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Showing 1 to 15 of 117 results Save | Export
Tom Bramley; Carmen Vidal Rodeiro; Frances Wilson – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2024
Traditionally in England, exam results in General Certificates of Secondary Education (GCSEs) (and before them O levels) and A levels have been reported as letter grades, with A (or A*) as the top grade, then B, C etc. The reforms gave the opportunity to revisit the arguments for different formats of reporting, and Cambridge Assessment contributed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Rating Scales, Scoring Formulas
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Rebecca Clarkson – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
Primary school teachers in England are responsible for the statutory assessment of writing, using a set of criteria. The aim of this research was to analyse the responses of teachers to the criteria "at the expected" standard. An elicitation exercise with 10 primary school teachers was conducted, where teachers talked through their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Educational Assessment, Writing Evaluation
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Matthew Inglis; Colin Foster; Hugues Lortie-Forgues; Elizabeth Stokoe – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
We analysed the full text of all journal articles returned to the education subpanel of the 2021 Research Excellence Framework (REF2021). Using a latent Dirichlet allocation topic model, we identified 35 topics that collectively summarise the journal articles that research units, typically schools of education, selected for submission. We found…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Research
Tom Benton – Research Matters, 2024
Educational assessment is used throughout the world for a range of different formative and summative purposes. Wherever an assessment is developed, whether by a teacher creating a quiz for their class, or by a testing company creating a high stakes assessment, it is necessary to decide how long the test should be. Specifically, how many questions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High Stakes Tests, Test Length, Test Construction
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Kathryn Telling – European Educational Research Journal, 2024
The cry that today's higher education students are particularly individualist is a commonly-heard one. In England, the considerable personal cost of tuition is often blamed for creating a series of negative student traits, including consumerism (an idea that one has bought the right to a degree) and individualism (a sense of the individual as the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Evaluation Criteria, Individualism
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Williamson, Joanna; Child, Simon – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2022
School- and college-based vocational and technical qualifications (VTQs) in England are required to award successful candidates a grade rather than simple pass or fail. Ensuring the reliability and validity of these grades is considered vital, particularly in light of the high-stakes purposes for which school assessment results in England are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Vocational Education, Qualifications, Student Evaluation
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Francesca Mccarthy – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2024
This paper examines the reactions of English pupils who were preparing for GCSE and A-Level examinations to the 2020 exam cancellations resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. In doing so, it addresses a gap in international research related to high stakes testing by presenting pupils' perspectives. It uses a Bourdieusian framework to explore the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Exit Examinations, Standardized Tests
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Al-Imarah, Ahmed A.; Shields, Robin; Kamm, Richard – Quality in Higher Education, 2021
Both innovation and quality assurance are prominent concerns in higher education institutions but research is ambiguous with respect to the relationship between quality assurance and innovation. Specifically, it is unclear whether quality assurance supports innovation or, conversely, acts as a hindrance. As a relatively new innovation, massive…
Descriptors: Quality Assurance, Educational Quality, Technological Advancement, Educational Innovation
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Watermeyer, Richard; Chubb, Jennifer – Studies in Higher Education, 2019
Little is known about the process of evaluating the economic and societal impact of research undertaken in university settings. In this paper, we explore the accounts of senior academics and user-assessors, populating disciplinary sub-panels spanning the humanities and social sciences, convened to judge and 'score' the impact claims of researchers…
Descriptors: Outcome Measures, Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Public Policy
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Brooks, Greg; Beard, Roger; Ampaw-Farr, Jaz – Research Papers in Education, 2021
From 2006 the British government strongly favoured synthetic phonics as the principal approach for the teaching of initial literacy in state-funded primary schools in England, and since 2010 has made it mandatory. In 2007-2013 just over 100 commercially published phonics schemes were available, and in that same period the government maintained a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English, Phonics, Basal Reading
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Belluigi, Dina – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2020
This paper explores the conflicts engendered during the artist's formation due to repeated submission to assessment in formal creative arts education. In a comparative qualitative study of two visuals arts practice undergraduate curricula, the underlying interpretative approaches to intentionality were uncovered to comprehend the impact of the…
Descriptors: Art Education, Visual Arts, Undergraduate Study, College Curriculum
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Susan Smith; Kimiya Akhyani; Dan Axson; Andrei Arnautu; Ilina Stanimirova – International Journal for Students as Partners, 2021
This case study outlines a staff-student partnership to co-create generic assessment criteria to use in a UK business school. It highlights the potential for staff-student partnerships to create a temporary subfield, in which the established power differentials of academia are dissolved and partnership values can be established. We draw on a…
Descriptors: Evaluation Criteria, Partnerships in Education, Business Schools, Teacher Student Relationship
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Herold, Frank – European Physical Education Review, 2020
This paper focuses on how physical education (PE) teachers interpreted and implemented a new, minimalist and traditionalist National Curriculum for Physical Education (NCPE) in England. Utilising a single-method, cross-sectional design, 43 teachers participated in semi-structured interviews which explored their approach to teaching the new…
Descriptors: Physical Education Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, National Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Laing, Anna F. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2021
Student-led movements have called for the decolonization of the Higher Education (HE) system in the UK, as well as elsewhere. Much of the onus within British geography has been on decolonizing geographical knowledges, recognizing the role of the discipline in the colonial project. This paper expands on these literatures by examining how work on…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Geography Instruction, Universities, Foreign Countries
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Glackin, Melissa; Greer, Kate – School Science Review, 2021
This article provides an up-to-date list of reasons for teachers to create a case for residential fieldwork. The list was developed as part of a project examining 'learning journeys' of inner-urban school visits to residential field centres in England. Uniquely, it draws from the perspectives of students and teachers in light of the changes to…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, COVID-19, Pandemics
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