Title: Severe Grading in MFL - the people
1Severe Grading in MFL- the people
draft Sat 18th
- Helen Myers (Past President, ALL Asst Head, The
Ashcombe School) - David Blow (Head, The Ashcombe School)
- Duncan Byrne (Chair ISMLA)
- Geoffrey Plow (Exams, ISMLA)
- John Dunford (Gen. Secretary ASCL)
- Peter Downes (former Chief ML examiner, Head,
President ALL SHA)
ALL Assoc. for Language Learning
ISMLA Independent Schools ML Assoc
2Severe Grading in MFL- brief history
- Long-standing concern - research by Nuttall in
1974 Peter Downes raised over time, leading to
recommendation in the Nuffield Report - Series of presentations by Helen Myers and David
Blow using DfES and other data - Continuing concern in ML community, esp as
Languages is no longer compulsory and numbers go
into freefall - Series of meetings by ALL, ISMLA etc with QCA and
exam boards (06)
3 GCSE MFL grading
- Our outline principle is that students studying a
particular GCSE subject should have a reasonable
expectation that they will get comparable grades
across a range of subjects. - The PANDA Relative Performance Indicator measures
the performance of students in their other
subjects compared with the particular one. By
the principle above, these should be negligible.
They are not.
4Severe grading
thanks to Peter Tymms for this phrase
- Terminology is important. Words like hard,
standards, demand carry multiple
connotations. - Restate principle that pupils of comparable prior
attainment should attain comparable grades across
a range of subjects whether Business Studies
which will be only started at GCSE, Maths, Drama,
etc all of which have very varying situations for
different pupils
5Depressing exams (NB separate issue from grading)
- As professionals, we know (or should know) that a
difficult paper with low scores does not need
to lead to low grades as the grade boundaries
/conversion to UMS will be adjusted to
compensate... - BUT pupils leaving that exam will perceive that
they have performed badly, which compounds the
severe grading problem
6Issues for pupils
- Perceive that they are performing worse in
languages in other subjects - Reduces the take-up at KS4 and A-level
- In each case, pupils are doing relative
comparisons on grades (note key issue at AS in
French as compare with other subjs - at A2 Univs
can make subj. by subj. adjustments)
7Issues for staff managers
- Heads and Governors may think that languages are
under-performing - Mixed messages re school targets and DCFS targets
- Ritual debate each year about whether standards
are slipping / pupils are choosing soft
subjects........
8Dearing Review
- National outcry at drop in numbers GCSE Aug 06 -
Alan Johnson sets up Dearing Review - Mr Johnson wants to see what more can be done to
encourage14-16 year olds to study GCSE or other
language courses leading to a recognised
qualification. DfES Press Notice 2006/0144
Oct 06 - Meeting Nov 06 with Lord Dearing
- Idea of broad comparability with Maths grading
- Awareness of public and political sensitivity
9Numbers - GCSE French
German - similar pattern but 40 as many, e.g
120,000 (French 300,000)
02
06
10Grades
02
- drop of 30,000 in number gaining A-C from 02 to
06 - drop of 40,000 in number gaining A-C from 02 to
08
08
German - similar pattern but 10,000 (02 to 06)
and 18,000 (02 to 08)
11Joint Proposal to Dearing (1)
- The mandate of QCA and the examination boards is
to ensure that "standards are maintained over
time". This is an enormously challenging task
and one which has a high public profile. - Comparability of grading
- It is now accepted by QCA and the exam boards
that pupils of similar prior/concurrent
attainment will gain a lower grade in languages
than most other subjects. - The presented documentation is available at
http//www.all-london.org.uk/severe_grading.htm - Because this difference is embedded historically,
and their mandate is to maintain standards over
time, a decision from the DfES is needed to
change this.
12Joint Proposal (2)
- Opportunity for change
- In the light of the crisis at KS4, there is now
the opportunity for a change. - The very strong experience of modern language
teachers, advisers and senior managers is that
the discrepancy in grading is one significant
negative factor in the decline. - Making changes here will not in itself solve the
overall problem, but, to use a metaphor, will
remove having a hand tied behind one's back.
13Joint Proposal
- Proposal
- That QCA, and thus the exam boards are mandated
to ensure that the grades awarded in Modern
Languages move to become comparable, on average,
to those awarded in Mathematics. Different
methodologies exist to measure the comparability
(described in the papers), and these should all
be used, so that the pupils of similar
prior/concurrent attainment have a similar
average grade in Modern Languages to that in
Mathematics. - This proposal should be treated independently of
the many other ideas and proposals to deal with
the issue of KS4 M.L.
14Dearing Review
- Led to recommendation in Consultation Report (Jan
07) confirmed in Final Report (Mar 07) to have
definitive study published on perception of
severe grading (with implicit corollary that
there should be action...) - the consultation had
found strong confirmation of the view that award
of grades is more demanding than for most other
subjects
15Dearing Review - press
- Dr Coe, of Durham's curriculum, evaluation and
management centre, believed such trends were
repeated in other years, but insisted "the
question of difficulty is not about content of
the subject ... It is purely about the
examination and grading process." - David Willetts, Conservative education spokesman,
said "If there is evidence modern languages is
tougher than other GCSEs, then that is something
that has to be corrected. They should be the same
level of challenge as traditional academic
GCSEs." http//education.guardian.co.uk/gcses/stor
y/0,,2031769,00.html - James Meikle, education correspondent
- Monday March 12, 2007
16Political context
- I would like to wait until I have this advice
before making any decisions about changing grade
boundaries Alan Johnson, Secretary of State, May
08 referring to the QCA study set up in response
to Dearing recommendation when replying to joint
letter from ASCL, ALL, ISMLA - Meetings with Jim Knights, David Laws (LibDem)
and Nick Gibb (Con) to ensure cross-party
awareness
17Sensitivity
- We do not underestimate the sensitivity of this
topic - Remember Feb 08
- get GCSE ML without speaking
- ML Orals abolished!
- Through all of our involvement, have sought to
make politically realistic proposals - e.g Lord
Dearing liking the idea of comparability with
Maths no-one will say that Maths is easy
18QCA report - Feb 08
- Introduced two definitions of comparability
- 1. Attainmentbased comparability - 8
- each boundary must be set using professional
judgement. The judgement must reflect the quality
of candidates work, informed by relevant
technical and statistical evidence.' - 8 - Fundamentally, awarding meetings are required to
ensure that the quality of work describing a
particular grade this year is the same as that of
the previous year. - 9
19QCA report - Feb 08
- 2. Aptitudebased comparability
- The aptitude-based conception of comparability
holds that two examinations may be seen as
comparable if students of a certain calibre
have an equal chance of achieving a particular
grade in any examination (either within subject
areas or between them). - One examination is harder than another if the
results of a (representative) group of students
taking both examinations are worse in it. This is
the approach to comparability on which the ALL
proposal is based.
20statistical case of severe grading now accepted
- see joint press release
QCA report - Feb 08
- What if French grades based on candidates key
stage 3 test scores and their results in GCSE
mathematics? The analyses indicated that the
changes would be marked at the higher grades. - About half the candidates presently awarded a
grade B would gain a grade A as the threshold
mark or performance standard for a grade A would
have to move down by about half a grade width.
There would be a similar effect at grade C.
evidence suggests that for D grade in French 70
gain higher grade in Maths
QCA report had said that only 123 schools
(excluding grammar schools) had maintained a high
rate of GCSE languages take-up (over 90 per cent
entered in each year from 2003 to2006).
21QCA report - Feb 08
- Conclusion The present examination system is
not based on an aptitude-based conception of
comparability and its adoption would create a
major threat to public confidence in students
results. We have similar concerns about applying
a new performance standard to languages but not
to any other subjects, some of which might also
want to claim special status. We do not have
evidence that there have been significant changes
to grade standards in GCSE languages in recent
years. In conclusion, we do not therefore,
recommend any adjustment to national grade
standards in GCSE languages. - unfortunate implication in conclusion of report
that TL special problem with MFL Instead we
should focus on improving levels of teaching and
learning in modern languages in order to gain
students' commitment and raise performance.
22Brigshaw School Language College
presented at Language College Conference May 08
and Oct 08
- 2007 GCSE results
- 53 5A-C 40 5A-C inc En Ma
- 24 A-C in MFL i.e. 59 out of 243
- comparing MFL results with Maths
- 70 lower grade than Maths
- 23 same grade in Maths
- 7 higher grade than Maths
- so in Year 11 those not in line for C switched
to Asset Languages (138 of 240) of which expect
46 to get equiv grade C or higher. So (46 102)
/ 240 60 A-C in MFL for Jun 08
but is it TL issue?
23Brigshaw School Language College
- What is most striking about the school is the
pervasive sense that it is a place where learning
languages matters. The school has extensive
provision for languages, with good links across
subjects so that pupils can see how and why they
can apply their language skills and knowledge.
Pupils appreciate the very good opportunities to
get involved in visits abroad. New courses are
ensuring that, whilst everyone has to study a
language throughout their time at school, there
are courses to suit different needs. Extensive
use is made of the expertise in the language
college to support other schools and the
community. - Ofsted Nov 06
- The school had also called in the examiners to
look at the papers, and they agreed that the
school had properly prepared the candidates
24Way forward
- We believe it is unrealistic to move to
comparable grading for all subjects - Currently 4 main bands
- ML
- Maths, Sci, His, Geo
- English
- Art, Drama, PE,
- We are proposing simply that ML moves into the
3rd band - tiny changes in grade boundaries
involved, similar to those which have taken place
- one-off step change
data from CEM SCORE paper
25Situation of MFL - A/L
To asses the relative performance of subjects in
the context of uneven grading at a national
level, there is a calculation in the PANDA of 1)
the average pts score of candidates in the
subject 2) the average points score of those
candidates in the OTHER subjects they are
taken. The difference between the two figures
shows how the grading for the subject compares to
other subjects. Because the second figure is
calculated ONLY for the candidates doing the
first subject, it automatically takes account of
the ability profile of the candidates doing the
subject This establishes the national context,
and if the same calculation is done for the
school, it removes the "severe grading" issue
from the consideration of performance
nearly 1 grade on average
from post-16 PANDA national data for Relative
Performance Indicator (RPI)
20 points 1 grade
26Situation of MFL - A/L
- French - blue
- German - black
nearly 1 grade on average
Col. 3 "difference" as in previous graph
from post-16 PANDA national data for Relative
Performance Indicator (RPI)
20 points 1 grade
27Situation of MFL - A/L
- French - blue
- German - black
Col. 3 "difference" as in previous graph
B
C
89.0
0
-7.2
Col. 1 - average score in subject
20 points 1 grade
28Situation of MFL - A/L
- French - blue
- German - black
Col. 3 "difference" as in previous graph
C
B
7.2
0
96.2
-7.2
20 points 1 grade
Col. 2 - average score in OTHER subjects (related
to ability profile)
29Issues for MFL - A/L
- Note that French German have high severe
grading factor at A/L. - French German have the highest average grades
in OTHER subjects - So
- will suffer in comparison with other subjects,
- are only left with the most able
- Compounded by situation at AS for these 2004
A/L grades,in 2003 at AS French had subject
ave 22.9 OTHER subject ave
29.9 (diff - 7.7)
30A virtuous circle???
- Language grading is fair, so...
- Pupils choose MFL at KS4, feel good after their
exams and get grades in line with other subjects
so... - More choose at AS and get grades in line with
other subjects so... - More continue to A2 and so...
- Everyone is happy!