This page is regularly updated with information relating to Ofqual.
Ofqual has published research it has carried out in relation to views of teacher assessed grades.
Ofqual has also published an investigation of inter-subject comparability in GCSEs and A levels in summer 2021 (12 July 2022).
Ofqual has published the consultation outcomes and the regulatory requirements for the new GCSE qualifications in French, German and Spanish:
Ofqual has published a new interactive app which gives access to data held by Ofqual on the numbers of candidates taking specific awards over a ten-year period. You can access the full range of Ofqual’s statistical publicationsand research reports on Ofqual’s main website. Some of the analytics also feature in the Ofqual blog.
Ofqual has published Official Statistics provisional entries for GCSE, AS and A level summer 2022 (26 May 2022). They have also updated the Guidance for centres: awarding VTQs in 2021 and 2022 (23 May 2022).
Ofqual have released a podcast (13 May 2022) in which Laura McInerney (journalist and co-founder of Teacher Tapp) interviewed Dr Jo Saxton, Chief Regulator of Ofqual, and Cath Jadhav, Executive Director of Standards, Research and Analysis at Ofqual, on grading and exams this year.
Ofqual have published an open Letter to Centres from Dr Jo Saxton, Chief Regulator. The letter covers grading and outlines the information available for schools and colleges. Ofqual has also released a podcast on grading and marking in 2022.
On 13 May 2022, the government published information about ‘levelling up’ premium payments for mathematics, physics, chemistry and computing teachers. From autumn 2022, early career teachers can claim a levelling up premium payment for teaching the above subjects in eligible state-funded secondary schools. Levelling up premium payments will be offered in schools identified as having a high need for teachers. Teachers in an eligible school in an Education Investment Area will receive a higher payment.
On 11 May 2022, a joint Ofqual and Department for Education statement was published about qualifications being taken in the academic year 2022-2023.
Ofqual has also produced a range of other resources to support students during this exam season:
Ofqual has published two surveys to seek feedback from students, teachers, tutors, and home-educators on some of the adaptations to exam arrangements in summer 2022.
The online surveys take 10 to 15 minutes to complete and will be open until 11.59pm on Sunday 15 May 2022. They can be accessed via the following links:
Ofqual has re-published the Guide for Schools and Colleges (22 April 2022) which covers a range of information on the awarding of GCSE, AS and A levels. The guide brings together information that has already been published elsewhere to form a useful reference document for schools and colleges.
Ofqual has also recently published Official statistics on appeals for GCSE, AS, A level and Project: 2020 to 2021 academic year. (21 April 2022)
Ofqual has published the Student Guide to exams and formal assessments in 2021 to 2022. (8 March 2022)
Ofqual has published resources to aimed at helping young people through the exam period. There is a range of materials – guides, blogs and other documents – for students, or teachers, parents and carers supporting them, to help manage exam pressure. These include:
A guide for students on coping with exam pressure, developed with specialists from Liverpool John Moores University and a series of blogs written by a group of researchers and practitioners who work together through the University of Manchester’s Institute of Education:
Ofqual has also published a collection of links to guides and advice published by other organisations and specialists and a review of published literature on the topic of test anxiety which may be of interest to academics and practitioners working in the field.
A letter from Chief Regulator Jo Saxton after Advance Information for GCSE, AS and A level exams was released on 7 February. The letter can be read here
You can find relevant guidance from JCQ and Ofqual, including FAQs for students and exam centres, and the student guide on the JCQ Advance Information landing page.
Ofqual has published the following documents on advance information:
Ofqual has also published a refreshed version of a guide for students: coping with exam pressure, which was produced in conjunction with Professor Dave Putwain, a researcher (and a former teacher) at Liverpool John Moores University.
Ofqual has published summary guidance which pulls together the special considerations approaches of awarding organisations into a single place. It gives a summary for each awarding organisation offering Applied Generals, Tech Awards, Tech Certs and Tech Levels in England. You can view the guidance here (3 February 2022)
Ofqual has published a range of research and analysis reports about assessment and awarding in 2021. This includes:
Ofqual’s Chief Regulator, Jo Saxton, wrote to schools on 9 December 2021 explaining what they can expect from the advance information. You can read the letter here.
The government’s intention is that exams and other formal assessments, including for VTQs and other general qualifications, will go ahead in the academic year 2021 to 2022. Ofqual has considered how regulations can help make this happen. Ofqual has published guidancefor awarding VTQs in this academic year.
Ofqual 2022 contingency guidancefor GCSE, AS and A level - Arrangements for exams and non-exam assessments for students taking qualifications in summer 2022.
Ofqual is inviting applications for external experts to help with their work on qualifications and assessments for GCSEs, A levels, a wide range of vocational and technical qualifications and new apprenticeship end-point assessments. External experts help to ensure the qualifications Ofqual regulates are fit for purpose, ensuring that the right things can be assessed in a consistent way. Find out more here.
The student guides created by Ofqual to support this summer’s awarding process have been updated to include more information about the appeals process. The information within the guides is not new but it has been written in less technical language to help students understand their choices and the appeals process. Schools may wish to share the guide as part of their results day support for students. You can view the guides here.
Ofqual has also published a collection of 5 reports (July 2021) studying aspects of learning during the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.
Assisted technology (AT) is an umbrella term that can, in the broadest sense, include any device, software or system that is used to support an individual who has some form of disability or impairment. This Ofqual qualitative study sought to explore the use of assistive technologies in assessment. Findings include:
Ofqual has published alternative formats of the student guide:
Ofqual has also published several documents that we would like to draw your attention to:
The guidance from Ofqual on how to complain, whistleblow or report malpractice has been updated in relation to the arrangements for 2021. This is not to be confused with the appeals process for awarding grades. Rather, this Ofqual complaints process allows complaints to be made about the awarding organisations it regulates.
Ofqual has published guidance ( 20 May 2021) on awarding of vocational, technical and other general qualifications in summer 2021. The guidance outlines what to expect from awarding organisations and the adaptations that have been made this year.
Ofqual has
published its corporate plan for 2021/22 (19 May 2021).
Ofqual has published the following documents:
Ofqual is consulting (14 May
2021) on arrangements for non-exam assessment (NEA) and fieldwork requirements
for some GCSE, AS and A level qualifications in 2022. This consultation closes at 11:45pm on 28 May 2021.
The news story can be read here (14 May
2021).
The information on the Autumn 2021 exam series has been updated (13 May 2021) to clarify the autumn exams will assess students in the same way as had been planned for exams in summer 2021.
Ofqual has written a response (13 May
2021) to the government’s consultation on Post Qualifications Admissions.
Please see the new guide to awarding for students (May 2021) published by Ofqual. The guide explains how GCSEs, A levels, vocational and technical qualifications will be graded and awarded in summer 2021.
There is more information from
Ofqual on GCSEs, AS and A levels in 2021 (10 May 201) and vocational,
technical and other general qualification in 2021 (10 May 2021). JCQ have
also published information on GCSEs, AS and A levels in 2021.
On 27th April Ofqual confirmed how data and evidence of a student’s grades will be submitted in this summer’s awarding.
Schools (centres) will be able to submit students’ grades from Wednesday 26th May until Friday 18th June 2021. Once the grades are received, every centre will be asked to provide samples of student work, as described in Ofqual’s recent blog, quality assurance for GCSE, AS and A level: information for schools and colleges.
Centres should retain the work and records of marking or grading judgements as exam boards will request samples after 18th June. This will also be needed if a student wishes to appeal their result.
Please see the submission of teacher assessed grades, summer 2021: info for teachers guidance for more information.
Students who receive a teacher assessed grade this summer will be eligible to take GCSE, AS or A level exams in the same subject in autumn 2021, Ofqual confirmed yesterday.
This also applies to those students who exam boards believe would have sat exams in summer 2021 had they not been cancelled.
These decisions follow a consultation, Arrangements for GCSE, AS and A level exams in autumn 2021, an analysis of which was published yesterday after the consultation closed on 9 April.
Ofqual has also decided that:
Separately, Ofqual also published its decisions document on Consultation on autumn assessment opportunities for Vocational and Technical and Other General Qualifications. Ofqual has confirmed the details of the framework, which will require awarding organisations that normally provide assessment opportunities between September and January, to make those assessments available to learners who were eligible to receive a result through a teacher assessed grade if they wish to improve on it.
Where awarding organisations
do not normally provide assessment opportunities between September and January,
Ofqual will require them to provide those opportunities where they reasonably
consider there is sufficient demand and would be manageable to both the
awarding organisation and centres.
Ofqual has published a news story (27 April 2021) and updated the information for heads of centre, heads of department and teachers on the submission of teacher assessed grades: summer 2021 (27 April 2021) document, following confirmation of the detailed arrangements for external quality assurance.
Guidance on Exam
centre responsibility for students retaking qualifications from summer 2020’(27 April 2021) has been updated to explain responsibility for entering
students for exams or alternative arrangements to exams and how the cost of
fees will be covered.
A blog published 22 April 2021 by Ofqual gives further details on the quality assurance process for awarding in summer 2021.
Ofqual has published a consultation (21 April 2021) on the appeals process for awarding in 2021. This is seeking views on the specific Ofqual guidance, not the underlying policy decisions (which have already been established).
Following the Secretary of State’s decision to extend the end date for continuing learners on the legacy Functional Skills qualifications until 31 July 2021, Ofqual has updated its related publications:
· Functional Skills English conditions and requirements
· Functional Skills English guidance
· Functional Skills mathematics conditions and requirements
· Functional Skills mathematics guidance
The DfE collection on
Functional Skills has been similarly updated.
Yesterday Ofqual announced (24 Match 2021) it had published further guidance and documentation relating to assessment and awarding this year. This included two documents in particular that you should take note of:
There was also a range of more technical documents and further consultations, which you may wish to read but are perhaps less directly useful to schools:
Simon Lebus, Interim Chief Regulator
has delivered an important speech in which he
talks about the "difficulty of applying teacher judgement and some of the heavy
responsibility the task places on teachers who find themselves not merely
preparing their students for the next step of their life journey but also for
allocating the exam grades that provide a passport to it. We know that teachers
feel the weight of this responsibility and are not always comfortable with some
of the moral dilemmas and conflicts with which it confronts them.”
On the subject of assessing and grading this summer, you might find it useful to read this speech by Ian Bauckham, interim Ofqual Chair. In particular it is worth noting Ian said that:
The DfE/Ofqual published a series of documents yesterday relating to the outcome of the consultation (25 February 2021) on assessment and awarding of qualifications in 2021:
The outcome of the consultation (25 February 2021) on awarding VTQs and other general qualifications was also published yesterday including the following documents:
New guidance (26 February
2021) was published on awarding of functional skills in 2021.
This new blog (11 February 2021) from Ofqual on the GCSE autumn 2020 exam series says the following:
On 29 January 2021 Ofqual published
this blog: Consultation
update and a proposal for externally-set papers.
Ofqual received over 103,000
responses across the consultations on GCSE, AS and A levels and on vocational
and technical qualifications. They are analysing the responses and plan to
publish next steps the week beginning 22nd February.
DfE and Ofqual have launched a consultation(15 January 2021) seeking views on how to award grades in a way that reflects
students’ performance accurately recognising the disruption they have faced
this year. The consultation will close at 11.45pm on 29 January 2021. You can
respond here. Ofqual has
also launched a consultation
on awarding arrangements for a range of vocational and technical qualifications(15 January 2021).
Simon Lebus, Interim Chief
Regulator, has published this blog (15 January 2021) on how 2021 could look for students.
Ofqual is looking for subject experts to support its review of the new technical qualifications that form part of T Levels in the following subjects:
More information about what this entails can be found here.
It has been announced (13 January 2021) that a £135million fund has been launched to upgrade classrooms, buildings and equipment in readiness for T-Level courses starting in 2022. T Level providers can bid via the T Level Capital fund. Where an academy delivering T Levels is part of a multi academy trust, the Trust will need to apply on behalf of the academy. More details about applications can be found in the Capital Fund Guidance. The window for applications is now open and the deadline to submit is 26th March 2021.
Ofqual has launched a consultation ( 11 December 2020) . To support the consultation there is an explanatory video, PowerPoint and document.
The deadline for submission is: 11:45pm on December 20th 2020.
Ofqual has published detailed investigation into optionality in three subjects (GCSE English literature, GCSE History and A level Sociology), as well as a summary briefing paper.
Alongside this research, Ofqual also published a news story exploring the issues of optionality and predictability and a research paper and briefing on exam question predictability.
Ofqual has published a detailed analysis of the extent to which particular groups of children were disadvantaged by the CAG awarding process in summer 2020. Ofqual states, "Our research suggests that students were not systemically disadvantaged in 2020 on the basis of their protected characteristics or socioeconomic status.”
The study looked at CAGs, calculated-grades and final grades, making comparisons with 2018 and 2019. You can read more about it in the following:
Analysis has also been carried out regarding GCSE English language and maths entries for the November 2020 series.
Ofqual has published Official Statistics for:
The following documents have also been recently published:
In addition, the GCSE, GCE AS and A-level June 2021 Common Timetable has now been confirmed. The JCQ news release can be found here.
Ofqual has published (5 November 2020) the outcome of their consultation on GCSE MFL assessment in 2021.
You may also be interested to read the Acting Chief Regulator, Dame Glenys Stacey’s letter to the Secretary of State.
Ofqual has published a blog on autumn exam series standard setting ‘Setting Standards in the autumn series (19 October 2020)
JCQ is consulting with stakeholders on the GCE AS, A level and GCSE Summer 2021 provisional Common Timetable until 30 October. Please find further information here. (October 2020)
Ofqual published the outcome (October 2020) of its consultation on the arrangements for assessment of vocational and technical qualifications.
CCEA, Ofqual and
Qualifications Wales have published updated guidance (September 2020) regarding
appeals for summer 2020 results. The guidance explains the awarding bodies’
expectations in relation to appeals made on the grounds of a centre error,
particularly the type of evidence that would be required to support such
appeals.