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Newton, Paul E. – Research Papers in Education, 2022
There are two major myths concerning A level exam standards in England. First, the Ancient Myth, which insists that standards were norm-referenced until the 1980s, when they transitioned to being criterion-referenced. Second, the Modern Myth, which insists that standards transitioned again, during the 2010s, to being based upon the comparable…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Misconceptions, Exit Examinations, Norm Referenced Tests
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Victoria Crisp; Gill Elliott; Emma Walland; Lucy Chambers – Research Papers in Education, 2025
In England, examinations for general qualifications (GCSE, AS and A level) were cancelled in summer 2020 and summer 2021 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and replaced with contingency measures involving teacher judgements. For summer 2020, the intention was to calculate grades using rankings provided by centres, prior attainment data for the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Achievement Tests, Exit Examinations
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Benton, Tom; Elliott, Gill – Research Papers in Education, 2016
In recent years the use of expert judgement to set and maintain examination standards has been increasingly criticised in favour of approaches based on statistical modelling. This paper reviews existing research on this controversy and attempts to unify the evidence within a framework where expertise is utilised in the form of comparative…
Descriptors: Reliability, Expertise, Mathematical Models, Standard Setting (Scoring)
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Rigby, Chloe – Research Papers in Education, 2017
Children experience numerous types of learning transitions throughout their educational lives physically (changing schools) and substantively (moving through different key stages in school), and daily (in moving between subjects). One transition that is frequently overlooked within the British education system is that from the General Certificate…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Student Experience, Secondary Education, Student Adjustment
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Johnson, Sandra – Research Papers in Education, 2013
For a number of reasons, increasing reliance is being placed on teacher assessment in high-stakes contexts in many countries around the world. Simultaneously, countries that have for some time relied to greater or lesser degrees on teacher assessment for high-stakes purposes are in the process of questioning the validity of that reliance. In…
Descriptors: Reliability, Student Evaluation, High Stakes Tests, Evidence
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Bramley, Tom; Dhawan, Vikas – Research Papers in Education, 2013
This paper discusses the issues involved in calculating indices of composite reliability for "modular" or "unitised" assessments of the kind used in GCSEs, AS and A level examinations in England. The increasingly widespread use of on-screen marking has meant that the item-level data required for calculating indices of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Secondary Education, Test Reliability
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Bradshaw, Jenny; Wheater, Rebecca – Research Papers in Education, 2013
This review examined a range of approaches internationally to the reporting of assessment results for individual students, with a particular focus on how results are represented, the level of detail reported and the steps taken to quantify, report and explain error and uncertainty in the results' reports or certificates given to students in a…
Descriptors: Test Reliability, Error of Measurement, High Stakes Tests, Foreign Countries
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Stringer, Neil Simon – Research Papers in Education, 2012
General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) and General Certificate of Education (GCE) grading standards are determined by Awarding Bodies using procedures that adhere to the Code of Practice published by the regulator, Ofqual. Grade boundary marks (cut scores) are set using subject experts' (senior examiners) judgement of the quality of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Exit Examinations, Grading
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Wheadon, Christopher – Research Papers in Education, 2013
This paper describes how item response theory (IRT) methods of test-equating could be applied to the maintenance of public examination standards in England. IRT methods of test-equating have been sparingly applied to the main public examinations in England, namely the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE), the equivalent of a school…
Descriptors: Test Theory, Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Item Response Theory
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Ball, Stephen; Maguire, Meg; Braun, Annette; Perryman, Jane; Hoskins, Kate – Research Papers in Education, 2012
This paper, based on ESRC-funded research work in four case study schools, explores the "pressures" to "deliver" which bear upon English secondary schools in relation to GCSE performance. It further illustrates the ways in which pressure is transformed into tactics which focus on particular students, with the effect of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Case Studies, Exit Examinations
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Suto, W. M. Irenka; Nadas, Rita – Research Papers in Education, 2009
It has long been established that marking accuracy in public examinations varies considerably among subjects and markers. This is unsurprising, given the diverse cognitive strategies that the marking process can entail, but what makes some questions harder to mark accurately than others? Are there distinct but subtle features of questions and…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Physics, Interviews, Examiners
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Stringer, Neil – Research Papers in Education, 2008
Advocates of using a US-style SAT for university selection claim that it is fairer to applicants from disadvantaged backgrounds than achievement tests because it assesses potential, not achievement, and that it allows finer discrimination between top applicants than GCEs. The pros and cons of aptitude tests in principle are discussed, focusing on…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Aptitude Tests, Achievement Tests, College Admission