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Joanna Williamson – Research Matters, 2025
Teachers, examiners and assessment experts know from experience that some candidates annotate exam questions. "Annotation" includes anything the candidate writes or draws outside of the designated response space, such as underlining, jotting, circling, sketching and calculating. Annotations are of interest because they may evidence…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Tests, Documentation, Secondary Education
Putwain, David W.; Nicholson, Laura J.; Kutuk, Gulsah – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2023
In the context of high-stakes qualifications, teachers may warn students of the negative consequences of failure as a tactic designed to increase engagement and, ultimately, achievement. Previous studies have shown that these types of messages, namely fear appeals, are indirectly related to engagement and achievement in different ways, depending…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Academic Failure, Tests, Test Results
Gareth Bates; James Shea – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2024
Retrieval practice has been shown to be an effective and efficient way to enhance learning and which has led researchers to call for retrieval practice to be part of teachers' regular repertoire of activities within a classroom. Recent policy changes in England have seen retrieval practice being encouraged and emphasized as a strategy that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Recall (Psychology), Information Retrieval, Learning Processes
Hajar, Anas – British Educational Research Journal, 2020
England has experienced recent growth in the prevalence of private tutoring (PT). The qualitative study reported in this article aims to explore the perceptions of 14 Year 6 pupils and their teachers from three state-maintained primary schools in East Kent on PT participation and its impact on grammar school admissions. Data were collected through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Education, Tutoring, Tutors
Van Rossum, Tom; Foweather, Lawrence; Hayes, Spencer; Richardson, David; Morley, David – Measurement in Physical Education and Exercise Science, 2021
The aim of this study was to establish the content of a teacher-oriented movement assessment tool (MAT) for children aged 4-7 years. A three-round Delphi poll with an international panel of forty-six academics and practitioners was conducted. Consensus was reached on a selection and number of fundamental movement skills to be assessed with four…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Basic Skills, Tests, Elementary School Students
Wood, Rebecca; Happé, Francesca – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2023
Despite the availability of access arrangements for tests and exams for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities, many autistic children and young people have low academic achievements. There is also a lack of consensus on what their educational priorities should be and a failure to link their school programmes to longer-term…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Barriers, Elementary Schools
Jopling, Michael; Williams-Brown, Zeta – Education 3-13, 2021
This paper reflects on the findings of two studies focused on teachers' perspectives on the standards agenda. The original study was carried out in 2010-2011 and published in 2015 in Education 3-13 [Brown, Z., and K. Manktelow. 2015. "'Perspectives on the Standards Agenda: Exploring the Agenda's Impact on Primary Teachers' Professional…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Standards
Fautley, Martin; Daubney, Alison – British Journal of Music Education, 2022
This article considers the impact that the Swanwick-Tillman spiral article (Swanwick & Tillman, 1986) has had on contemporary thinking in music education in England. Building on a discussion concerning the antecedents of the notion of a spiral, the ways in which a generalist music curriculum can be planned and organised are discussed. Drawing…
Descriptors: Music Education, Spiral Curriculum, Teaching Methods, Tests
Naomi E. Winstone; Robert A. Nash – Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 2024
Feedback information can be a powerful influence on learning, yet there is currently insufficient understanding of the cognitive mechanisms responsible for these effects. In this exploratory study, students (N = 279) received teacher feedback on a practice exam paper, and a few days later we assessed the amount and type of feedback information…
Descriptors: Memory, Feedback (Response), Tests, Drills (Practice)
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
Bowie, Robert A.; Coles, Richard – British Journal of Religious Education, 2018
This article draws on three sources of evidence that together indicate hermeneutical weaknesses in exam courses on Christianity in English Religious Education (RE). It scrutinises a single exam paper and an associated text book from a recent authorised course. It conceptually explores features of a new style of long Religious Studies (RS) exam…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Education, Course Descriptions, Secondary School Students
Goldstein, Harvey; Leckie, George – British Educational Research Journal, 2016
Schools in England and Wales since the late 1980s have been compared in terms of their performances in public examinations and standardised test scores in the form of "school league tables", with Wales ceasing to produce these after 2001. One of the factors related to performance in examinations is the choice of the examination board,…
Descriptors: Tests, Standardized Tests, Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis
Whittaker, Adam – British Journal of Music Education, 2021
A-level music, a qualification taken most often in English and Welsh school contexts around the age of 18, has been a long-standing feature of the musical training of many musicians. Historically bound up with Western European Art Music, the qualification has somewhat broadened its horizons in recent times, though with mixed success in opening up…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Teachers, Tests, Foreign Countries
Golding, Jennie – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications, 2021
We evidence English teacher and student perspectives on the learning of pre-university mathematics 'A Level' courses through the pandemic period to July 2021. Data are drawn from a 2017-21 classroom-close study of enactment of such courses in 13 fairly representative centres, using an institutional ethnographic approach. The pandemic picture was…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Skipper, Yvonne; Douglas, Karen M. – British Educational Research Journal, 2016
In the current study we examined how different experiences of a selective entry examination influenced children's feelings about themselves, school and intelligence as they approached transition to secondary school. Children were recruited from three English schools that use a selective entry examination to stream students into secondary schools…
Descriptors: Selective Admission, Self Concept, Test Results, Locus of Control