The kids I really feel sorry for are the ones who would have got A or B grades regardless of the " dumbing " down.
My youngest Daughter has a friend who has just finished a four year degree course at Brighton Uni. She got her degree and good luck to her but....I was amazed to hear she sat NO exams at all to gain that degree. It was ALL based on coursework and even she freely admitted some of her mates copied stuff from the internet.
With teachers now only doing four years at uni to attain their degree, instead of the six they used to do, are they better because of it? Yes I know that the other two years are done in the " classroom " but they have still had two years less at uni than teachers of old.
How the heck can you have exams where there are multiple choice questions? There is a quiz on SH and last week out of the ten questions on celebrities, I guessed six right out of ten. Surely the same can happen in an exam?
It is obviously in the Governments interest to bleat about 99% pass rates at GCSE level. But ask an employer and they will say exams nowadays are not worth anything with so many passing.
As I have said I feel sorry for the students who would have got A grades now and ten years ago, but some kids will gain good results that bear no resemblance to exams of years gone by.
Mrs777's Daughter's school was a failing school according to Offsted and the headmaster was sacked and he was slated in their report. Here was a guy at the top of his tree yet still he was useless and of course there were poor teachers and bad standards. Yet their exam results were still top notch, work that one out. :shock:
There is no punishment in her school for not doing homework....sorry coursework, and the discipline issue plays a big part.
I was flabergasted two years ago at the level of questions kids were asked at GCSE level, two of which I have written earlier, add to that multiple choice and being able to take exams a year sooner, then is it any wonder 99% of students pass. Anyway how the heck can you pass with a e grade ffs?