Don’t allow the use of externally-set exams for 2021 grades

Students this year are severely underprepared for any form of externally set examination, even if these are sat in informal conditions. Guarantee that only teacher assessed grades will be used in awarding A Level and GCSE grades in 2021.

This petition closed on 3 Aug 2021 with 10,386 signatures


Reticulating Splines

You may be interested in these active petitions

1. Allow ARRS funding to be used for practice nurses and GPs - 11,073 signatures
2. Don’t increase the income requirement for family visas to £38,700 - 74,059 signatures
3. Make bleed kit training part of the school curriculum in secondary school - 3,186 signatures
4. Review the brightness of car headlights for safety - 13,428 signatures
5. For the United Kingdom to recognise the state of Palestine immediately - 12,223 signatures

Following the announcement of the cancellation of this year's examinations in England for A Level and GCSE students, there has been speculation of externally-set 'mini tests' for use in awarding teacher assessed grades at the end of summer.

Students have faced significant disruption to learning and must not be further disadvantaged by the use of examinations in any form, such as the 'mini tests' proposed by Ofqual. These would only further existing inequality.


Petition Signatures over time

Government Response

Monday 15th March 2021

Student’s will be awarded grades determined by their teachers based on a range of evidence. Teachers will be supported with guidance and materials to help them make judgements.


Students have worked hard in preparation for their exams this year and teachers have gone to enormous lengths to provide high quality remote education.

Given the ongoing disruption to education caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, we announced in January that GCSE, AS and A level exams will not go ahead as planned this summer.

The interests of students are at the core of these decisions. Our priority is to ensure all those who were due to take exams in 2021 have the best possible chance to show what they know and what they can do, enabling them to progress to the next stage of their education, training, or employment.

Students will receive grades determined by their teachers, with assessments covering what they were taught, and not what they missed. Teachers have a good understanding of their students’ performance and how they compare to other students this year and in previous years.

Centres will decide what evidence they wish to use. Centres should aim to use high quality evidence that clearly relates to the exam board specification, in terms of both content and assessment approach. Teachers can use evidence from across the duration of the student’s course, to determine their grade. This includes non-exam assessments, mock exams, in-class assessments, or responses to exam board assessment materials. Work produced outside of the school or college environment, for example, at home, can be included as evidence to support a teacher’s judgement.

Exam boards will provide optional assessment materials to support teachers in making their decisions. Exam boards will provide sets of questions organised to help teachers quickly find questions in the topics they have taught. There will be a combination of published and unpublished questions, with a proportion of unpublished questions in all subjects. Teachers will have flexibility to choose questions and topics in line with what has been taught, and they will mark these assessments themselves using exam board provided mark schemes.

The use of the materials provided by the exam boards is optional, and teachers will have flexibility over how many of the questions they use with their classes.

Assessment materials are just one way for students to show what they know and can do – they are one element of the overall approach to gathering evidence of a student’s performance. The outcome of these assessments, where used, will make up one part of a student’s final grade.

These assessment materials will look and feel very different from exams: they are not (and will not feel like) exams – there will be no specific, set window for administering these materials, unlike an exam that is sat at the same time by students across the country and they will not be required to be administered in ‘exam conditions’.

The Department knows there has been differential lost education, as some students have suffered more disruption to their education than others. Because of this, students will only be assessed on the content they have been taught.

We are committed to working with parents, teachers and education providers to develop a long-term plan to make sure that students have a chance to make up their education. We have appointed Sir Kevan Collins as Education Recovery Commissioner to advise on this plan.

More immediately, we are making available a further £700m to put in place a range of additional measures to give early years providers, schools and providers of 16-19 education the tools they need to target support to their students. This package will build on the £1bn catch up package announced in June 2020 and form part of the wider response to help students recover their lost education over the course of this Parliament.

A range of high-quality online resources will be available for all teachers and pupils, starting from the summer term and throughout the summer holidays, provided by Oak National Academy, to help give pupils the confidence they are ready for the next academic year. We are also funding a short, focussed summer school offering a blend of academic study and enrichment activities with additional details on this due to be provided by the end of March.

Department for Education


Constituency Data

Reticulating Splines