Quote Originally Posted by Subotan View Post
So, the mainstream Left's position is the same as the Mainstream Right's one then? Or is the next Conservative government going to reverse their own policy?
Is Labour really left, though? Was Major really Right? Also, how does the current Conservative Party "own" a policy which was implemented before most of the current party members were sitting MP's? This is just a fallacy, the Conservative Party has been out of power for 12 years, they are no longer responsible for the state of the education system; nor are they bound by the decisions of the last Conservative Government and last Cabinet.

http://www.economist.com/world/brita...gin_payBarrier

Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
ARE ever-rising A-level results evidence of better teaching and harder-working pupils, as Labour education secretaries claim each August? Or are they proof of spoon-feeding syllabuses and easier exams, as the opposition Conservatives say?

This year’s results, published on August 20th, provided another chance for those on both sides to “agree or disagree”. The pass rate rose for the 27th year running, and is now 97.5%, up from 68.2% in 1982. The share of A-grades went up too, by 0.8 percentage points compared with last year, and now stands at 26.7%. The end result of this 27-year bull run is that an eighth of all candidates now get three A grades, more than used to get a single A back then.

On the face of it, this is a success story. But probe the figures and they start to look flakier. School league tables, and the less selective universities, count grades regardless of subject, so an A in photography equals one in physics. But that assumption of parity is inaccurate, according to researchers at Durham University. By comparing results in different subjects awarded to the same candidates, and grades at A-level and GCSE, they have shown that some subjects really are softer (see chart). The idea is that an educational “Gresham’s Law” is at work, with bad qualifications driving out good as schools push pupils towards easier subjects in the hope of rising up the league tables, and pupils scramble after any old As to present to undiscriminating universities.

There is evidence that this happens—but only at the margins. If the Durham team’s figures are used to adjust grades, the real value of newly minted A-levels has fallen a little compared with their face value every year since 2003, as slightly more students choose easier subjects over hard ones than did the year before. During that time a gap of around half a percentage point opened up between the two. The fact that certain subjects are required for many degrees—mathematics for engineering; the sciences for medicine—acts as a countervailing force. So do the selective universities, which generally prefer candidates who take the tougher subjects.

Lacking any such restraint is year-on-year grade inflation across the board. And that, like continental drift, is hard to see in action. One oft-tried way to spot it—looking at old exam papers—is little help, since standards are set more by the marking than the syllabus or test. (“What is love?” is easy if “An emotion” gets full marks; hateful if one must illustrate with sonnets and explain how neurotransmitters function.) But in the long run, it can have a dramatic effect. The Durham team used aptitude tests to show that pupils of a given ability get far higher A-level grades now than they used to 20 years ago. Over the same period an 18-percentage point gap opened up between pass rates in A-levels and the International Baccalaureate.

Alan Smithers, an educationalist at Buckingham University, thinks grades inflate when examiners check scripts that lie on boundaries between grades. Every year some are pushed up but virtually none down, resulting in a subtle year-on-year shift. Wider expectations also seem to be mildly inflationary. He points to 2002, when the cack-handed introduction of a new A-level curriculum led to soaring grades. Exam boards panicked, and shunted grade boundaries to drag them back down. And when results fall, as they did with the English tests taken by 11-year-olds this summer, that provokes outrage too.
The main reform being proposed by Michael Gove, the Tory education spokesman, is for harder subjects like maths to be worth more in school league tables than softer ones like sociology. But since blanket grade inflation rather than a shift to easier ones is the main force at work, this would have little effect. And tackling it would entail limiting the share of candidates allowed to get each grade, as happened until the mid-1980s.

That would be politically tricky, since such limits seem unattractively arbitrary. Moreover, it would mean abandoning any hope of measuring even genuine improvements in educational standards. Whether or not Mr Gove gets the chance to implement his ideas after the next election, the ritual of hurrahs and boos over A-level results seems likely to continue.
You've completely avoided the point about rewiting summative assessments.

It's hardly likely the probable next Tory government is going to say "For a decade and a bit, Middle England, you've had it too easy. In actual fact, all of your kids are stupid" and put grades back to pre-inflationary levels.
On the other hand, they can't continue to allow people with C's in English to remain functionally illiterate, as was found recently.

I'm arguing that it's screwed up that you can expect students to somehow magically know how to get good grades on essays when they aren't taught how to write them.
Failure of teaching, lack of formative assesment. Neither are an excuse to repeat summative assessment ad nauseum.

It gets more complex every year. Introducing easy essay standards, then increasing those standards in the following year without teaching the students about those increased standards has only one logical outcome; that students who did well last year will not do as well in that year and will have to resit to display their full potential.
Oh woe! It's the same at degree level, it get's harder every year. Either you shape up, or you crash and burn. Still, this is no excuse to repeat summative assessments. Summative assessments should reflect the student's ability, formative assesments are used to test whether the student is learning.

Do you think exams are getting easier? The majority of people who say that are generally stuck up journalists who complain when grades go up, down or stay the same.
I think that in the four years between myself and my sister there has been a softening of subjects, especially in areas such as biology where more subjective "ethical" questions are asked; pointless at GCSE level. There are also more "open book" exams than there used to be, or questions that are confined to a particular portion of a text, with that text provided. English exams are particularly bad, while Welsh ones are much harder. I know someone who passed Italian GSCE basically without a teacher.


Oh my, how dreadful for Victor. All that better primary and secondary schooling (Because mummy and daddy didn't want him to mix with the louts, and so pretended to be Catholic), better facilities, smaller class sizes, more extra-curricular spending, private tutoring, more stable home environment and reduced chance to fall into crime, all counts for nothing when Victor has to do slightly harder work than Bob on the Moss Side.
Not really, as Victor (who calls their child Victor?, how about Peter?) will come out with qualifications valued more by British and foriegn universities. Bob will just have three or four fairly worthless A-Levels. I will be sending my children to a Public School for all the reasons listed above. I went through State education, and I want to give my children the opertunities I was denied.