Private School Investigation Into Alleged Inflated Top Grades Must Be Transparent and have Deadlines

Private School Investigation Into Alleged Inflated Top Grades Must Be Transparent and have Deadlines

By Joshua Hopwood

The investigation of private schools for malpractice by exam boards following alleged ‘credible evidence’ for over-inflated grades, must be transparent, and have deadlines. It must reveal outcomes sooner rather than later.

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Investigations of this nature must be speedy and should not take long to provide concrete evidence of inflated top grades in private schools, if indeed credible evidence exists to support such allegations.

Private schools are being investigated for malpractice after  alleged “credible evidence”  of some over-inflated teacher grades issued when exams were cancelled due to Covid, but details of the credible evidence have not been forthcoming.
Alleged credible evidence that are neither outlined nor even confidentially revealed to relevant officials begin to lack authenticity and the very credibility claimed, because of the failure to demonstrate the claim within reasonable time. It doesn’t take long to reveal credible evidence, and evidence of such nature does not call for much of an investigation.
Evidence of cheating by accredited teachers will immediately call for a sacking, as the integrity of well paid private teachers have been called into question. the uncorroborated claims are waiting to be proven, and sensible deadlines must be set if they are to be taken seriously.
Clear and incontrovertible evidence of inflated grades in as few as two private schools would be enough to raise alarm, if proven. The disparity between  top grade at G.C.S.E and an inferior grade will be easy to establish and shouldn’t take long.

Top grades at private schools were on the high when exams were cancelled and replaced with teacher grades, but there are several potential explanations for that. Pupils in private schools are generally more studious than those attending state schools, and often have dedicated expensive tutors who assist them with both homework and coursework, and regular academic development.

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private school pupils are also generally encouraged to read wider outside the curriculum.

The higher fees or independent schools are also representative of the well off background of its students, and the fact these pupils most times come from  highly educated and disciplined  backgrounds with top intellectual  regular training.

Performance of pupils in school can be different from under exam conditions, but most important is the fact that it was a different cohort of pupils taking exams this year than last year in private schools.  Exam conditions pose different challenges for different types of pupils.

The fact grades for pupils dropped this year when pupils had to sit exams has been erroneously used as evidence that grades were inflated the year before.

The fact top grades for grammar schools showed very little sign of  falling has strengthened the narrative of  those alleging inflated grades.

One fact ignored is that while grammar school pupils all had to pass their eleven plus to gain admission there, not all private schools have strict entry requirements. In many cases, having the right cash to pay for the high fees suffices to guarantee joining a private school.

Grammar school students are almost all assumed to have a strong primary school foundation, whereas not all private school pupils necessarily hail from the same background from primary school.

An overall drop in private school top grades this year is not enough evidence to suggest inflated grades, but the stated credible evidence of inflated grades needs to be presented sooner rather than later. It is unacceptable to suggest cheating without providing the associated evidence to support it.

Some experts suggested the data may support arguments that independent schools inflated last year’s grades, others urged caution on drawing conclusions.

Rob Halfon, chair of the education select committee, asked Saxton today whether this was evidence private schools “gamed the teacher assessed system”.

“Tempting as it is to make comparisons, it was a totally different form of assessment. That said, Ofqual takes all allegations of malpractice and cheating extremely seriously,” she said.

“We require the boards to investigate any credible evidence of malpractice and cheating. I know there are ongoing investigations.”

Pressed further at the hearing into this year’s exam results, Saxton clarified that there were individual cases of malpractice being investigated at private schools.

She said while exam boards run the investigation, Ofqual is tasked with monitoring them – so she was unable to comment further.

On the more broader issue of the difference in grades between private and state schools, Saxton said: “It’s one of reasons I was incredibly glad we could reinstate exams – it proves exams are the fairest form of assessment.

“It’s similar to the unfortunate issue we see with regions. There were differences in results in independent schools and other school types that existed prior to the pandemic.

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“They were exacerbated without exams and we’ve seen the results from 2022 are closer to those that existed prior to the pandemic”.

 

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