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UK Department for Education, 2025
This report estimates the monetary impact of one day of school absence within state-funded English secondary schools. First, the authors model the association between absence in Years 7-11 and Key Stage 4 attainment. Then, they apply these results to previous departmental research on the lifetime earnings returns to education. Combining these…
Descriptors: Attendance, Income, Wages, Economic Impact
Carmen Vidal Rodeiro – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic caused unprecedented disruption to education systems around the world. In England, as part of the government's response to the pandemic, schools and colleges were closed and lessons were moved partially or entirely online. Furthermore, public examinations in June 2020 were cancelled, meaning that methods had to be developed…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Change, Exit Examinations
David Bray – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2024
This short article notes the disruption to public examinations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and resultant lockdowns. This provides a context to examine the way normreferencing controls the distribution of grades in England's test and examination system. This is viewed as 'the elephant in the exam room', something accepted, normalisedand hidden…
Descriptors: Norm Referenced Tests, COVID-19, Pandemics, Criterion Referenced Tests
Yeadon, Will; Inyang, Oto-Obong; Mizouri, Arin; Peach, Alex; Testrow, Craig P. – Physics Education, 2023
The latest AI language modules can produce original, high quality full short-form (300-word) Physics essays within seconds. These technologies such as ChatGPT and davinci-003 are freely available to anyone with an internet connection. In this work, we present evidence of AI generated short-form essays achieving First-Class grades on an essay…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Physics, Essays, Science Instruction
Rodeiro, Carmen Vidal; Williamson, Joanna – Research Matters, 2023
In England, GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) qualifications offered to students aged 14-16 were recently reformed. For mathematics specifically, the new GCSE aimed to be more demanding, provide greater challenge for the most able students, and support progression to post-16 mathematics. However, there have been concerns that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Exit Examinations, Secondary School Students, Mathematics Tests
Neil Francis Peirson – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2025
Virtual laboratories (VL) can provide students with learning experiences simulating practical experiments in a traditional laboratory. Evidence is presented that students believe in the truth of results from the VL as well as those from the traditional laboratory. The underlying reasons for these beliefs are explored, through Russell's description…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Science Laboratories, Student Attitudes, College Students
Jane, Philip – Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, 2023
Toward the end of the nineteenth century a number of external music examining systems were introduced to New Zealand. Two of them, Trinity College, London, and the Associated Board, gained a strong following and became de facto standards in the absence of a national music conservatorium. This article briefly outlines the beginning of external…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music Education, Grades (Scholastic), Student Evaluation
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
Tim Gill – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2025
The main aim of this research was to investigate the impact of reducing the number of components on overall performance in GCSE subjects. In particular, researchers were interested in how the grade achieved by candidates on a reduced number of components compares to their grade on the full qualification. This research mainly looked at GCSEs with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Skills, Mathematics Tests
Tom Benton – Research Matters, 2025
This research draws on evidence from three qualifications taken in autumn 2020, when comparative judgement (CJ) was used as a key source of data in setting grade boundaries. In these cases, a separate CJ exercise was completed for each individual paper in the qualification so that standards could be maintained from a previous series. In this…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Evaluative Thinking, Grades (Scholastic), Cohort Analysis
Ben Smith; Stephen P. Morris; Harry Armitage – Research Papers in Education, 2023
It is not uncommon for randomised trials in education to have the performance of sample members in national examinations as their primary outcome. In many cases, examination results are available as summary measures only. Taking the example of GCSE examination results in England, this paper shows that using summary measures of an underlying score…
Descriptors: Language Arts, Mathematics Instruction, Grades (Scholastic), Standardized Tests
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
Ben Smith; Stephen Morris; Harry Armitage – Education Endowment Foundation, 2021
This paper aims to assess the impact of using GCSE grades as a primary outcome in educational evaluations and trials, compared to using marks. The choice of grades or marks is relevant as many evaluations use GCSE performance as an outcome measure. For such evaluations, the National Pupil Database (NPD) is used as a source of data by the vast…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grades (Scholastic), Student Evaluation, Performance Based Assessment
Mead, Daniel – Education Economics, 2023
In most OECD countries, more women than men enrol in undergraduate degrees. I analyse this gap in enrolment using the elicited subjective beliefs of a sample of 240 17-18-year-olds living in England. I use these beliefs to estimate a discrete choice model. The results from this model can explain the majority of the gender gap in enrolment. Gender…
Descriptors: College Enrollment, Gender Differences, Undergraduate Study, Values
Machin, Stephen; McNally, Sandra; Ruiz-Valenzuela, Jenifer – Centre for Economic Performance, 2023
A very small number of young people enter youth custody between age 16 and 18 (about 4 in 1000 males), yet the consequences are severe. They spend an average of 7 months in youth custody and such incarceration has been related to negative outcomes in the longer term even if they can establish themselves in the labour market. In this paper, we…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Juvenile Justice, Institutionalized Persons, Child Custody