School Information System

A-level examiners must achieve top grades before sealing pupils’ fates

Richard Adams

Weeks after students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland sweated through A-level and GCSE exams, their fate is being decided in a windowless basement near the centre of Cambridge – decisions that mean joy for some and despair for others.

There’s a hush of concentration in the room, the only sound the turning of pages and scratching of pens, as the group sit poring over the anonymous exam papers in front of them – but no exams are actually being marked.

Instead, the small group of experts for the OCR examination board is working its way through piles of scripts arranged by score, weighing up where the boundary should fall between an A or B for this particular humanities subject.

This is the most highly regulated and delicate part of the examination system, which the public never sees. OCR, one of the five main examination boards, granted the Guardian exclusive access to its inner workings – revealing a process characterised by caution, rigour and sophisticated technology.

Share

Fast Lane Literacy™ by sedso

all

Explore teaching tips and learn more about the word all.