Discover Habbo's history
Treat yourself with a Secret Santa gift.... of a random Wiki page for you to start exploring Habbo's history!
Happy holidays!
Celebrate with us at Habbox on the hotel, on our Forum and right here!
Join Habbox!
One of us! One of us! Click here to see the roles you could take as part of the Habbox community!


Results 1 to 8 of 8
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    17,016
    Tokens
    34,327

    Latest Awards:

    Default Shake-up of A-levels confirmed by Gove

    Education Secretary Michael Gove has confirmed changes to A-levels in England that will mean pupils will take exams at the end of two-year courses.

    Pupils are expected to being the new A-level courses from autumn 2015.

    AS-levels will remain, but as a standalone exam, and leading universities will play a bigger role in maintaining standards.

    Labour accused the education secretary of turning the clock back and narrowing young people's options.

    Head teachers' leader Brian Lightman said: "This is a classic case of fixing something that isn't broken."

    Students in Scotland have a different exam system while the devolved governments in Wales and Northern Ireland will make their own decisions about whether to implement the changes to A-levels.

    In a letter to exam regulator Ofqual, Mr Gove says A-levels in their current form do not provide the solid foundation students need.

    "The modular nature of the qualification and repeated assessment windows have contributed to many students not developing deep understanding or the necessary skills to make connections between topics," writes Mr Gove.
    More from:
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-21156370

    What a stupid decision really. The fact that they've scrapped modules now essentially means your 2-year study comes down to a single multiple-hour memory exercise for each course. Not only that, but those that take on an A2 course can no longer drop out at AS and still get a qualification, they will have nothing. Those that take on an AS course can no longer extend their qualification if they find they actually enjoyed their first year.

    You will no longer get to pick and choose any modules, so you can't choose modules that suit your tastes and interest yourself, such as in Maths. Apparently the top Unis are saying this is a mistake, and if this actually goes ahead, I can see Uni entry requirements dropping somewhat. I remember back at college when everyone complained of a certain module, and our teachers said we should be lucky because they had one big exam at the end of it. Seems like people won't be so lucky anymore.

    Changes come into place Autumn 2015, right when I plan on starting to teach...

    Thoughts?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    5,600
    Tokens
    12,584
    Habbo
    :Cerys

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Oh fgs..

    It's always changed for our year. Like, our year is always first/second to experience the changes. Makes me angry >.>

    I didn't even realise they needed a change. Damn Gove. Lets slaughter him.





  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    17,016
    Tokens
    34,327

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by :Cerys View Post
    Oh fgs..

    It's always changed for our year. Like, our year is always first/second to experience the changes. Makes me angry >.>

    I didn't even realise they needed a change. Damn Gove. Lets slaughter him.
    They don't need changing, not really.

    They changed it in 2010 to extend the grades to an A*, but the thing is, those people that have got A* grades at A-Level haven't even finished University yet, so we don't even know how successful that was or not. So they're just making changes before they even see how previous changes have gone.

    And they say it's to prefer you for University. Well, at University you have modular exams at the end of every year, not one huge exam worth 100% of your degree in your final year. *Sigh*

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    10,481
    Tokens
    3,140

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    What a stupid decision, all it achieves is to narrow student's options.

    Seems he's just making changes to make it look like he's doing something.
    Chippiewill.


  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    N.Ireland
    Posts
    6,257
    Tokens
    23,061
    Habbo
    Red

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    O god that really would be awful! My school never got to do gcses spread out over 2 years and had all my exams in like the one sitting . It was awful and I actually found Alevels so much easier. I missed the A* change and i feel sorry for anyone who will have to sit through this change. It's bad that its only in england. There should be a unified system for the Uk :S There will probably be a big drop in English students exam performance.


  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Scotland
    Posts
    17,016
    Tokens
    34,327

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Red View Post
    O god that really would be awful! My school never got to do gcses spread out over 2 years and had all my exams in like the one sitting . It was awful and I actually found Alevels so much easier. I missed the A* change and i feel sorry for anyone who will have to sit through this change. It's bad that its only in england. There should be a unified system for the Uk :S There will probably be a big drop in English students exam performance.
    I'm sure that Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland are glad that there isn't a unified system with the idiot that's in charge

    And with your GCSEs, do you mean all your exams were in Summer rather than split Winter/Summer, or you literally had all Maths exams all in one day, all Science on another day etc.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Manchester
    Posts
    3,216
    Tokens
    475

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    You know, instead of making people sit one exam after 2 years of study (that's ******* madness) he could have fixed the problem he purports there to be (lack of deep understanding) by changing the content of A-levels. A key example in my mind is that there is no calculus in A-level physics, meaning you have to waste time being taught how to apply calculus properly in physics during your first semester at university. The lack of problem solving required in most a-levels is probably the biggest problem. This is going to make things so much worse.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    warwickshire, england
    Posts
    1,255
    Tokens
    858

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Kardan View Post

    And with your GCSEs, do you mean all your exams were in Summer rather than split Winter/Summer, or you literally had all Maths exams all in one day, all Science on another day etc.
    she would have meant one exam for each subject that covered everything they had done in the course, rather than modules so that you have to learn EVERYTHING. this changed for my year (thank god) and we had the modual way
    the only thing stronger than fear is hope

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •