Home / Ofqual confirms details on submitting evidence for exam grading
Ofqual confirms details on submitting evidence for exam grading
EB News: 28/04/2021 - 09:20
Ofqual has confirmed details of how data and evidence of a student’s grades will be submitted in this summer’s exam grade awarding.
Once student grades are submitted by schools and colleges (centres), they will be asked to provide samples of student work, as described in Ofqual's recent blog, so exam boards can check teacher assessed grades.
Centres should retain the work and records of marking or grading judgements as exam boards will request samples after 18 June. It will also be needed if a student wishes to appeal their result.
Interim Chief Regulator Simon Lebus said: "This year we are awarding grades without exams taking place. The arrangements we have put in place offer the fairest way forward and it is important that students, parents and the wider public have confidence in these results.
"We have asked all schools and colleges to send in samples of students’ work so that exam boards have evidence from every centre available as they carry out quality assurance after 18 June. It will also avoid the need for exam boards to contact centres after the end of term when teachers should be taking a much-needed rest during the summer holidays.
"We are very conscious of teacher workload. The sample is relatively small and should not take too long for exams officers to submit."
Forty-four per cent of education professionals are unfamiliar with the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025, otherwise known as Martyn’s Law, according to new research.
A report from the Digital Poverty Alliance show that while digital tools are now embedded across school routines, access and usability remain deeply uneven.
School food improvement programme Nourish is set to launch in Cumberland in 2026, working with schools to improve the quality and culture of food throughout the school day