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Daury Jansen; Louise Elffers; Suzanne Jak; Monique L. L. Volman – Oxford Review of Education, 2024
The prevalence of private supplementary tutoring (i.e. shadow education) is growing, particularly in nations with selective school exams. The hypothesis that tutoring attendance rises as pressure to perform increases has not yet been tested. Therefore, our research question is: does the likelihood of attending shadow education increase with an…
Descriptors: Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, Secondary Schools, Foreign Countries
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Ozga, Jenny; Baird, Jo-Anne; Saville, Luke; Arnott, Margaret; Hell, Niclas – Oxford Review of Education, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic suspended established practices that, in normal times, are seen as central to the functioning of education systems. For example, in England, school closures led to the cancellation of national examinations in 2020, and their attempted replacement with an algorithmic model. Following public outcry about what were seen as the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Countries, School Closing
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Prince Agwu; Charles T. Orjiakor; Aloysius Odii; Chinyere Onalu; Chidi Nzeadibe; Pallavi Roy; Obinna Onwujekwe; Uzoma Okoye – Oxford Review of Education, 2024
The importance placed on passing Senior Secondary School Certificate Examinations (SSCE) in Nigeria has led to the emergence of 'Miracle Examination Centres' (MECs). MECs are schools where candidates get undeserving excellent SSCE results through institutionally enabled malpractice. This undermines the Nigerian education sector and its leadership.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Ethics, Certification
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Early, Erin; Miller, Sarah; Dunne, Laura; Moriarty, John – Oxford Review of Education, 2023
Socio-demographic background and school-level factors are influential on an individual's educational outcomes. However, limited research has had the ability to examine the impact of a pupil's socio-demographic profile and school-level factors, whilst accounting for the multidimensional structure of socio-economic status. Using data that combined…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Exit Examinations, Educational Attainment, Foreign Countries
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Jeffrey, Ricky – Oxford Review of Education, 2019
Previous research suggests that knowledge in different subjects varies in terms of objectivity and 'granularity' (division of knowledge content into smaller chunks). It has also been suggested that subject objectivity and granularity vary across different educational systems, due to resource differences. This study measures knowledge objectivity…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Foreign Countries, Intellectual Disciplines, Exit Examinations
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Hansen, Kirstine; Henderson, Morag – Oxford Review of Education, 2019
Gaps in GCSE attainment have long been the concern of policy makers, academics, and social commentators, largely due to the importance of these exams for setting children on their future academic and career pathways. In the past a wide range of factors relating to the pupils, their families, and their schools have been found to account for…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Secondary Education
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Meadows, Michelle; Black, Beth – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
Teachers in England are under pressure to maximise their pupils' examination results, both to improve pupils' life chances and to ensure their school performs well on government accountability measures. This article reports the findings of an anonymous, online, voluntary survey of 548 teachers from secondary schools and colleges. The survey asked…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Accountability, Testing, Qualifications
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Ingram, Jenni; Elliott, Victoria; Morin, Caroline; Randhawa, Ashmita; Brown, Carol – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
There has been a period of intense policy change involving GCSE examinations in England, proposed partly in response to schools using tactics to maximise performance against accountability measures. The reforms included a change to linear rather than modular entry, removing partial re-sits, and limiting early and multiple entry to examinations by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Accountability, Qualifications
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Henderson, Morag; Anders, Jake; Green, Francis; Henseke, Golo – Oxford Review of Education, 2020
With approximately three times the resources per pupil in private compared with state schools, Britain's private sector presents an interesting case of what could be expected from schools that are extremely well resourced. This paper studies the links between private schooling and educational performance in upper secondary school, as measured…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Educational Attainment, Academic Achievement, Secondary School Students
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He, Qingping; Stockford, Ian; Meadows, Michelle – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
Results from Rasch analysis of GCSE and GCE A level data over a period of four years suggest that the standards of examinations in different subjects are not consistent in terms of the levels of the latent trait specified in the Rasch model required to achieve the same grades. Variability in statistical standards between subjects exists at both…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Intellectual Disciplines, Item Response Theory
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Benton, Tom – Oxford Review of Education, 2015
A key predictor of young people's future outcomes is their level of academic achievement whilst at school. In England this is most commonly measured by achievement in GCSEs. However, not all pupils will have taken the same set of GCSE examinations as, for example, they may make different subject choices. For this reason, GCSE performance is often…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Achievement, Exit Examinations, Models
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Dilnot, Catherine – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
English students from less privileged backgrounds and state, rather than private, schools remain significantly under-represented at high-status universities. There has been little work to date on the role of A-level subject choice, as opposed to attainment, in access to university. Using linked administrative data for three recent cohorts of…
Descriptors: Taxonomy, College Entrance Examinations, Exit Examinations, High School Graduates
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Baird, Jo-Anne; Gray, Lena – Oxford Review of Education, 2016
The ways in which examination standards are conceptualised and operationalised differently across nations has not been given sufficient attention. The international literature on standard-setting has been dominated by the psychometrics tradition. Broader conceptualisations of examination standards have been discussed in the literature in England,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Standards, Position Papers, Educational Policy
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Taylor, Rachel Charlotte – Oxford Review of Education, 2016
This study used semi-structured interviews with staff in 14 secondary schools in England to explore strategies for entering students to GCSE Mathematics, focusing on the use of early and multiple examination entry. The key findings suggest that teachers were keenly aware of performativity pressures and that this prompted the use of a number of…
Descriptors: Accountability, Secondary Schools, Exit Examinations, Mathematics Achievement
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Barrance, Rhian; Elwood, Jannette – Oxford Review of Education, 2018
This paper presents data that consider ways in which young people experience the curriculum through the lens of subject examination syllabuses (for GCSEs), their associated assessment techniques and structures, and educational policies at national and school level concerning subject choice. Drawing upon an original qualitative dataset from a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Student Attitudes, Exit Examinations
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