Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Labour’s Corbynistas have yet to face the unpalatable fact tha

1246789

Comments

  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    https://twitter.com/BBCBreakfast/status/1294884093847642113

    I feel like this is a really very bad way to respond to this.

    I kinda like his voice. Bit like the result of a threesome involving Alan Bennett, Alan Partridge and Wallace.

    And Gromit.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,106
    kinabalu said:

    No it doesn't. 2020 is forever asterisked. It's a value judgement and I think I'd make it differently. I'd live with anomalous overall marks for the pandemic year in order to minimize the individual injustices to individual kids in the pandemic year.
    I can just see people in 2030 or later chatting at the bar about how numpties got inflated grades in 2020 and how terrible it was or interviewers thinking , oh they took GCSE's in 2020 they must be thick , and binning application.
  • RH1992RH1992 Posts: 788
    edited August 2020
    IshmaelZ said:

    An impressive level of optimism about what we can expect from 2021, 22, 23...

    More to the point, what is so terribly awful about grade inflation? We expect to live with a certain level of monetary inflation and indeed find it beneficial. 95% of the point of grades is to discriminate within year groups not between them so inflation is irrelevant, and if we wnt to use grades to discriminate between different years' achievements we can adjust for inflation just as we do with money before making comparisons. Where's the problem?
    Grade inflation normally would affect the allocation of University places. Universities would either have to raise the entry requirements, or they'd have a harder time picking and choosing between students with similar grades. This means they may end up going for the more "extra curricular" wealthy student who does after school and weekend activities, but this would disadvantage the straight A inner city student who doesn't have the opportunity to do those activities.

    However, when it comes to this year as a one off, I'd be happy to let the grade inflation slide, as long as the University system doesn't use the circumstances as an excuse to dramatically change their requirements next year.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601

    Boris (and hence the government) was committed before the pandemic. Boris lifted Labour's 2017 platform and implicitly opposed Cameron and May.
    Certainly there were elements, it was to be high spending time, but people are taking the comparison way too far.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,601
    malcolmg said:

    It was a serious question , it happens all the time, especially by UK people but foreigners as well as they are conditioned to it by how the UK is portrayed ( ie as England), they at least have an excuse.
    You only need look at NHS where they portray the English NHS as the de facto UK Health Service on a daily basis.
    Oh I know it happens all the time, and it shouldn't.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    IshmaelZ said:

    An impressive level of optimism about what we can expect from 2021, 22, 23...

    More to the point, what is so terribly awful about grade inflation? We expect to live with a certain level of monetary inflation and indeed find it beneficial. 95% of the point of grades is to discriminate within year groups not between them so inflation is irrelevant, and if we wnt to use grades to discriminate between different years' achievements we can adjust for inflation just as we do with money before making comparisons. Where's the problem?
    Gove and Cummings didnt like young'uns having better grades than them.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    Stocky said:

    No-one has been "downgraded". You make it sound that the centre assessed grades were final grades in the first place. They were always to be subject to moderation.
    This is incorrect. On Ofqual's own assessment, about 50% of the grades are accurate, which means a quarter of students have been given grades less than they should have been.

    At the same time a quarter have been given grades that are too high. They are not complaining about this, but it does mean that the English government's "solution" fails even on its claimed plus points of avoiding grade inflation and maintaining a gold standard.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,580
    malcolmg said:

    I can just see people in 2030 or later chatting at the bar about how numpties got inflated grades in 2020 and how terrible it was or interviewers thinking , oh they took GCSE's in 2020 they must be thick , and binning application.
    Apart from as a conversation point, 2 years or so after the event no-one cares about A level grades. If you went to Uni, then it's the degree. If you didn't, it's your track record.
  • FF43 said:

    This is incorrect. On Ofqual's own assessment, about 50% of the grades are accurate, which means a quarter of students have been given grades less than they should have been.

    At the same time a quarter have been given grades that are too high. They are not complaining about this, but it does mean that the English government's "solution" fails even on its claimed plus points of avoiding grade inflation and maintaining a gold standard.
    Precisely.

    Giving people a lower grade than they deserve is not the solution to inflation. You don't solve wage inflation by randomly slashing a quarter of the population's wages while dramatically increasing another quarter's.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    edited August 2020
    FF43 said:

    This is incorrect. On Ofqual's own assessment, about 50% of the grades are accurate, which means a quarter of students have been given grades less than they should have been.

    At the same time a quarter have been given grades that are too high. They are not complaining about this, but it does mean that the English government's "solution" fails even on its claimed plus points of avoiding grade inflation and maintaining a gold standard.
    No. 39% are lower than the inflated teacher assessments went for. 1% are higher. 60% are the same.

    More are lower than higher because Ofqual - as they said right from the start - think that the overall grades should be broadly consistent with previous years. This is an arguable premise to start out with, as other posters have opined.

    See:

    https://dfemedia.blog.gov.uk/2020/08/14/misleading-a-level-claims-debunked/
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818

    Arguably he could have got away with it if he'd taken the position early, before the prospect of the government losing the initial vote was being seriously discussed. The Remainers would have been frustrated and some of them would have rebelled but they weren't really in a position to challenge him.
    If the Tories had got behind the May Brexit - yes maybe. But they didn't.

    I think Corbyn Labour part one (2015/17) worked well. They brought down a Tory government and removed its majority. Came close to replacing it.

    But part two (2017/2019) was a disaster. They should have continued to frustrate Brexit but not have collaborated with the Benn Act. Forced Johnson to own the choice of No Deal or extension.

    These counterfactuals ...
  • Foxy said:

    Not much talk of BTecs, but that sounds even worse:

    https://twitter.com/LadySassington/status/1294931478141382657?s=09
    That’s odd: the students who did BTechs at my school have had their results, indeed I think they got them on Thursday.

    That is probably Pearson fouling up.
  • That isn't the truth. The truth is the Conservatives have done a good job at boosting equality of opportunity.

    Let us take one excellent metric - the proportion of the country that own their own home. If there is equality of opportunity then the proportion of home owners should go up.

    In 1979 owner occupied homes were below 12 million, by 1997 that had increased to nearly 17 million, a dramatic increase in equality of opportunity.

    Unfortunately that increase of opportunity slowed and stalled under Labour but in recent years the actions of the Tories have meant that owner occupier rates have been going back up again.

    I congratulate you on your highly selective use of data in order to avoid confronting Tory failure.

  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,570
    "In the last two years, Sweden had fewer all-cause mortalities than their Nordic neighbors."

    Sweden had the lowest number of deaths since 1977 in 2019. A mild flu season partly.

    This paper argues that what they call "this dry tinder" of people, old, ill and frail, may help explain why Sweden virus death/100K is higher than Denmark and Finland despite the light lockdown.

    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3674138


    A Mr Cummings has done a quick video looking closely at this low peak in all cause deaths in 2018/19.

    https://twitter.com/FatEmperor/status/1280095800392122373
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    The core problem with assessments without exams is that you discriminate in a way that is not objective.

    The purpose of exam marks is to discriminate: students with A grades are offered opportunities that are not given to those with a C. Exams are somewhat arbitrary;you can get good results with a superficial knowledge of the subject and poor results with a good knowledge. But they are objective. They test what they test. People accept the results because they are objectively arrived at.

    The problem with the current situation is that people have As that should have Cs and Cs that should have As but they are going to discriminate anyway. There is no solution to the problem; you can only mitigate it a bit, eg by offering more university places. The English government appears not to have intention of doing so.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    malcolmg said:

    Is that real "England" or the usual "England = UK"
    I think it will be England, as the statistics will have been collected for England, not the UK.
    You can read the paper if you want to check (I might get around to it..).
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,286

    That’s odd: the students who did BTechs at my school have had their results, indeed I think they got them on Thursday.

    That is probably Pearson fouling up.
    Were the results out of line with expectations? Not heard much about it.

    PB bias to tertiary educated, I guess.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,580
    Stocky said:

    No. 39% are lower than the inflated teacher assessments went for. 1% are higher. 60% are the same.

    More are lower than higher because Ofqual - as they said right from the start - think that the overall grades should be broadly consistent with previous years. This is an arguable premise to start out with, as other posters have opined.

    See:

    https://dfemedia.blog.gov.uk/2020/08/14/misleading-a-level-claims-debunked/
    AIUI, very, very few people get grades 2 or more 'different' to that anticipated.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818
    IshmaelZ said:

    An impressive level of optimism about what we can expect from 2021, 22, 23...

    More to the point, what is so terribly awful about grade inflation? We expect to live with a certain level of monetary inflation and indeed find it beneficial. 95% of the point of grades is to discriminate within year groups not between them so inflation is irrelevant, and if we wnt to use grades to discriminate between different years' achievements we can adjust for inflation just as we do with money before making comparisons. Where's the problem?
    I agree. It was much harder to get an 'A' at A level in my day. So what. I don't lose sleep over it. And this is the essence of my point. What we have here - thousands of individual kids receiving poorer results than they might reasonably have got if the pandemic had not led to no exams - is worse than allowing the pandemic year to have higher than usual overall grade inflation.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    FF43 said:

    The core problem with assessments without exams is that you discriminate in a way that is not objective.

    The purpose of exam marks is to discriminate: students with A grades are offered opportunities that are not given to those with a C. Exams are somewhat arbitrary;you can get good results with a superficial knowledge of the subject and poor results with a good knowledge. But they are objective. They test what they test. People accept the results because they are objectively arrived at.

    The problem with the current situation is that people have As that should have Cs and Cs that should have As but they are going to discriminate anyway. There is no solution to the problem; you can only mitigate it a bit, eg by offering more university places. The English government appears not to have intention of doing so.

    Good post, though I doubt that there are many (if any) As that should have been Cs. The teacher rankings have been adhered to, remember. They are key.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    The hospital data at NHS England website on the number of people in hospital with Covid really does demonstrate that we are no longer in a pandemic. There are so many hospital trusts with less than 5 beds occupied with people who have tested positive with Covid. The growth in cases is really having no effect on the NHS and the number of people in hospital with Covid continues to fall
  • Marginally devaluing the grades for everyone is much fairer than dramatically devaluing the grades for a minority (by giving them a grade below what they should have got) in order to maintain the value for others. Its also no less "accurate" than giving out the wrong grades to the wrong people.

    Lets say hypothetically there are 3 pupils whom a teacher thought were capable of getting an A so gave them all a predicted grade of an A. But in the real world had they say exams lets say that Pupil 2 may have choked in the exam and got a B instead. But the teacher ranked pupil 3 below pupil 2.

    Teachers predictions: Pupil 1: A; Pupil 2: A; Pupil 3: A
    Had they sat exams: Pupil 1: A; Pupil 2: B; Pupil 3: A
    Algorithm: Pupil 1: A; Pupil 2: A; Pupil 3: B

    The exams may have given 2 As and 1 B, the algorithm may have given 2 As and a B but is the algorithm "fairer" or more accurate than the teacher's prediction? No. The teacher's predictions got 2 grades correct and 1 incorrect, the algorithm got 1 grade correct and 2 incorrect. You don't fix a mistake by making another mistake to balance it out as an average.

    Via the algorithm Pupil 3 has seen their grade devalued from an A to a B unfairly which is far worse than having an A devalued to a slightly less valuable A.
    I mostly agree with this, but I am struck by how many non-teachers seem to think that the “had they sat the exams” bit is the correct answer; I’ve seen far too many cock-ups by exam boards to have any faith in that. The exam process itself is least worst one at best and in many cases cruelly capricious.

    I would say that in the example you give it is just as valid to say that the exam results and the algorithm are each out by one.

  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    kinabalu said:

    No it doesn't. 2020 is forever asterisked. It's a value judgement and I think I'd make it differently. I'd live with anomalous overall marks for the pandemic year in order to minimize the individual injustices to individual kids in the pandemic year.
    Agreed.
    Rather than trying to apply standardisation of individual marks within the year, they have arrived at individual marks by a very roundabout route with the potential to introduce anomalies from each set of operations.
    While they justify this statistically for individual measures (eg rank order versus individual predictions), they don’t really consider the effect on individuals of the errors introduced cumulatively - they’re only really interested in overall group comparisons.
    And the strong priority given to year versus year standardisation exacerbates the number of likely individual anomalies.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    kinabalu said:

    No it doesn't. 2020 is forever asterisked. It's a value judgement and I think I'd make it differently. I'd live with anomalous overall marks for the pandemic year in order to minimize the individual injustices to individual kids in the pandemic year.
    The issue is that teachers systematically overestimate results from year to year
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786

    Apart from as a conversation point, 2 years or so after the event no-one cares about A level grades. If you went to Uni, then it's the degree. If you didn't, it's your track record.
    I'm not so sure about this. If you have candidates for job X who both have 2:1 degrees from one of the new universities, but one has ABC at A level and the other one has BCD, the former would have a clear edge. In my experience of employing graduates, A levels still count, especially when degrees are from, shall we say, less famous universities.
  • IshmaelZ said:

    An impressive level of optimism about what we can expect from 2021, 22, 23...

    More to the point, what is so terribly awful about grade inflation? We expect to live with a certain level of monetary inflation and indeed find it beneficial. 95% of the point of grades is to discriminate within year groups not between them so inflation is irrelevant, and if we wnt to use grades to discriminate between different years' achievements we can adjust for inflation just as we do with money before making comparisons. Where's the problem?
    There's no problem in accepting grade inflation as long as we are honest about it and acknowledge that a grade now is worth less than the equivalent of previous years.

    But instead we have the pretence that grades are higher now because of better schools or hard working pupils or the wonder or the government's education policy.
  • So Labour needs to find another 4%. I say this because that's what Blair achieved in 1997.

    This still would not be a Labour win, not even close. We're in real trouble.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279

    The hospital data at NHS England website on the number of people in hospital with Covid really does demonstrate that we are no longer in a pandemic. There are so many hospital trusts with less than 5 beds occupied with people who have tested positive with Covid. The growth in cases is really having no effect on the NHS and the number of people in hospital with Covid continues to fall

    Of course you are right. I`m long convinced that some want us to still be in a pandemic - or at least maintaining that level of fear - for ideological or party political reasons. It disgusts me.

    My understanding (I could be wrong) is that new covid hospitalisations are falling generally, perhaps universally - even in Leicester which is still in lockdown.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    kinabalu said:

    Yep. C'est ca.
    Although in 1/3 of choke scenarios (which are a minority) the algorithm would - albeit by chance - have given the correct grade to the choker
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,511
    On topic, the beliefs of a cult:

    - defeats are actually victories in disguise
    - we won the argument though we lost the battle
    - everything is always somebody else's fault
    - we know what's good for people better than they do
    - the worse things get for the people we say we represent, the better for us
    - our time will come.

    Welcome to the world of the Corbynistas.

  • Fishing said:

    On topic, the beliefs of a cult:

    - defeats are actually victories in disguise
    - we won the argument though we lost the battle
    - everything is always somebody else's fault
    - we know what's good for people better than they do
    - the worse things get for the people we say we represent, the better for us
    - our time will come.

    Welcome to the world of the Corbynistas.

    This is spot on. Johnson also has the same problem.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,782
    edited August 2020
    kinabalu said:

    Yep. C'est ca.
    Actually worse than that.
    If for example you’re in an poor school and this year you happen to have two very bright kids rather than the usual one, the chances of one if them getting statistically stuffed are relatively high, as the individual prediction data wasn’t taken into account - just the ranking order, and marks extrapolated from the group data, normalised to match prior years.
  • So Labour needs to find another 4%. I say this because that's what Blair achieved in 1997.

    This still would not be a Labour win, not even close. We're in real trouble.

    If I were you I'd stop worrying about polls for at least a year.

    But if you want Labour to do something then they need to be developing some general policies rather than jumping onto passing bandwagons.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818

    Yet we're told that fairness within a year is vital.

    That goes if you accept the over predictions along with the accurate predictions.

    Aside from encouraging further over predictions in future years.
    The approach taken prioritizes the integrity of the 2020 results as a whole - compared to previous years - at the expense of integrity and fairness for individual kids in 2020. It elevates the macro over the micro. The price of this is the individual injustices and the plans wrecked this year. The benefit is that the 2020 results are not in aggregate devalued by above trend inflation. I'm saying that imo the price exceeds the benefit.
  • Charles said:

    The issue is that teachers systematically overestimate results from year to year

    They do not over-estimate, they say what they think pupils should get based on the work they have done. Then some pupils do not perform as well as expected.

  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,511

    This is spot on. Johnson also has the same problem.
    Nope, Johnson is much more pragmatic, electorally speaking. In fact, he's the opposite - largely unprincipled.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    Something should have been done about grade inflation many years ago.
  • StockyStocky Posts: 10,279
    Fishing said:

    On topic, the beliefs of a cult:

    - defeats are actually victories in disguise
    - we won the argument though we lost the battle
    - everything is always somebody else's fault
    - we know what's good for people better than they do
    - the worse things get for the people we say we represent, the better for us
    - our time will come.

    Welcome to the world of the Corbynistas.

    Great post. The psyche of the hard left: "the worse things get for the people we say we represent, the better for us".
  • Foxy said:

    Were the results out of line with expectations? Not heard much about it.

    PB bias to tertiary educated, I guess.
    I don’t what the expectations were.

    Speaking of which, I’m fairly certain (though I could be wrong) that we did not tell our students what grades we had sent off for them because we assumed that they would be adjusted. When students are talking about the grades they got versus predictions are they the actual predictions the school sent to the boards or are they the UCAS predictions that they should have known about (and which tend to be “what’s the highest grade this student could realistically get” rather than “what grade do you expect this student to get”)?
  • I congratulate you on your highly selective use of data in order to avoid confronting Tory failure.

    I congratulate you on your non selective use of zero data in order to fabricate claims of Tory failure.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818

    I mostly agree with this, but I am struck by how many non-teachers seem to think that the “had they sat the exams” bit is the correct answer; I’ve seen far too many cock-ups by exam boards to have any faith in that. The exam process itself is least worst one at best and in many cases cruelly capricious.

    I would say that in the example you give it is just as valid to say that the exam results and the algorithm are each out by one.
    True. An A student does not become a B student because they get a B.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Something should have been done about grade inflation many years ago.

    In general yes. Not this year.

    Is grade inflation improved by lowering the WRONG people's grades?

    The system should be seeking to give every pupil the right grade with the benefit of the doubt going to the pupils.

    Unless there was zero doubt that would inevitably lead to inflation. The only way to avoid inflation is to give as many incorrectly lower grades as incorrectly higher ones are given out. How is that fair to those who get the incorrectly lower ones?
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,511
    Stocky said:

    Great post. The psyche of the hard left: "the worse things get for the people we say we represent, the better for us".
    It's not just the psyche. Lenin is supposed to have stated it explicitly - the worse, the better, or chem khuzhe tem luchshe, in my rusty Russian. I think John Adams also used it to refer to the American revolution. Such people regard revolution as an end in itself, even if their means can be achieved by peaceful reform.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,353
    Cheer up kids who've had their A levels downgraded & missed out on uni, you've had a narrow escape from being indoctrinated.

    https://twitter.com/jamesdoleman/status/1294956139130519554?s=20
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295
    edited August 2020

    In general yes. Not this year.

    Is grade inflation improved by lowering the WRONG people's grades?

    The system should be seeking to give every pupil the right grade with the benefit of the doubt going to the pupils.

    Unless there was zero doubt that would inevitably lead to inflation. The only way to avoid inflation is to give as many incorrectly lower grades as incorrectly higher ones are given out. How is that fair to those who get the incorrectly lower ones?
    I agree with you completely. By not doing anything about it for many years there was always the risk that something would eventually be done in one particular year which is very unfair to the students in that year. Those who allowed it to happen in the first place are heavily to blame for this mess. I'd like to understand the mindset that led them to start the process of grade inflation in the first place.
  • Fishing said:

    Nope, Johnson is much more pragmatic, electorally speaking. In fact, he's the opposite - largely unprincipled.
    There is definitely a cult around Johnson, see Twitter for a start.
  • I congratulate you on your non selective use of zero data in order to fabricate claims of Tory failure.
    Is there anything you accept the Tories have failed on?
  • This is spot on. Johnson also has the same problem.
    Which defeats of Johnson's are celebrated?
    Which battles did Johnson lose?

    Etc
  • kinabalu said:

    True. An A student does not become a B student because they get a B.
    I think the biggest problem is that there is not a huge difference between an A student and a B one. In a normal year if everyone gets within one of what I was expecting then I think that I have done pretty well with my predictions.

    The reason this becomes a big deal is that the grade inflation means that university offers are much less forgiving: not many students are sitting on a CC offer from UCL that means if they drop a grade it doesn’t matter.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818
    Nigelb said:

    Actually worse than that.
    If for example you’re in an poor school and this year you happen to have two very bright kids rather than the usual one, the chances of one if them getting statistically stuffed are relatively high, as the individual prediction data wasn’t taken into account - just the ranking order, and marks extrapolated from the group data, normalised to match prior years.
    I'm hearing about Cs instead of As in some such scenarios. You can't go doing that. Prefer Sturgeon's call on this. Not sure what is the best thing now if we don't want to look like Scotland followers - encourage and fund appeals and take a speedy and accommodating approach to them? But maybe that's stable door and bolted horse territory.
  • Is there anything you accept the Tories have failed on?
    Yes.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,286
    edited August 2020

    I mostly agree with this, but I am struck by how many non-teachers seem to think that the “had they sat the exams” bit is the correct answer; I’ve seen far too many cock-ups by exam boards to have any faith in that. The exam process itself is least worst one at best and in many cases cruelly capricious.

    I would say that in the example you give it is just as valid to say that the exam results and the algorithm are each out by one.

    Yes, and I think that confidence in the system has dropped since re-marking and re-grading have become the norm, and often with significant changes in grades. When I was at Sixth form getting the answers reviewed didn't seem permitted. The whole culture of appeals has shown a light on what was always a capricious system. Grade inflation matters less to me than confidence in the exam system itself.
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,591
    Scott_xP said:
    So says Carl Gardner "replying to Carl Gardner". A sad, one-person echo chamber better left in obscurity. You're doing him a disservice by exposing him to daylight on here.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Something should have been done about grade inflation many years ago.

    The annual grade inflation was stopped in 2012.

    With much whining and fury resulting - much of it on PB.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,859

    Cheer up kids who've had their A levels downgraded & missed out on uni, you've had a narrow escape from being indoctrinated.

    https://twitter.com/jamesdoleman/status/1294956139130519554?s=20

    Is he aware that there are degree courses other than English Literature or PPE?
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,511

    There is definitely a cult around Johnson, see Twitter for a start.
    That is one thing I will never, ever do, because I don't have the patience to shower for half an hour after bathing myself in the sewer of the internet.

    But anyway I don't think Johnsonism is a cult. There is no real guiding ideology, except staying in power, and there is a realism about electoral defeats that is totally lacking in the Corbynite left.
  • kinabalu said:

    I'm hearing about Cs instead of As in some such scenarios. You can't go doing that. Prefer Sturgeon's call on this. Not sure what is the best thing now if we don't want to look like Scotland followers - encourage and fund appeals and take a speedy and accommodating approach to them? But maybe that's stable door and bolted horse territory.
    Which is bad, and made worse by the absurdly high offers that universities are making these days.

    If I had got Cs instead of As it would have been embarrassing, but it would not have affected my university place.
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    A-levels and algorithms. One confounding factor might be that in real exams, grades are not distributed identically by subject or by year.

    There is also wide variation this year with the non-exam exam results this year.

    ... in French, for example, the share of pupils getting an A or above increased to nearly a half – 46.0% – from 36.4% last year. At grade C or above, there was an increase from 85.2% to 89.6%.
    https://ffteducationdatalab.org.uk/2020/08/a-level-results-2020-the-main-trends-in-grades-and-entries/

    Look at music! And PBers will note history did worse than physics; worse in terms of sudden jumps in performance, that is.

    Even beyond the current uproar that just highlights what a ridiculous mess A Level grading has become over the last 30 years.
    I sat A Levels myself in the early 1970s and was teaching them from the mid-1980s. Nowadays some 98% of pupils sitting the exams manage to pass - ie to obtain at least an E grade. A grades or higher have been awarded to 25% - 27% - a figure likely to have increased significantly this year due to the ongoing fiasco. Until the late 1980s a system of relative marking was used whereby A grades were restricted to the top 10% sitting the exam with a further 15% being awarded a B grade. Therefore, 75% of pupils did no better than a C grade. Moreover, 30% failed to pass the exam and were given an O Level pass - or nothing at all. In other words, 30% of pupils failed to obtain even a grade E pass - compared with just 2% in recent years. It also means that pupils awarded - say - BCC grades prior to the late 80s could not unreasonably expect AAA today!
  • Yes.
    For example
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,570
    edited August 2020

    Which is bad, and made worse by the absurdly high offers that universities are making these days.

    If I had got Cs instead of As it would have been embarrassing, but it would not have affected my university place.
    I studied computer science at a leading university and managed degree-level computational mathematics with a 'C' (in Maths) at A level (early 1980s grading system).
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,106

    I congratulate you on your highly selective use of data in order to avoid confronting Tory failure.

    He is a real Tory plant , obviously works for them.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,286
    Stocky said:

    Of course you are right. I`m long convinced that some want us to still be in a pandemic - or at least maintaining that level of fear - for ideological or party political reasons. It disgusts me.

    My understanding (I could be wrong) is that new covid hospitalisations are falling generally, perhaps universally - even in Leicester which is still in lockdown.
    Last time I was updated we had 11 Covid-19 inpatients in the supposed hotspot of Leicester.

    Mind you, when I was running errands in town yesterday it seemed as busy as most Saturdays. Some shops etc were still closed, but not a lockdown in a meaningful sense.
  • justin124 said:

    Even beyond the current uproar that just highlights what a ridiculous mess A Level grading has become over the last 30 years.
    I sat A Levels myself in the early 1970s and was teaching them from the mid-1980s. Nowadays some 98% of pupils sitting the exams manage to pass - ie to obtain at least an E grade. A grades or higher have been awarded to 25% - 27% - a figure likely to have increased significantly this year due to the ongoing fiasco. Until the late 1980s a system of relative marking was used whereby A grades were restricted to the top 10% sitting the exam with a further 15% being awarded a B grade. Therefore, 75% of pupils did no better than a C grade. Moreover, 30% failed to pass the exam and were given an O Level pass - or nothing at all. In other words, 30% of pupils failed to obtain even a grade E pass - compared with just 2% in recent years. It also means that pupils awarded - say - BCC grades prior to the late 80s could not unreasonably expect AAA today!
    One of the reasons for the high pass rate is that most schools will discourage anyone likely to fail from continuing with the course, but I take the rest of your point.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,698
    justin124 said:

    Even beyond the current uproar that just highlights what a ridiculous mess A Level grading has become over the last 30 years.
    I sat A Levels myself in the early 1970s and was teaching them from the mid-1980s. Nowadays some 98% of pupils sitting the exams manage to pass - ie to obtain at least an E grade. A grades or higher have been awarded to 25% - 27% - a figure likely to have increased significantly this year due to the ongoing fiasco. Until the late 1980s a system of relative marking was used whereby A grades were restricted to the top 10% sitting the exam with a further 15% being awarded a B grade. Therefore, 75% of pupils did no better than a C grade. Moreover, 30% failed to pass the exam and were given an O Level pass - or nothing at all. In other words, 30% of pupils failed to obtain even a grade E pass - compared with just 2% in recent years. It also means that pupils awarded - say - BCC grades prior to the late 80s could not unreasonably expect AAA today!
    And those who got AAA back in the day were a class act.

  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,846

    https://twitter.com/BBCBreakfast/status/1294884093847642113

    I feel like this is a really very bad way to respond to this.

    I am half in horror half in a strange sort of morbid admiration for his determination not to inflate grades in all this. As I said before this blew up, the politics of this demands everyone gets a nice grade and have done with it. So we have a year when some thickies get in to better universities than they should. Who cares?
  • Which defeats of Johnson's are celebrated?
    Which battles did Johnson lose?

    Etc
    There are people that come out to defend him whatever he does, whatever position he takes, some of the comments on Twitter are like a cult, it's genuinely terrifying.

    There is absolutely a cult that surrounds him.

    Honestly in many cases the comments under a Corbyn Tweet are just as mad as those under a Johnson Tweet.
  • I am half in horror half in a strange sort of morbid admiration for his determination not to inflate grades in all this. As I said before this blew up, the politics of this demands everyone gets a nice grade and have done with it. So we have a year when some thickies get in to better universities than they should. Who cares?
    We rarely ever agree but I completely agree with you here.
  • I studied computer science at a leading university and managed degree-level computational mathematics with a 'C' (in Maths) at A level (early 1980s grading system).
    Another Computer Scientist! :)
  • And those who got AAA back in the day were a class act.

    Are we about to have a repeat of the first week of university where everyone tells everyone else what their A-level results are?
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,818
    Charles said:

    The issue is that teachers systematically overestimate results from year to year
    I wouldn't put it that way. They look at each child and estimate the best grade that they can reasonably hope to achieve based on the info and perception they have. Of course in aggregate that will constitute an overestimate as compared to real results in real exams.

    As for grade inflation in general, the only way to stop that is to award results in a purely relative way. The top 10% in the country get As, the next 25% Bs etc. I'm quite attracted to that idea myself although I know there are downsides.
  • kinabalu said:

    The approach taken prioritizes the integrity of the 2020 results as a whole - compared to previous years - at the expense of integrity and fairness for individual kids in 2020. It elevates the macro over the micro. The price of this is the individual injustices and the plans wrecked this year. The benefit is that the 2020 results are not in aggregate devalued by above trend inflation. I'm saying that imo the price exceeds the benefit.
    The number of plans being wrecked this year I suspect will turn out to be minimal.

    The universities have places to fill and filled they will be.

    Now if you're willing to accept a huge dollop of grade inflation ** then lets be honest about it and continue it for future years.

    Because its the pupils of 2021 onwards who are losing out in their education far more than the pupils of 2020.

    ** I sense you believe higher grades for all would be a step on the road to the New Jerusalem.
  • Stocky said:

    I kinda like his voice. Bit like the result of a threesome involving Alan Bennett, Alan Partridge and Wallace.

    And Gromit.
    He looks like a child who is trying on his Dad's suit
  • Are we about to have a repeat of the first week of university where everyone tells everyone else what their A-level results are?
    My A-Levels were terrible, I see no need to talk about them as they have no impact on my life now.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,286

    Which is bad, and made worse by the absurdly high offers that universities are making these days.

    If I had got Cs instead of As it would have been embarrassing, but it would not have affected my university place.
    Standard offer at my Medical School in 1983 was BBC, but in practice the average was probably AAB or so. It meant that dropping a grade once one had an offer wasn't a catastrophe.
  • malcolmg said:

    He is a real Tory plant , obviously works for them.
    Don't know to be honest, on certain things he is quite interesting to talk to but on others he just goes into denial and deflection mode.
  • kinabalu said:

    I wouldn't put it that way. They look at each child and estimate the best grade that they can reasonably hope to achieve based on the info and perception they have. Of course in aggregate that will constitute an overestimate as compared to real results in real exams.

    As for grade inflation in general, the only way to stop that is to award results in a purely relative way. The top 10% in the country get As, the next 25% Bs etc. I'm quite attracted to that idea myself although I know there are downsides.
    The biggest problem is that for subjects with only a small entry each year the grade you get would be highly dependent on who else was doing the exam that year. Fine if all you want it for is university entrance to a strictly limited number of places, less good if you want to be able to compare students from different years at any time (like on a CV).
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786
    justin124 said:

    Even beyond the current uproar that just highlights what a ridiculous mess A Level grading has become over the last 30 years.
    I sat A Levels myself in the early 1970s and was teaching them from the mid-1980s. Nowadays some 98% of pupils sitting the exams manage to pass - ie to obtain at least an E grade. A grades or higher have been awarded to 25% - 27% - a figure likely to have increased significantly this year due to the ongoing fiasco. Until the late 1980s a system of relative marking was used whereby A grades were restricted to the top 10% sitting the exam with a further 15% being awarded a B grade. Therefore, 75% of pupils did no better than a C grade. Moreover, 30% failed to pass the exam and were given an O Level pass - or nothing at all. In other words, 30% of pupils failed to obtain even a grade E pass - compared with just 2% in recent years. It also means that pupils awarded - say - BCC grades prior to the late 80s could not unreasonably expect AAA today!
    Your're right, but it's also because A-level teaching has improved significantly since the 1970s. I agree that there has been grade inflation. But the accountability mechanisms now in place (Ofsted, performance tables etc.) have put significant pressure on sixth forms and colleges to improve the rigour and quality of A-level teaching. When I first started teaching, back in the '80s, there was no real comeback if half your students failed or left the course early - as many did.
  • Your're right, but it's also because A-level teaching has improved significantly since the 1970s. I agree that there has been grade inflation. But the accountability mechanisms now in place (Ofsted, performance tables etc.) have put significant pressure on sixth forms and colleges to improve the rigour and quality of A-level teaching. When I first started teaching, back in the '80s, there was no real comeback if half your students failed or left the course early - as many did.
    Is it not also the case that back then the entry requirements were lower?
  • justin124 said:

    Even beyond the current uproar that just highlights what a ridiculous mess A Level grading has become over the last 30 years.
    I sat A Levels myself in the early 1970s and was teaching them from the mid-1980s. Nowadays some 98% of pupils sitting the exams manage to pass - ie to obtain at least an E grade. A grades or higher have been awarded to 25% - 27% - a figure likely to have increased significantly this year due to the ongoing fiasco. Until the late 1980s a system of relative marking was used whereby A grades were restricted to the top 10% sitting the exam with a further 15% being awarded a B grade. Therefore, 75% of pupils did no better than a C grade. Moreover, 30% failed to pass the exam and were given an O Level pass - or nothing at all. In other words, 30% of pupils failed to obtain even a grade E pass - compared with just 2% in recent years. It also means that pupils awarded - say - BCC grades prior to the late 80s could not unreasonably expect AAA today!
    Not for this year but one good idea would be to embrace what happened in Australia when I was there (Victoria at least I don't know the other states). There aren't any "grades" there instead everyone is given a percentile ranking. A top grade there then is 99.95 which means you are in the top 0.05 percentile and did better than 99.95% of the other pupils in the State that year. The ranking then goes down in steps of 0.05 to 30.00 (below 30 is unpublished fail).

    Under this system there aren't five letter grades there are thousands of possible ranking grades to get between 30.00 and 99.95

    It's also literally impossible to have inflation under this system since every percentile must have (apart from rounding) the same number of people in it.
  • In the current cabinet, I wonder who is weaker, Patel or Williamson.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,698
    Andy_JS said:

    Waiting for the result of the LD leadership election is a bit like Waiting For Godot.

    Are they using an algorithm?
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 8,786

    Is it not also the case that back then the entry requirements were lower?
    No.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,333
    edited August 2020

    And those who got AAA back in the day were a class act.

    A guy I was at school with got AAAA in Maths, Further Maths (is that still a thing?), Physics and Chemistry. He went to Cambridge and then spent his adult life on the dole and cheating at dominoes in various pubs.

    I got ABBD in 1985 which i reckon was a good effort. The D was English as I had no formal education in written English until I was 13 and struggled mightily with it.
  • I notice Philip never actually answered why he supports Eton existing, he just went onto deflect.
  • Foxy said:

    Standard offer at my Medical School in 1983 was BBC, but in practice the average was probably AAB or so. It meant that dropping a grade once one had an offer wasn't a catastrophe.
    Whereas a lot of students now are sitting on offers that they might have made on a really good day if exactly the right questions came up in the exam. For Oxbridge and medicine (which we lump together as being of equal difficulty) dropping one grade can be catastrophic.
  • No.
    Somebody mentioned above they'd got into Computer Science at a good uni with much lower grades than any course I applied to.
  • I notice Philip never actually answered why he supports Eton existing, he just went onto deflect.

    “State schools are a necessary evil, and we should work towards a society that has no need of them”

    Discuss...
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,678

    Another Computer Scientist! :)
    Me too. Actually, when I went to (Copenhagen) University, you couldn't take computer science separately - it had to be "Mathematics (with computer science"). I quickly discovered that I couldn't get a job as a mathematician except in teaching or insurance, neither of which appealed to me, so I quietly dropped the "mathematics" bit as soon as I'd taken my PhD. I'd struggle to work out a square root these days.
  • “State schools are a necessary evil, and we should work towards a society that has no need of them”

    Discuss...
    What is the implication of this, we all pay?

    I am not suggesting we tomorrow get rid of Eton at all, I am just saying that in principle I oppose its existence, as I do all private schools.

    The solution though - unlike the cultists on Twitter - is to make state schools better, not pull private schools down.
  • Which is bad, and made worse by the absurdly high offers that universities are making these days.

    If I had got Cs instead of As it would have been embarrassing, but it would not have affected my university place.
    The higher offers are a response to the higher grades.

    The offers I received from Russel Group unis required only Cs and Ds.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,570

    Somebody mentioned above they'd got into Computer Science at a good uni with much lower grades than any course I applied to.
    From memory my offer was BBC.
  • Me too. Actually, when I went to (Copenhagen) University, you couldn't take computer science separately - it had to be "Mathematics (with computer science"). I quickly discovered that I couldn't get a job as a mathematician except in teaching or insurance, neither of which appealed to me, so I quietly dropped the "mathematics" bit as soon as I'd taken my PhD. I'd struggle to work out a square root these days.
    I suppose it depends on the job you go into but I must say that much of what I learned in terms of Maths and Computer Science has helped me very little in my day to day job. I tend to think Computer Science sets you up quite badly for a career in Software Engineering, which many go into.
  • Rexel56Rexel56 Posts: 807
    Quite bemused by the condemnation here of the somewhat pejoratively labelled “grade inflation”. Being a Governor of a maintained, non-selective school I spend many a happy hour working to hold our Headteacher to account on objectives which, primarily, focus on genuine* improvement of outcomes as measured by progress. It would be a funny old world if we declared that year-on-year improvement is to be frowned upon.

    * to be fair to the Gove reforms, they did drive out some of the more spurious improvements achieved by gaming the system...
  • There are people that come out to defend him whatever he does, whatever position he takes, some of the comments on Twitter are like a cult, it's genuinely terrifying.

    There is absolutely a cult that surrounds him.

    Honestly in many cases the comments under a Corbyn Tweet are just as mad as those under a Johnson Tweet.
    Twitter is insane and an echo chamber. You'll find the same under anyone. FBPE is another cult etc

    Twitter lends itself to cults.
  • No.
    For the A-level course itself you are correct, but for University? My highest offer was CC. The only people I knew who needed As were those foolish enough to try for Cambridge.
  • CorrectHorseBatteryCorrectHorseBattery Posts: 21,436
    edited August 2020

    From memory my offer was BBC.
    The point I was getting at, was that I suspect nowadays you'd likely achieve a higher set of results but at the same time the entry requirements are higher.

    Southampton was AAA from recollection (might be higher now), Cambridge was A*AA.
This discussion has been closed.