Thursday, 23 August 2012

The AQA boundary changes explained...

Ok, below is my best attempt to visually show you what the changes to the grade thresholds AQA have made mean to a student in the 2012/13 cohort. It is also worth remembering in this very complex year that students were also able to take the very last 'legacy' cycle of the old GCSE in November of 2011, which has now expired. This means that Year 11 students in 2011/12 had the potential for THREE points of entry for GCSE English Language, and goes some way to explain why the picture nationally is so mixed. Schools enter students for various different units at different points in the year. Some schools do no early entry, others try and bank all their GCSE English grades early on in January of Year 11 (or even in Year 10!) to enable them to focus on other subjects.Some will enter certain sets or classes early, others will give everyone two attempts at the exam and enter the children twice. The rights and wrongs of this is a different debate for another time.

The main issue that has emerged today is that the grade boundary changes introduced between this January and June have meant that children who schools confidently estimated to be securing a certain grade were in fact not doing so, where the same work/level of ability would have secured that estimated grade earlier in the same academic year.

In short, if you were entered early you will have done significantly better for the same quality of work. This is where the injustice lies. Not in the changing of boundaries as a concept (leave the grade inflation debate for another day), but in the change mid-year, without notification, and with the effect of many students missing their targets and teacher/college forecasts being incorrect. Teachers work hard to help students reach the highest level they are capable of. What has happened is like a teacher marking out a finish line for a student to run to, firing the starter pistol and the authorities moving the finish line 100m further on while the teacher is busy watching the student run as fast as they can.

AQA GCSE English Language
Unit 1 is the examination. It can be sat in either January or June and is worth 40% (marked out of 80). There are two tiers of entry.
 Higher
Grade A*
Grade A
Grade B
Grade
C
Grade D
Grade E
Grade F
Grade G
Jan 2012
61 
54
47
41
33
-
-
-
June 2012
61 (-)
55 (+1)
49 (+2)
44 (+3)
39 (+6)
-
-
-
Foundation
Grade A*
Grade A
Grade B
Grade
C
Grade D
Grade E
Grade F
Grade G
Jan 2012
-
-
-
43
33
23
13
3
June 2012
-
-
-
53(+10)
41 (+8)
30 (+7)
19 (+6)
8 (+5)




AQA GCSE English Language
Unit 2 is Speaking and Listening. It is teacher assessed and marks are moderated by visiting examiners. Tasks are undertaken throughout the course. The marks can be submitted for either January or June cycles. A mark of 45 is awarded by the teacher, Unit 2 is worth 20% of the GCSE.
 
Grade A*
Grade A
Grade B
Grade
C
Grade D
Grade E
Grade F
Grade G
Jan 2012
41
37
31
25
20
15
11
7
June 2012
41 (-)
38 (+1)
33 (+2)
28 (+3)
23 (+3)
18 (+3)
13 (+2)
8 (+1)


 
AQA GCSE English Language
Unit 3 is Controlled Assessment. It is teacher assessed with a sample taken for external moderation. Tasks are undertaken throughout the course. The final folder comprises of four written pieces of work. Unit 3 is worth 40% of the GCSE. Folders may be submitted in either the January or June cycle. The same tasks were eligible for submission in Jan ’12 as June ’12. An overall mark out of 80 is submitted for the folder.
 
Grade A*
Grade A
Grade B
Grade
C
Grade D
Grade E
Grade F
Grade G
Jan 2012
72
64
53
43
34
25
16
7
June 2012
41 (-)
64 (-)
55 (+2)
46 (+3)
36 (+2)
27 (+2)
18 (+2)
9 (+2)





 
These charts reveal that a student sitting the Foundation exam in June of 2012 would have needed an additional 16 marks (7.8%) to secure an overall grade C than a student in the same cohort did in January 2012. Had the student’s teacher submitted their controlled assessment folder of work in January 2012 with a mark of 43, the student would have secured a C for Unit 3. In June, the same work in the same folder would earn them a D. The same is true of speaking and listening work. It is a fortunate student whose work was submitted in January instead of June. Same work, different outcome.
Please note. I have tried to be accurate here; it is possible I have made a mistake, but I don't think I have. One might be forgiven when you look at the sheer stupifying complexity of assessment of English at GCSE!
Key questions:
* Why was the change made and who authorised it?
* Is this change the same across all exam boards?
* Has any pressure been applied politically to bring down pass rates?
* Was a mistake made early in the year which required the thresholds to be adjusted to avoid a large increase in pass rate (if so, this hardly seems fair)?
* Was Mr Gove aware of this situation before today?
* Will Ofsted take this situation into account when deciding whether schools' attainment is worthy of one of their special categories?
Discuss...






6 comments:

  1. Under everything, behind every headline and after all the wrangling there are thousands of young people today across the country who feel betrayed.

    They think they have been let down by their teachers, or their school ... those that can comprehend the wider political picture feel let down by the Government who are meant to be there to serve their best interests.

    Today I had to break the news to 33 pupils who were told, repeatedly, by their teachers that if they did in the exam what we were seeing in school then they would gain that "magical" grade C. We based this entirely on deep analysis of exactly how pupils had done in the January entry. We knew that exam inside out, we could recite grade descriptors in our sleep and the pupils knew exactly how they needed to prepare.

    All for naught.

    Today I had to watch, powerless, as those young people who deserved to get a C have their hopes ripped from them.

    Let Gove tell them how he has raised standards and helped them achieve their "true potential".

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  2. Michael Gove forgets that all those children he has let down today will be able to vote in the next election.

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  3. Except Richard they won't vote.

    I'm not against moving grade boundaries but the spin today was that grade boundaries always change (in raw marks yes they do but not by the extent we have seen today)so schools and teachers should always be aware of this. A case of shifting the blame in the political game that Gove plays yet again.

    If the grade boundaries change then they need to change at the start of the cohort. Gove has managed this with the changes to the Level 2 equivalents from 2014 onwards giving sufficient warning (although the publication of the L2 equivalent qualifications accepted in 2014 did not help schools being published on 31st January- after most options had been decided).

    Unfortunately there is no group or political party that wishes to criticise this clear injustice.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Spot on Richard. A few of my students missed out on a C. When I first noticed this I was petrified, thinking I had made a mistake in adding up the controlled assessment numbers. Then I realised they had CHANGED the numbers.
    I can only assume that the person who authorised this did not fully understand the injustice that would be inflicted upon students. Why couldn't they just have waited until next school year?

    What politician will be brave enough to take on the powers that be?
    Some people in Ofqual and AQA should be held to account (they should lose their jobs!) and the grade boundaries should be shifted back to what they were in January. Simple really!

    ReplyDelete
  5. *cough* I think you've got one of your figures wrong - June 2012 Unit 3 A* boundary can't be 41, must be around 70-72 to fit the rest of the pattern.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thanks Tom - well spotted! It is 72.

    ReplyDelete