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Exam chiefs finally admit it - A-levels ARE easier
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22 January 2008
The so-called "gold standard" tests for school-leavers simply cannot be compared to those from a decade ago.
Since A-levels went modular in 2000 and more students took them, they have lost some of their ability to prepare the brightest students for university, MPs were told.
As a result, A-levels need to be made more challenging again to stretch the cleverest sixth-formers.
Successful students collect their A-level results, but exam chiefs have admitted that the standard has changed over the past 10 years
Jerry Jarvis, managing director of Edexcel, said: "It is very difficult to compare an A-level taken in 2007 with an A-level taken pre-2000. The structure is different. Access to A-level is very different."
Greg Watson, chief executive of the OCR exam board, agreed. "The role of A-levels has changed," he said.
"There was a time when A-levels were for those entering higher education. A-level has become effectively the standard school leaving qualification.
"There was inevitably the trade off between maintaining a qualification that's suitably motivating and providing the right structure for learning for a wide range of young people and making sure it is a good basis for university entrance.
"We have lost a little bit and have moved to introduce a bit more stretch and challenge for the most able candidates."
Students now face 57 university admissions tests because tutors cannot distinguish between A-grade candidates.
Last summer, one in eight sixth-formers achieved at least three grade As at A-level.
Ministers have promised to reform A-levels to include an A* grade, more essays and fewer structured questions.
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