Ah, well that's a different system to the one Lamie is referring to. His google link shows 1965 onwards, so maybe yours was 1-8. You're not even 70 yetNo, it was 1964. There, now you know my age
Ah, well that's a different system to the one Lamie is referring to. His google link shows 1965 onwards, so maybe yours was 1-8. You're not even 70 yetNo, it was 1964. There, now you know my age
Why is it we need a pass/fail or ABCDE or 1-9 or 9-1 rating? Why not just mark the paper, give a percentage for the correct answers etc. Therefore 78% will be better than 56% and 31% etc. Employers would then know exactly how well anybody did in any given exam. Simples.
Being an OAP the grading of exam results has changed somewhat. In my day everybody needed A & B to pass what is the criteria now.
Why is it we need a pass/fail or ABCDE or 1-9 or 9-1 rating? Why not just mark the paper, give a percentage for the correct answers etc. Therefore 78% will be better than 56% and 31% etc. Employers would then know exactly how well anybody did in any given exam. Simples.
A*-C was considered a pass.
D-G was considered a not very good pass
U was complete failure.
A level
E is the pass grade, but C and above is considered good.
I don't like the new numbered system, there was nothing wrong with it before.
That would't work very well to allow for moderation of the results to balance spread of the grades. It possible in an easy exam you might need 90% for an A, but in a hard exam 75% would get you an A. Therefore comparing one person's 90% to the other persons 75% doesn't give a fair reflection of their performances.
But if an employer was looking specifically for good maths results rather than social media, they would only be looking at the maths percentage not anything else.
Unfortunately exams differ each year in their degree of difficulty. An 80 % this year might be more achievable than 70 % next year if the paper is easier this year. To smooth out such anomalies the assumption is made that each year group has a similar range of abilities so by setting grade boundaries after absolute percentages are known it is fairer to students in those years where the exam is harder. It's not perfect but unless some way can be found to make exams equally difficult year on year, it remains a better system than publishing percentages.
Unfortunately exams differ each year in their degree of difficulty. An 80 % this year might be more achievable than 70 % next year if the paper is easier this year. To smooth out such anomalies the assumption is made that each year group has a similar range of abilities so by setting grade boundaries after absolute percentages are known it is fairer to students in those years where the exam is harder. It's not perfect but unless some way can be found to make exams equally difficult year on year, it remains a better system than publishing percentages.
ok, so what an employer must now do is factor in that a grade C in year X is the same as a grade B in year Y. Do employers get a chart to show the degree of difference in difficulty year on year. Or could a grade E be the same as an A depending on the year. Just a thought.
Or they could go back to the A Level system when I took them. Back in the day, there was no pass mark as such (or a mark that got you an A). A certain percentage passed, a certain percentage got As etc. It meant that something like 40% of candidates (or 30%, I can't remember the number) failed every year. In theory, someone could have got 65% percent and failed.
Our teachers would never tell us what was a pass mark because they said it changed every year (but in reality it was about 45%).
The beauty of this system, however, is that it doesn't matter whether an exam was more difficult or not
I don't like the new numbered system, there was nothing wrong with it before.
Isn't that the same as the current system ?
Don't think so: the number of people passing, get top grades etc wouldn't vary if it were
I thought maybe in your day it would have been 1-9 with 1-6 being passes...'in my day' it was A-E with A-C being passes...these were only introduced in 1975...you sure you weren't on the former?
Sorry I wasnt very clear the assessment was 1-9 but I converted that to what I thought was modern day terminology of A - B . I should stick with the old format.