Research evidence relating to proposals for reform of the GCSE

<p>The September 2012 consultation document, Reforming Key Stage 4 Qualifications (DfE, 2012a), set out the government’s proposals for changes to the examination system at age 16. The Secretary of State said in the House of Commons that these reforms were radical, and others commented that th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baird, J, Ahmed, A, Hopfenbeck, T, Brown, C, Elliott, V
Format: Report
Published: Oxford University Centre for Educational Assessment 2013
Description
Summary:<p>The September 2012 consultation document, Reforming Key Stage 4 Qualifications (DfE, 2012a), set out the government’s proposals for changes to the examination system at age 16. The Secretary of State said in the House of Commons that these reforms were radical, and others commented that they composed the biggest change in the examination system in a generation. This warrants an analysis of the research literature relevant to the proposals. We address each of the following issues raised in the consultation document in turn, and present research evidence in each case. </p> <p>- How England competes in international test scores</p> <p>- The claim that there has been grade inflation</p> <p>- The proposals to raise the level of challenge in examinations</p> <p>- Familiarity with examination materials</p> <p>- The desire to increase students’ motivation</p> <p>- The plan for students only to be tested at the end of the course, rather than within a modular system</p> <p>- The proposal that the use of controlled assessment should be restricted</p> <p>- The proposal that examinations should not be tiered</p>