º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

New GCSE shake-up 'will lead to shortage of examiners'

Tougher new GCSE exams could lead to a national shortage of examiners, a Birmingham teaching union has claimed

Pupils during a GCSE exam(Image: Chris Radburn/PA Wire)

Tougher new GCSE exams could lead to a national shortage of examiners, a Birmingham teaching union has claimed.

Recruitment adverts for GCSE markers placed on city buses and in the pages of cruise holiday magazines may not be enough to help solve a staffing shortage, said Chris Keates, general secretary of the Rednal-based National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers.

Her comments came after sweeping reforms to both tougher standards to achieve top grades from September.

The changes – described as the “biggest shake-up” of the education system in almost three decades – will see a move away from coursework with GCSEs and A-levels becoming overwhelmingly exam-based.

It is feared the reforms will steep pressure on exam boards with extra papers to mark, with the full impact expected to be felt by 2019.

Ms Keates said the reforms had created “an enormous challenge” to recruit more markers.

She added that the qualifications reform had been “poorly thought-through” and “driven by ideology not evidence”, with too little thought for the resources needed to implement the reforms.

Major exams board OCR said it would need to hire thousands of extra staff to mark exams to cope with changes instigated by Michael Gove during his time as Education Secretary.