King Edward VI grammar in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, a 500-pupil boys' school, will abandon A-level English on the ground that it no longer prepares pupils for university study, according to its head teacher, Tim Moore-Bridger. The school may also switch pupils to Pre-U in German and French."I have for a long time been dissatisfied with the present structure of A-levels," he said. "I am sure what we're giving pupils at the moment [with A-levels] is not good preparation for university success – in particular the fact that they can go up without having written an essay to speak of."He said that the new modern languages syllabus for A-levels – also to be introduced in September – had cut out the study of literature to concentrate on speaking and listening skills."New A-levels have pretty well removed literature totally from modern languages," he added.Independent

 

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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EDUCATION: CAMBRIDGE EXAM CHIEF WARNS INTERFERENCE BY MINISTERS IS UNDERMINING QUALIFICATIONS

EDUCATION: CAMBRIDGE EXAM CHIEF WARNS INTERFERENCE BY MINISTERS IS UNDERMINING QUALIFICATIONS

7/22/2008 7:18:00 AM

 

The Guardian 22 July

 Ministers are accused of lowering confidence in qualifications by making too many changes. The government has gained unprecedented control of the exams system, interfered in the minutiae of qualifications and contributed to a loss of public confidence in standards, according to the head of Cambridge University's exam board, Greg Watson.He told the Guardian that the government has become intimately involved in the exam system over the past 11 years, introducing so many rapid reforms that they have risked the credibility of GCSEs and A-levels in the eyes of the public. Plans to create an independent exams watchdog, Ofqual, are likely to make the situation worse because it has not been given enough responsibilities, he said. Watson claimed the "politicisation" of the exam system began to significantly increase from 1997. Asked what the impact on standards was, he said: "The big impact is that the public is not sure any more. There's too much change too often. "The more often you change the system and the structures and the balances and the number of units, and the range of grades awarded, the harder it is to look at any year and compare it directly to one year, five years, 10 years, 50 years previously. The reason why the public is uncertain is because every change creates a doubt about whether the standards are being moved."Guardian 

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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£35BN REVAMP WILL PRODUCE GENERATION OF MEDIOCRE SCHOOLS

£35BN REVAMP WILL PRODUCE GENERATION OF MEDIOCRE SCHOOLS

7/21/2008 7:17:00 AM

 

The Guardian 21 July

 The biggest school building programme in a generation is on course to produce billions of pounds worth of "mediocre" facilities, an audit conducted by the government's own architecture watchdog has revealed.An estimated eight out of 10 designs for secondary schools proposed under the £35bn Building Schools for the Future (BSF) initiative are "mediocre" or "not yet good enough" and less than a fifth are considered to be "good" or "excellent".Among the problems discovered in a detailed review of 40 proposed designs for schools across the country are bullying hotspots in secluded yards, noisy open plan areas which make teaching difficult and classrooms which are too dark or prone to overheating on sunny afternoons. The findings from the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (Cabe) were released following a freedom of information request by the Guardian and represent the latest blow to a flagship New Labour programme which Gordon Brown had promised would deliver schools that are "the best equipped in the world for 21st-century learning". Every one of the country's 3,500 secondary schools is to be improved or rebuilt under the initiative by 2020. Ministers believe there is a positive link between pupil performance and investment in school buildings.The Commons select committee on education has launched an inquiry into the quality of the schools being built under the programme and its chairman, Barry Sheerman MP, said he was alarmed by Cabe's findings. He called on the government to throw out any design unless it is classed as good or excellent.Guardian

Lead Story | General | Secondary

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SATS CRISIS

SATS CRISIS

7/20/2008 10:03:00 PM

 TEST MARKING FIASCO 'WILL LEAD TO RECORD NUMBER OF APPEALS' 

The Independent 19 July

 The crisis over this year's national curriculum tests deepened yesterday with headteachers warning there would be record numbers of appeals over marking this year. Worries about the quality of marking of tests for pupils aged 11 and 14 threaten to cast a shadow over the results – which are due to be announced officially early next month.The crisis is leading to growing demands for the tests for 14-year-olds to be scrapped altogether because the system is under such a strain. Yesterday, when the first results of the 14-year-olds' tests were given to schools, it emerged that one in four papers still had to be marked.John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders – which represents secondary school headteachers, said the number of appeals was "almost certain to rocket". He added: "The Government and Ofsted [the education standards watchdog] use the SATs [national curriculum test] results to make judgements about whether schools will fail their inspections and heads can lose their jobs as a result. The results need to be accurate and schools will be much angrier at lack of accuracy than delay."Mick Brookes, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, said his office had been "inundated" by more than 100 emails from members who had not had their results or were worried about the quality of the marking.He has written to Christine Gilbert, chief schools inspector and chief executive of Ofsted, asking her to tell inspectors not to rely on this year's test results in reaching their judgements on schools. Latest complaints from schools include one from Richard Lane, a headteacher in Tamworth, Staffordshire, who said that markers had incorrectly totalled the marks on two maths papers. According to the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, the national curriculum watchdog, one in five primary schools is still missing results. Earlier in the week, Ken Boston, its chief executive, told MPs marking was "100 per cent complete in all subjects".

Independent

  

WATCHDOG WARNS 1M SATS RESULTS COULD BE SCRAPPED

 

The Guardian 19 July 


 The results of more than 1m Sats tests are today called into question by the head of the exams watchdog, who warns that if they are proved to be as inaccurate as reports suggest the government should move to annul them.
Kathleen Tattersall, head of Ofqual, said it is monitoring the quality of papers marked in this year's disastrous round of national tests by the American company ETS. If they are found to be faulty or there is a significant rise in schools appealing over the results it would make a "judgment" and the education secretary, Ed Balls, would have to scrap the results. Further questions have emerged over the future of the national tests sat by 11- and 14-year-olds after two of the three major exam boards confirmed they had not bid for the five-year £165m contract to run the Sats because they did not believe there was a strong enough educational rationale for them. Last night, as most schools closed for the summer, more than 90% of pupils in primaries had their results along with pupils in all subjects in secondaries other than English, where 29% of marks are still not returned, raising new questions over the government's league tables. The first data is due to be published on August 5.  Tattersall said: "If it transpires that both the anecdotal information and the appeals point to a real doubt about the quality ... then the responsible thing for Ofqual to do, because its core business is quality, is to look more closely at that."

Guardian

  

SCHOOL TESTING NOT SATISFACTORY

 

Leader; The Guardian 19 July

 Education is at the heart of progressive government. There is a danger though in its very prominence, for the more important it is to the government, the more the government will want proof that its policies work. As a result, tests intended quite sensibly to measure progress have become a curse, a stress for the children that sit them, a much-hated constraint on the teachers that teach them and, when processed into league tables, a controversial way of informing parents about how good schools are. Now their administration has overwhelmed the company contracted to mark them. The fiasco offers a chance to find a better way of doing things. The lights have been flashing red over the American-owned firm ETS Europe for months now - long enough for the commissioning body, the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, to exercise "to the maximum" (as the chief executive told MPs earlier this week) its power to advise and warn in the run-up to the publication of the results. Ken Boston described such a hair-raising catalogue of administrative failings to MPs last Monday that any parent hearing it would fear for the future of a whelk stall in the company's hands. Yet despite the evident failure, it is reported to be too costly to rescind the contract, making a mockery of the idea of management accountability. Ed Balls, the secretary of state, has yet to explain why, or apologise.Devastating as children, parents and teachers will be finding the non-arrival of results for key stage 2 and 3 Sats, or (worse) the arrival of the wrong results, however, this is merely a sideshow in the larger argument against what the National Association of Head Teachers has called the "hopelessly cumbersome and monolithic" national testing regime. Like school heads, MPs on the cross-party schools committee are calling for a slimmed down, more focused system of national testing. They say it is not possible to test pupil attainment, teacher effectiveness and school accountability through one device. The key stage 3 test for 14-year olds has few supporters and could surely be replaced by in-school teacher assessment.

Guardian

  

DEADLINE FOR APPEALS OVER SATS RESULTS IS EXTENDED

 

The Times 19 July

 The number of appeals over national curriculum test results for 11 and 14-year-old pupils is expected to soar this year, amid concerns that marking has been rushed to deal with a massive backlog of unmarked scripts. The National Assessment Agency has agreed to push back the deadline for appeals until September 10 – or ten days after the start of the autumn term – to deal with an avalanche of expected appeals. This will mean that final marks for many papers are unlikely to be delivered until well into the autumn term, causing difficulties for pupils who are trying to make decisions about which GCSEs to study in the next academic year. The latest marking figures show that more than a quarter of 14-year-old pupils will not get their Key Stage 3 results before the end of term. According to ETS, the private contractor at the centre of the marking debacle, 29 per cent of English results were still not ready for publication yesterday.

The Times

  

US EXAM FIRM TO GET THE SACK

 

Sunday Times 20 July

 The American testing firm responsible for the exam marking fiasco is expected to lose its £156m contract, potentially landing the taxpayer with a multi-million-pound compensation bill. Lawyers for the government’s Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) are this weekend negotiating with ETS to ensure the firm’s deal ends, if possible by mutual consent, once the debacle has been resolved. Ed Balls, the schools secretary, is not intervening directly but sources say he is keen that the talks should extricate him from the embarrassment of having to compensate ETS for ending its five-year contract early. Such a deal could also mean that ETS escapes having to pay compensation for the delays in marking standard assessment tests (Sats), taken by 1.2m pupils aged 11 and 14.

Sun Times

  

FEARS OF NEW CRISIS AFTER EXAM FIASCO

 

The Observer 20 July

 Angry teachers are fearful for next year's tests and call for compensation to be paid to schools  Fallout from the school exams fiasco could plunge next year's tests into chaos, headteachers said yesterday, amid calls for schools to be financially compensated. As teachers prepared to sacrifice part of their summer holidays to sort out the mess, ETS, the American firm at the centre of the debacle, is said to have privately admitted full responsibility. Barry Sheerman MP, chairman of the Children, Schools and Families select committee, said compensation should help those worst hit by the crisis. 'It is obvious that things have gone pretty wrong, and someone should be paying compensation to someone for the mistakes that have been made,' he told The Observer. 'If anyone should get it, it should be the schools and the pupils who have had all the stress.' He also demanded that schools should not to be charged for any papers they send back to be re-marked, adding: 'I am fearful for next year unless people really get their act together.'

Observer

  

DELIVER US, MINISTER, FROM YOUR DREADFUL INCOMPETENCE

 

Minette Marrin Sunday Times 20 July

 ‘Delivering on” is one of the worst of the ugly new expressions of the new Labour era. However, as with most of Labour politicians’ promises, “delivering on” is something that they don’t actually do. It seems they can’t.This past week jaws everywhere must have been dropping at the school exams fiasco. Hundreds of thousands of children broke up for the summer holidays on Friday without knowing their Sats results – due on July 8 – because they aren’t ready. Some papers haven’t been marked, some haven’t even been collected and it now seems that many have been lost or wrongly graded by examiners of doubtful quality. All 1.2m papers may have to be remarked. Children, teachers and parents must be beside themselves with disappointment and anger.Sun Times 

 

 

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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SATS: EXAM MELTDOWN

SATS: EXAM MELTDOWN

7/18/2008 7:00:00 AM

 

The Independent 18 July

 Thousands of children are caught in the chaos of this summer's SATs tests. Is an American firm to blame or are there just too many exams, asks Richard GarnerThe head of the Government's exams watchdog could not have put the dilemma more succinctly. There are 40,000 English teachers in secondary schools, said Ken Boston, the chief executive of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) – the Government's regulatory body for national curriculum assessments and tests. Between them, they have to mark GCSE papers taken by 600,000 pupils, A-levels by 250,000, AS-level papers from 250,000 and national curriculum tests for 14-year-olds by a further 550,000. Given that each exam includes two papers and the tests for 14-year-olds three, that is more than 800 scripts per teacher – even if every one of those 40,000 was enticed by the lure of between £1 and £2 a script to volunteer as a marker. Against that background, a new contractor – the American company ETS – is brought in on a contract to deliver the test results for 11 and 14-year-olds (known as SATs) earlier than they have been delivered for the past four years – by 8 July. The result? Failure and chaos throughout the national curriculum testing system. In truth, said MPs who questioned Dr Boston about the fiasco earlier this week, warning bells should have sounded much earlier.It should have sounded an alarm with the QCA, argued members of the Commons Select Committee on Children, Schools and Families, when two of the UK's biggest exam boards, the Assessment and Qualifications Alliance and the OCR (Oxford and Cambridge and Royal Society of Arts), did not bid for the tests' contract. With their knowledge of the education system, it is being argued, they privately knew that what was being asked of the contractor could not be delivered.

Independent

  

LEADING ARTICLE: TOO MANY EXAMS, TOO MUCH PURE INCOMPETENCE

 

Leader; The Independent 18 July

 The fiasco over this year's Standard Assessment Tests (Sats) is more than just a failure to deliver on time. It is a self-inflicted wound on the educational system that will affect the ranking of schools and the marking of papers for years to come. Just how the exams authority came to negotiate such a flawed contract, and just how the US company concerned got it so wrong, has yet to be established. But it is something that the Schools Secretary Ed Balls – currently refusing to acknowledge any responsibility for the mess – is going to have to come forth and explain. Apologies (which incidentally Balls still won't give) are not enough. What schools and children need to know is what is going to happen to the results this summer, and whether the same company, which has been given a five-year contract, can be trusted in the future.Dr Ken Boston, the chief executive of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, which was in charge of negotiating and overseeing the contract, has admitted that the date for publishing next year's results has already been put back. It thus becomes clearer by the day that the current system of testing is unsustainable and has to be reformed. The simplest and best way – from an educational point of view – would be to scrap the tests for 14-year-olds altogether. They are supposed to check pupils' progress as they approach GCSEs and could easily be replaced by an internal assessment of pupils by their teachers. Dr Boston calculated that, in any one year, almost 1,700,000 secondary-school pupils are taking tests or exams in English for which external markers have to be found. There are only a maximum of 40,000 English teachers to mark them. It is proving an impossible conundrum which only an easing of the current testing pressures can solve. Independent  

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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UNIVERSITIES SHUN A-LEVELS FOR OWN ADMISSIONS TESTS

UNIVERSITIES SHUN A-LEVELS FOR OWN ADMISSIONS TESTS

7/17/2008 8:51:00 AM

 

The Independent 17 July

 At least 18 universities are setting their own admissions tests because they believe they can no longer rely on A-level results alone to gauge a candidate's ability, a report reveals today. Universities UK – the body representing vice-chancellors – estimates that one in seven of its 132 members has introduced such exams.Its findings are a further blow to the credibility of A-levels, and have angered critics who claim the university entrance tests will help middle-class students whose parents can afford coaching for them. Many of those setting their own exams are members of the Russell Group of elite universities and institutions. The tests, used mainly for popular courses such as law or medicine, include aptitude exercises, essay writing, critical thinking and subject-specific examinations, in addition to other forms of testing such as interviews and auditions.Independent

Lead Story | FE/HE/ Skills

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EDUCATION: EXPAND ACADEMY MODEL INTO PRIMARY SECTOR, SAYS THINKTANK

EDUCATION: EXPAND ACADEMY MODEL INTO PRIMARY SECTOR, SAYS THINKTANK

7/16/2008 7:01:00 AM

    

The Guardian 16 July

  Privately sponsored, state-funded academies should be expanded to take over failing primary schools according to a book published today and backed by the three big political parties.The failure of primary schools to teach large numbers of pupils to read and write is masked by a political focus on secondary schools, the book argues.An "extraordinary complacency" around primaries is fuelling poor results at GCSE by badly equipping pupils to learn from an early age, the book says. Children in disadvantaged areas of the country, where the academy programme is focused, are worst affected.The book, titled Academies and produced by the liberal thinktank CentreForum, includes chapters from leading academy heads, sponsors, the minister for academies, Lord Adonis, and Conor Ryan, a former education adviser to the Blair government. It marks a fresh political consensus on academies bringing together Adonis, CentreForum which is closely linked to the Liberal Democrat leadership, and the Conservative party.Michael Gove, shadow education secretary, will take part in the book's launch.Guardian

Lead Story | Primary

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WATCHDOG HITS OUT AT TEST CHAOS

WATCHDOG HITS OUT AT TEST CHAOS

7/15/2008 7:16:00 AM

   

FT 15 July

 The head of England's qualifications watchdog has painted a picture of chaos in exam marking for key tests taken by all state school 11- and 14-year-olds. Ken Boston, chief executive of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, told MPs that markers had been given wrong information about the location and time of training, unmarked scripts had been incorrectly returned to schools, and markers had experienced delays in getting papers.The marking of the exams - Key Stage Two and Key Stage Three - has been outsourced to ETS, the education company. Mr Boston was speaking before the children, schools and families select committee of the House of Commons, to which he had been summoned to explain this year's exam problems.Key Two Stage Two results will be published today, one week late. Most Key Stage Three results will be later this week.

FT

  

SCHOOL TEST RESULTS FIASCO MAY RESULT IN EDUCATIONAL TESTING SERVICE BEING SACKED

 

The Times 15 July

 The fiasco over delayed school test results affecting millions of children could result in the company responsible being sacked and forced to pay back tens of millions of pounds. Ken Boston, the head of the exams regulator, said after an emergency hearing of MPs yesterday, that the testing system was under stress and needed modernising. He added that problems were unlikely to be resolved in time for next year’s tests. Thousands of parents are expected to challenge the results, encouraged by the adverse publicity surrounding this year’s exams. This week Mick Brookes, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, said schools were reporting “all kinds of problems” with marking, and told parents that they should not rely on SATs [national curriculum test] results as the sole indicator of their child’s progress. He urged schools to give parents teachers’ assessments of pupils, as well as SATs results, and advised that these be treated as “provisional”. Yesterday Dr Boston, the chief executive of the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, claimed that the company, ETS, had failed to respond to 10,000 e-mails. His officials were forced to set up and pay for a call centre to cope with complaints to the company.

Times

  

WE SHOULD HAVE LEARNT FROM US EDUCATIONAL TESTING SERVICE EXPERIENCE

 

Alexandra Frean:The Times July 15

 The marking of this year’s national curriculum tests for 11 to 14-year-olds has, by any measure, been a shambles. But it would be a mistake to regard the problem as a new one. Head teachers know only too well that every year there are problems of one kind of another with the marking of the 9.5 million papers sat by 1.2 million students. Results have been published late before, most notably in 1998 and again in 2004, when the head of the National Assessment Agency resigned after a delay of three months in getting out accurate Key Stage 3 English results. Many of the problems can be laid squarely at door of ETS Europe, the contractor that took over marking the papers this year on a £150 million, five-year contract. Problems began to emerge last October when some senior markers resigned because of new approaches to the way that the Key Stage tests would be marked. By early spring, markers were reporting a series of administrative problems, including ETS failing to register their contract details, difficulties in contacting the company by telephone or e-mail, delays in training and the failure of a system for selecting English markers. Once children had taken the exams there were delays in the papers being sent to markers, some scripts went astray and many markers received the wrong batches of scripts. In the past, marking was administered by Edexcel, one of the three main examination boards in England. When ETS took over the marking this year it embraced new technology, using online training and verification for markers and for recording results. In so doing it discarded years of experience and loyalty built up among the workforce of markers, who are mostly part-time teachers trying to earn some extra holiday money (the pay is £3.50 per script, plus a 50p administration fee).

Times

  

EDUCATIONAL TESTING SERVICE: AMERICAN MARKERS HAD EARLIER PROBLEMS

 

The Times 15 July

 Educational Testing Service (ETS) Europe is being paid £165 million of public money over five years to mark key stage tests for schools. This is its first year in the role and it has already run into problems, prompting complaints from head teachers, MPs and the exams regulator over delays in returning test results. Other apparent problems have involved its software, helpline and face-to-face training. It took over the marking of 9.5 million papers from the exam board Edexcel. ETS Europe is part of ETS, a huge non-profit making American organisation with extensive test administration experience in 180 countries. In the US it is responsible for running SATs tests, but recently lost the contract for the Graduate Management Admission Test, worth a reported £100 million. It has a controversial history of alleged mistakes in its marking of American test papers. These included inaccurate scoring in an exam used to license teachers in 2004, resulting in more than 4,000 people failing when they should have been given a pass. In 2006 ETS announced a year-long delay in introducing revised exams for graduates. A spokeswoman for the Princeton Review, an education company, said at the time: “ETS has never met a deadline they have set. We are not surprised at all.” An ETS spokesman said recently that he had no knowledge of any previous problems in other countries. However, that ETS was given an important contract was heavily criticised. Nick Gibb, the Tory schools spokesman, said: “There was a clear lack of due diligence taken when awarding this contract.” Times 

Lead Story | Curriculum / Quality Assurance

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