With exams cancelled across the UK, teens and parents across the country have been wondering what these means for GCSE and A Level grades. Many teens are unsure how they can prove themselves while learning from home. Here we speak to Marc Naylor, a Teacher Trainer and former Deputy Head, about what kids can do in 2021 to achieve the grades they deserve.
GCSEs and A-level exams have been cancelled in England, Wales and Northern Ireland for 2021, as have Highers and Advanced Highers in Scotland. For some students who don’t perform well in exams (or just don’t like them), this will be music to their ears. For others, not so much. Some may now be questioning what this means for the universities, colleges or apprenticeships they were working towards. Others might realise that they haven’t performed consistently through the school year and now don’t have the opportunity to cram ahead of an exam to push their grade up. There are still a lot of uncertainties about how it’s all going to work, but here are a few things we do know.
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson has stated that the doomed “mutant” algorithm used in 2020, which led to significant downgrading of pupils’ final grades and disproportionately hitting the state sector more than the private, will not be used for assessments this year. That said, he’s so far been unable to explain how the whole process will work. It’s currently expected that grades will rely on a combination of teacher-led assessments and something that Ofqual is still working on. There’s been recent speculation that Ofqual will soon announce that students must sit mini-assessments in the summer term.
How Assessments Will Work
Teachers will be asked to award their pupils’ grades based on evidence that their work is to the standard of that grade. This will include any previous exam, mock or internal assessment grade. They’ll also consider their experience of teaching the student and decide whether what they’ve seen tallies with the work produced so far and the individual’s engagement.
In some cases, schools might have had a chance to set up mock exams or some kinds of more formal assessments, and any data from those will be factored in. Teachers will also take into account the fact that that pupils have missed perhaps 6+ months of school, might not have had access to Wi-Fi or technology, and are unlikely to have completed all aspects of the curriculum. Final grades will also depend on any further info that comes from the Department for Education between now and the summer. Usually the data required by exam boards is entered around the Easter holidays, so if that’s anything to go by, students have about a term to convince their teachers to allocate the grades they think they deserve.
What Your Teen Can Do to Get Their Best Grades Without Exams
1. Keep standards up all year
The most important things are for students to listen to their teachers, email or message them if they’re unsure about anything, and complete all the homework and classwork they get set. Each piece of work a teen completes and sends to their teacher will help them build a picture of the grade they should be awarded in the summer.
Some teens might feel this adds pressure to each piece of work they do, but really, it means your teen has lots of opportunities to prove themselves. If they struggle with a new topic one week, for example, but then work at it and improve by a couple of weeks later, the teacher will a) be impressed that a student has worked through a challenge and b) have evidence in their later work that they should achieve a higher grade.
2. Engage during lessons
Teachers are looking for genuine engagement during live lessons, and teens should get involved as much as they can. They shouldn’t be afraid to ask questions, just like they would in school lessons. Most tech platforms like Google Classroom, Microsoft Teams and Zoom let you virtually raise hands to ask questions — teens should use it and wait for the teacher’s response rather than interrupting. If there’s something the student really doesn’t want to say in front of the class, then it’s fine to message the teacher privately about it. It’ll show initiative and engagement (although teaching staff may not be able to give an immediate response), and help them keep up with their learning.
Crucially, pupils need to stay for the whole call every lesson so they can take in everything the teacher communicates with them. Teachers will know if students dip out of the live lesson at the first opportunity, and this can cause learning gaps to grow if it’s an ongoing habit. For the same reason, students shouldn’t chat with classmates unless it’s been requested in relation to the task, and they should be prepared to unmute and answer questions when they’re asked.
3. Stay motivated
We know this one is easier said than done. Key elements that help include having a daily structure, having a sense of achievement and having something productive to show for each day. For teens, online school can provide the basis for all of these: the digital timetable offers up the structure for them to follow, they can feel a sense of achievement when they learn something new, and completing the school work means they have something productive that shows engagement with each lesson. It can help teens to see the value of knowledge for its own sake rather than it all being about the end goal of an exam or final grade.
As a parent, do what you can to keep communication open. Online classes offer up some of the face-to-face interaction that we all need, but it’s likely your teen will crave more human connections for their own wellbeing, so allow them to contact other friends online out of school hours.
Your teen should also remember that they’ll need a grade to move ahead to whatever is next, whether that’s work, college, university, or an apprenticeship. Demonstrating now that they can apply themselves to the structure and routine of a digital classroom will be of long-term benefit for their future working or studying days.
4. Stay connected
As well as seeing their classmates in their remote school lessons, your teen and their friends can help each other by staying connected at this time. They could set up a WhatsApp group where they talk about the work they have to do this week, share online resources and remind each other of upcoming deadlines. They could schedule Zoom study sessions with mates where they get on with their work “together” as they might have in a library – this is a nice way to create accountability with each other, and it’ll help fend off isolation too. Even within your family, if you have more than one child, an older sibling can boost their own learning by teaching another. If they’re closer in age, blocking out quiet study time where they’re together but focused can help them stay motivated too.
If they’d benefit from some 1-1 academic support, our online tutors can help them keep up with their learning, fill in learning gaps and boost their motivation during this challenging time. They will have studied similar course to your teen, so they teach from their own recent experience and can easily relate to what teens are going through.
If you’d like some more advice on keeping your teen’s education on track, have a read of our blog on how to set up homeschooling. For tips on managing everyone’s different needs, how to adjust homeschooling for kids of different ages has advice from a mum who’s in the thick of it.
MyTutor
MyTutor provides stress-free tuition that delivers results. In face-to-face online lessons, if you'd like to source some extra support with getting back on track, MyTutor's one-to-one tutors offer face-to-face online curriculum-focused academic support as well as much-needed confidence boosting and mentorship. In their first lessons, a tutor will work out where they have learning gaps and how they learn best, and tailor all lessons to suit their needs. Our handpicked tutors are subject specialists from UK universities and students improve, on average, by a whole grade in a term's worth of lessons (often more), so whatever your child's goals, they can get the help they need to achieve them.