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Exam results expected to be substantially higher than normal this year
walesonline.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from walesonline.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
This is what a GCSE results day looks like in 2021 as delighted pupils get their results two months early
walesonline.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from walesonline.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Welsh exam bosses deny claim a mutant algorithm is being used for this year s GCSEs and A-levels
Fresh warnings from teachers of a mutant algorithm by the backdoor are wrong, insists exam board
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Exam board the WJEC has defended the process to decide this year’s exam grades as teachers, students and parents continue to complain it is unfair again.
Teachers are all grading this year s A-levels and GCSEs differently
Some learners will be entirely assessed on sat exam-style papers, while some will be assessed mainly on non-exam style evidence. Most will have a combination of both but even that has huge variations.
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Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy notice The vast variation in how learners in Wales are being assessed for cancelled GCSE and A level grades this summer has been laid bare.
Ulster Herald
Advertisement Posted: 4:00 pm May 9, 2021
By Victoria Housden
AN Omagh Academy student, who wrote to the Education Minister expressing concerns about how GSCE grades were being determined during the pandemic, has spoken out against the Peter Weir’s ‘disappointing’ response.
In an email to Minister Weir, pupil Daniel Hetherington penned his concerns about ‘the way the GCSE grades were being determined, and the inappropriate stress and pressure this was putting pupils under’.
The 16-year-old also outlined that he was ‘sitting more exams’ than what was usual in a pre-pandemic world, with ‘less time to prepare’.
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Speaking to the UH, Daniel explained, “I was concerned about the way that GCSE grades were being determined, and the inappropriate stress and pressure this was putting pupils under. This was made much worse by the poor guidance handed down from the Minister and CCEA.
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