'Championing the rights of children'

Now Gove wants a league table for pupils

Garry Mon 09 Jul 2012 09:30

Teenagers sitting major exams could be told where they rank out of all their peers nationwide under new proposals being considered by the Education Secretary Michael Gove.

Mr Gove is investigating whether to introduce a national grading system for the new O-level-style exam he is proposing to replace GCSEs, which would see each entrant given a position from one to about 200,000.

He floated the idea as one of a series of radical moves to overhaul A-levels at a seminar last October – but now wants to consider extending it to whatever replaces GCSEs.

The gradings could be used by universities and employers to differentiate between students, a large and growing proportion of whom obtain top grades. More than one in four A-level papers are now awarded an A grade pass.

Teachers’ leaders last night declared their opposition to the grading system, the results of which could be used (without naming individual pupils) in exam league tables. A school could boast, for instance, that one of its pupils was top in the entire country.

Read more ... (The Independent - 6 July)