Archive for the ‘GCSE’ Category

Ofsted and Children “missing” from Education

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Today Ofsted has published a report called, without any apparent irony, ‘Children Missing from Education’. Anyone involved in home education will find its assumptions and conclusions highly questionable, at the very least.

The summary of the survey reads as follows:

‘Ofsted’s latest survey highlights the challenges local authorities face in identifying and tracking children who are missing from education. Children missing from education, and whose whereabouts become unknown, not only risk failing academically but are also potentially vulnerable to physical, emotional and psychological harm.

‘The Children missing from education report surveyed 15 local authorities of different sizes across England, in both urban and rural areas. It found that none of the authorities felt confident that they knew about all the children living in their area in order to fulfil their duties to keep children safe.’

The first and most obvious point to make is that although some children may be (shamefully!) missing from certain local authorities’ records, this does not mean they are missing from education. On the contrary, we can be sure that many of them are receiving a full and carefully-constructed education within the home environment.

At Oxford Home Schooling, we are supporting thousands of students in this category, most of them working successfully towards Key Stage 3, GCSE and A-level qualifications. Some of these youngsters have been assisted by their local authorities, others have been studiously ignored.

We are not aware of a single home-learner who is “vulnerable to physical, emotional and psychological harm”, although one can never be complacent.  We work closely not just with the students but with their families and in the vast majority of cases, the families are close-knit, supportive and conscientious in their commitment to a high-quality education within the home environment.

Once again the tragic case of Khyra Ishaq is hauled into the debate, e.g. in the BBC’s report on the Ofsted survey, as if the tragedy would have been averted if the local authorities had had slightly different powers. In that case, the authorities had enough information and enough power to intervene but, for various reasons, did not do so in time.

The obvious lack of education taking place was the least of the apparent problems.  But the authorities had the power to ask the Ishaq family to demonstrate that full-time and appropriate education was in place and, if evidence was not forthcoming, to issue a School Attendance Order. This seems to me to be an appropriate set of safeguards and procedures and it is a shame that they were not observed. For Ofsted to claim that local authorities are unable to deal with home-educated children is disingenuous in the extreme.

Ofsted are best known for their inspections of schools so it should come as no surprise that they are in favour of inspection of homes where home education is (or is not) taking place. At a time when a new government is putting quangoes to the sword,  or, worse still, sending them to Coventry, it is understandable that it should seek to appropriate yet more powers and generate the work that might save a few of their own jobs.

But they are unlikely to get their wish. This is partly because of the near-universal hostility to the idea of inspection amongst the bona fide home-schooling community (e.g. HEAS).  Perhaps more importantly, the timing is all wrong. The Labour government, during three terms in office, might have sought to apply the same level of bureaucratic control to home schooling as it has done to other aspects of education, but it did not do so in the end.

The Con-Lib coalition has a a very different philosophy. At a time when the government is seeking to reduce cost, bureaucracy and the “nanny state”, it is highly unlikely to tamper with the delicate balance of freedoms, controls and responsibilities which is currently applied to the home education sector. In that context, Ofsted’s report will be pereceived as an empty gesture.

Our experience at OHS is that local authorities vary enormously in their treatment of home learners.  Some do not even have the mechanisms to find out from the schools involved that a particular pupil has been withdrawn. It would be a good idea to put effective systems in place, right across the country, to  ensure that schools do  always share this information. Home-educating families can then be positively supported rather than suspiciously monitored and inspected. But there is a world of difference between the provision of resources, tutors and perhaps even funding and the kind of unwelcome control that Ofsted offers.

(Dr) Nicholas Smith,

Principal, Oxford Home Schooling

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English Literature IGCSE

Friday, August 13th, 2010
sculptural relief by H.H. Armstead of 'Literature' in portland stone, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Whitehall, London

H.H. Armstead, 'Literature'

Oxford Home Schooling is pleased to announce that we now have an exciting new course for IGCSE English Literature.

The new course is designed to match the Edexcel 4ET0 specification for examinations in June 2011, June 2012, or later years.

Candidates are required to sit two written examinations, one on prose and drama and one on poetry. There is no coursework.  The specification is designed as ideal preparation for A-level English Literature study.

The selected texts for detailed study are Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men.  For the poetry paper, Edexcel has produced an anthology of sixteen poems including a number of popular favourites like Kipling’s ‘If’, Blake’s ‘Tyger’ and Dylan Thomas’s ‘Do not go gentle into that good night’, and a range of international poets including Alice Walker and Gabriel Okara.  The OHS course covers all sixteen poems in considerable detail.

As well as the three modules on the two set texts and the poetry, there are also two introductory modules, one on literary analysis and one on essay technique. The Edexcel requirements are a little more “academic” than the equivalent GCSE, but our course aims to make the study of English Literature lively and engaging for students of all abilities.

English Literature IGCSE forms an ideal complement to study of the main English IGCSE course or as part of a full range of IGCSE studies.

GCSE or IGCSE?

For the home-educated and distance learners in general, 2011 is the last year in which it is possible to stake a “standard” GCSE in English Literature. From 2012, GCSE students are required to undertake a controlled assessment which is not practicable unless you are in a supervised classroom. So IGCSE is the only viable choice in this and and a number of other subjects.  But there are plenty of IGCSE exam centres up and down the country so it is relatively straightforward to enter the exams, especially with no coursework involved.

IGCSE qualifications are accepted as at least the equivalent of GCSEs in all sixth form colleges, FE colleges, universities and other HE institutions.

If you are looking to study IGCSE English Literature outside the UK, there is no need to visit the UK to sit your exams.  With exam centres world-wide, Edexcel IGCSE is the obvious choice for international candidates.  Visit Edexcel International to find your nearest exam centre.

If you are interested in studying this or other IGCSE programmes with Oxford Home Schooling, please contact one of our Student Advisers today.

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IGCSE and State Schools

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Today’s Guardian includes the headline: ‘International GCSE offer rejected by the majority of state schools’.  Jessica Shepherd’s report notes that only 16 state schools have signed up to teach IGCSEs from this autumn despite the fact that they are now free to do so (after the announcement in June by the schools minister, Nick Gibb).

The report is midsleading in a  number of ways.  Only 16 have told the Cambridge board (CIE) that they will be offering the exams but Cambridge is not the only board offering IGCSE. Edexcel has designed a set of IGCSE specfications which are intended to be better suited to the needs of UK state schools.  It is also rather too early to tell how many schools will offer IGCSE this autumn as there is no requirement to notify a board in advance and many are still making plans.

But the Guardian does not make the obvious point. State schools are in no position to offer IGCSE programmes because those programmes are not funded. Only when IGCSE courses are funded at the same level as GCSE courses will we see a large scale shift away from GCSE and towards IGCSE. The government has not yet told us whether (or when) IGCSE programmes will be funded. Until that happens, IGCSE will remain the preserve of the private sector. But the very fact that so many private schools intend to offer IGCSE this year is clear evidence that IGCSEs are seen as a better and more demanding preparation for A-levels and university courses.

Martin Ward, deputy general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, has said that the low figure shows state school teachers have “clearly decided that there is no virtue in their pupils taking IGCSEs”. This is complete nonsense and he knows it. There are some schools where the teachers are aware of the IGCSE option who have decided that it would be too tough for most of their pupils and that it represents a risk to their GCSE rankings, but most have not considered IGCSE at all because of the absence of funding.  A party divide has opened up on this issue and it is clear that the ASCL is toeing the Labour Party line.

But there are much wider issues at stake here. Should we compel state schools to deliver a National Curriculum which is carefully controlled by the government? Or should we trust exam boards and universities to set the exams that students, schools and universities want? IGCSEs are currently unregulated but there is no doubt that they are harder than GCSEs. If they become state-regulated, will exam boards start competing (as they have done with GCSE) to make them ever easier in order  to attract a higher proportion of state schools? It may be some time before all these issues are satisfactorily settled.

Dr Nicholas Smith,

Principal, Oxford Home Schooling

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Results Day

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Examination results day is always exciting, and often it can be a day of great celebration. However, for a few candidates there can be disappointment and in some cases, justified confusion. If you are an Oxford Home Schooling student, then your Student Adviser can provide reassurance and help.

Private Candidates

External or Private Candidates are particularly vulnerable on results day as they are usually “on their own”, without the back-up of an exam officer and a set of teachers who know them well and can offer advice.  Also, exam officers are frantically busy with their own students at this time and may not be happy to explain things to someone who is not one of their own students.

If you are a Private Candidate, then unlike pupils in school, you will not already know your coursework mark and it will not be identified separately on your “Candidate Statement of Provisional Results”, otherwise known as your results slip. All you will see on results day is the overall grade that you have been awarded. This can be frustrating and confusing, particularly if you have not done as well as you expected. It is easy to become annoyed and frustrated, but there are things that you can do to gather more information.

What can you do?

Always look at the results slip carefully, since for Private Candidates, a common cause of a lower than expected grade is an administrative error at the exam board which means that your coursework mark may not have been included in your grade. If you see the hash symbol “#” next to the grade it means that part of your mark is missing. This is usually the coursework and (as long as you did your coursework and submitted it correctly) this can easily be rectified. You just need to calmly show your exam officer your results slip and explain that there is a problem indicated. If you are an Oxford Open Learning student, then your Student Adviser will also provide reassurance and help.

If there is not a hash symbol then unfortunately the chances are that you really did not do as well as you expected. In this case you need to stay calm and consider your options in consultation with other people, especially your tutor and/or Student Adviser. Please remain polite and always remember that it is not the exam officer’s fault, even though you may want to take your immediate frustration out on someone.

For most students everything goes well and results day is a great relief.  If it doesn’t then stay calm, there are people to turn to even though your exam officer may be very busy.

Good luck!

Jenny Booth

Exams Officer

Oxford Open Learning

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AS levels to be scrapped?

Monday, July 5th, 2010

AS levels will not be scrapped. The sensationalised headlines do not reflect the proposals that have currently been aired by Michael Gove, the new Education Secretary.

What Gove is suggesting is an alternative qualification for the more academic, university-bound student. Indeed, as he says, such an alternative already exists, in the form of the Cambridge pre-U, although it is available only in a small number of subjects and in a very small number of state schools. It is an invitation to other university-led institutions to put together rival qualifications, just as there are a number of rival boards for GCSE.

It is a broad hint that in the fullness of time, such alternative qualifications will not only be allowable in state schools but also funded in the same way as A-levels.  Until funding is in place, the take-up and public awareness of such qualifications will remain limited.

We have already seen the same government strategy applied to GCSE-level qualifications where it has already been announced that the IGCSE qualifications shunned by the last government will now be acceptable in state schools. IGCSEs, e.g. those set by Edexcel, will appeal to many schools because of their academic rigour and because they do not entail coursework. Coursework is very fiddly to administer and it is believed that coursework favours girls rather than boys so boys-only schools will be keen to adopt specifications that do not entail coursework.

Has the modularisation of A-levels also favoured girls and enabled them to overtake boys in terms of A-level achievement? While no alternatives exist, it is difficult to evaluate this theory. A bigger problem with modularisation has been the opportunity to re-take modules in order to get a better result. To many, a Grade C achieved at the third attempt is not really worth as much as a Grade C achieved after a single year of study, without any retakes, but there is no obvious mechanism to differentiate between the two. Certainly, universities would find it much easier to distinguish between candidates if they have all taken exams once only at the end of the course.

To many, IGCSEs are O-levels by another name and the new qualification proposed by Gove is a return to the old A-level system. Many educationalists see this as elitist and retrogressive but others will argue that after two decades of “dumbing down” in school qualifications, in order to keep students of widely varying ability in school to the age of 18, it is about time, we gave more able students the chance to prepare for university in a way that the universities themselves want.

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Too many parents failing to read to their children

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

A recent study by the National Literacy Trust has found that nearly nine in ten young people in the UK own a mobile phone, while only just over seven in ten have books of their own at home.

This has sparked a debate about the importance of books in the home, where the foundations of literacy are laid.

According to researchers, the presence of literature in the home has a profound effect on all families, irrespective of parental occupation or social class. This suggests that filling homes with a range of novels and reference books may make the difference between leaving school at 16 and progressing on to A-levels and University. It found that being raised in a household with a 500-book library would result in a child remaining in education for an average of three years longer than those with little access to literature. Even having as few as 20 books in the home can still have an impact.

Children are twice as likely to read outside class if they are encouraged to read by both their mother and father. Two in ten young people don’t get any encouragement to read at all from their mother and four in ten don’t from their father. The extent to which parents create a home environment that encourages reading has been found to have a significant influence on academic attainment.

Children who read above the expected level for their age are more likely to have books of their own at home; 80 per cent of high-achievers have books of their own, while only 58 per cent who read below their expected level do so.

Jonathan Douglas, National Literacy Trust director has said that:

“By ensuring children have access to reading materials in the home and by encouraging children to love reading, families can help them to do well at school and to enjoy opportunities throughout their life.

“Involvement with reading activities at home has significant positive influences not only on reading achievement, language comprehension and expressive language skills, but also on pupils’ interest in reading, attitudes towards reading and attentiveness in the classroom.”

Read the full article here. The National Literacy Trust is determined to increase opportunities for parents to support their children’s reading.

This month they have launched the Tell Me a Story campaign to raise awareness of the importance of family literacy and to raise money to support their work with families in disadvantaged communities across the country. It is encouraging parents to read to their child for 10 minutes a day every day.

Literacy is not simply an issue for developing nations; it is the UK’s most pressing educational challenge.

The new coalition government has said that improving literacy will be a priority. This is great news and the National Literacy Trust hope that their Tell Me A Story campaign will raise awareness of the role of parents in supporting schools in addressing this challenge.

Want to improve your library at home? Need some ideas? Take a look at Cool Reads which gives suggestions for hundreds of cool reads for 10-15 year olds, reviewed by 10-15 year olds.

Also, why not take a look at the English KS3 courses offered by Oxford Home Schooling, split up into years 7, 8 and 9 with a variety of texts to read for each year.  There is also an interesting range of English and English Literature GCSE and IGCSE courses.

Parents who promote reading as a valuable and worthwhile activity at home have children who are motivated to read for pleasure, as well as giving their children the best start in life.

Sue Ray
Home Education Co-ordinator
Oxford Home Schooling
01865 798022
sue@ool.co.uk

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IGCSE and State Schools

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Michael Gove, the Education Secretary, has just announced that state schools will be able to offer IGCSEs (International GCSEs) in all subjects from September.  As he says, this will allow pupils at state secondaries to compete on a level playing field with their privately-educated peers.

At Oxford Home Schooling, we welcome this development, but it is only a first step. It provides implicit acknowledgment of the academic credibility of IGCSEs but this was rarely in doubt within universities and colleges. Yet until IGCSEs are funded on the same scale as ordinary GCSEs, no state school will, in practice, be able to take the plunge. They cannot offer courses with no funding, however superior they seem, especially when the costs of re-training staff and re-educating parents are included.

Equivalent funding needs to be granted as soon as possible. The fear for many in the state education sector is that a two-tier system will develop, like the old split between CSE and O-level, and that GCSE will become increasingly marginalised.  But the difference between GCSE and IGCSE is not just one of academic rigour;  it is also a matter of convenience and accessibility. The controlled assessment required for most new GCSEs has disenfranchised whole categories of students, including home learners and distance learners, and it is vital that a practicable alternative like IGCSE, without all the coursework baggage, is suitably recognised and validated.

John Dunford, the general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, says that IGCSEs do not meet the rigorous standards of normal GCSEs.  I know of very few disinterested educationalists who share this view. Anyone who has compared an IGCSE specification with the equivalent GCSE specification in any subject (and I have looked at many) has come to the conclusion that IGCSEs require equivalent breadth and greater depth across the topic areas. This is easiest to judge in subjects like Maths and Science where IGCSE specifications (e.g. set by Edexcel) include all the  “normal” GCSE topics, plus a range of extra topics that most state school pupils do not encounter till A-level.   My impression is that IGCSEs offer much better preparati0n for A-level and higher education.

I believe that most teachers share this view and would like to make the switch to IGCSE. The pressure will grow on the government to ensure that IGCSEs are funded on the same scale as GCSEs but no one knows for sure what impact this will have on GCSEs. Some interesting times lie ahead!

(Dr) Nicholas Smith,

Principal, Oxford Home Schooling

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Choosing a course

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

With so many different ways to check out courses – online, by glossy prospectus, on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, through friends, students or work colleagues – it helps to have a checklist of what to look out for before you make your choice.  Not all distance learning and home study colleges or centres are the same!

What do you want to study?

First of all: what do you want to study?  Are you, or your children, aiming for specific qualifications – say GCSE Maths or English – or are you trying to decide between, say A Level psychology or sociology?  It helps to be clear about why you want to study a particular subject – will it help you get the right number of GCSEs, IGCSEs or A Levels to apply for university or teacher training college?  Or do you need, say a science GCSE to get on to a nursing course?  If you are aiming to gain qualifications for a course of training, university or college, then you need to be clear about what the entrance requirements are before making your choice.

Where do you want to study?

Once you’ve made up your mind about what subject(s) you want to study, the next question is – what course(s) are you going to study in order to achieve that goal?  If you are aiming to gain qualifications for a course of training, university or college, then make sure you choose the right qualification to study. For those thinking about distance learning or home study, the choice between GCSE and IGCSE is critical.  Some GCSEs, for example, law, psychology and sociology, are currently assessed by written exam, but most subjects include coursework that is assessed by controlled assessment.  While school pupils can do their coursework with controlled assessment in a classroom, home students and distance learners do not have this option.  So for those studying at home, IGCSE is the exam of choice for Maths, English, History, Geography, French, Spanish, Business Studies, Economics and Accounting.  IGCSE is widely accepted by universities and colleges world-wide, and provides excellent progression to A Level. Check out the details of the course you want to study, and make sure you are not caught out by the limitations of controlled assessment.

Where can you sit your exam(s)?

Another aspect of assessment is: where can you sit your exam?  When you contact distance learning and home study colleges, ask whether they will help you find a test centre and complete your exam application form.  Is there someone there who is in contact with the exam boards and knows the procedures and deadlines for entering for exams?  Can they help you, even if you live on a remote island, are based in the jungle in Borneo, based abroad for six months, away travelling and don’t want to miss a deadline, or are simply concerned to make sure that you have filled in the form properly?

Who will help you?

Studying at home can be hard sometimes, so ask whether the course you want to study includes the support of a tutor.  If it does, then ask whether that tutor is a qualfied teacher, and has experience in teaching the subject you want to study.  This will be of much more help to you, or your children, than being assigned a tutor who is not qualified to teach, and has little relevant experience  either of teaching or the subject you want to learn.

What other help might you need?  Well, apart from a good tutor, you might also want help from a student mentor or adviser who you can call about other aspects of your course than those dealt with by your tutor.

What should the course materials include?

Next, check out the course materials.  Whether these are online or in print, the course provider should allow you time to look these over and decide whether this is the course for you.  Courses should be developed by experienced teachers, writers and editors to match the qualification specification they set out to teach.  Make sure the materials are up to date, include clear sets of aims, well structured and clearly written lesson content, a wide range of activities, practice material, recommendations for further reading, self assessment tests, tutor marked assignments and practice exams. 

How long does a course last?

Some students want to fastrack to a qualification, others prefer a gentler pace.  Ask how the course you want to study works: is it over a fixed time period, or is it flexible?  Can you go at your own pace?  Is there a fixed start date, or can you begin as soon as you want to?  Can you study for a GCSE or a A Level in one year, instead of two?

Here’s a checklist:

At Oxford Home Schooling we ensure that all our students have:

  • opportunities to study for a wide range of GCSE, IGCSE, A Level, business, accountancy and educational administration qualifications;
  • a set of course materials to match the qualification specification
  • a qualified, experienced teacher as a personal tutor
  • a student adviser to assist with queries about the course
  • a dedicated exams officer to help with entry for exams
  • an online examination centre finder to help you find your nearest test centre
  • flexible courses

Check out our courses on our website, or contact us for more information.  Your call is free!

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Distance learning route to training in remote regions

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Postbox and road sign at junction to Mull of Kintyre

Postbox at junction to Mull of Kintyre

An article in yesterday’s Guardian ‘Distance learning provided training for would-be nurses in remote regions’ illustrates how distance learning with the Open University has enabled former healthcare assistants, some with family responsibilities, to obtain nursing qualifications while living in remote areas.  From the Mull of Kintyre to the Channel Island of Jersey students are now able to gain full nursing qualifications by distance learning. 

Without distance learning as an option, none of those who successfully qualified as nurses would have been in a position to study and qualify.  All confirmed that with self-motivation, commitment and good time management they were able to combine the demands of work, family life and study to achieve their goals.  Most importantly, each received the support of a fully qualified, experienced tutor, together with that of a course mentor who offered advice and support throughout the entire period of study. 

If you live in an area or region that makes it difficult to follow a course of study by attending school or college then Oxford Home Schooling can help you achieve your goal.  Our GCSE, IGCSE, A Level, business management, accountancy training, and Certificate in Educational Administration courses have made it possible both for adult individuals and families who are home educating their children to study from home.  

We know that studying at home takes self-motivation and commitment to succeed. But we don’t expect you do go it alone. Like the trainee nurses mentioned in The Guardian, Oxford Home Schooling students receive support from a fully qualified experienced tutor, a student adviser, and a dedicated exams officer to help them make the most of their course of study.  We do our best to help you succeed, and we hope our students will consider us as part of their valued small community. 

Whether you live in the heart of the city, or miles from the nearest shop, distance learning with Oxford Home Schooling is easily accessible by phone, email, online or in print.  Contact us for information about how we can help you gain the qualifications you need.  The door is open.

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How to revise for exams when studying at home

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

It’s that time of year when the sun is shining and at the back of your mind is the thought that your exam date is not far away.  Now’s the time to make a plan of how (and when) you are going to revise so that you can do your best on the day. 

Plan ahead

If you are studying at home using one of our Oxford Home Schooling courses and are planning to take your exam this May or June, then you should be nearing the end of your course of study.  Make a note of how much time you have left before your exam date, then think about how you will divide your time between finishing the course and revising for your exam.  Some people find it useful to make a revision plan and record this on a calendar, or in a diary, on screen, or on a sheet of paper stuck up over their study place.  What will work best for you and help to keep you on track?

Use the time…

to make sure you have studied all parts of the course, understood the lesson content, and can use what you have learned to answer questions.  Easier said than done! So how can you break up this general aim into smaller, manageable tasks?

1.  Make the most of your course materials

First of all, re-read your course introduction.  It’s full of useful information about the overall content of the course: what’s in each module and lesson; where to go online to read the exam specification (or syllabus), and where to find practice exam papers online. Depending on your subject, your course introduction may also include advice on how to write essays, carry out a piece of practical work, or answer exam-type questions.

As you revise the course itself, use the lesson aims as topic headings and then make revision notes from the lessons on these topics.

Check your answers to tests and assignments that you did as part of the course.  You can learn a lot from the mistakes you made first time around. 

Sort out all the extra papers, notes, photocopies or downloads you might have slipped into the course folder; put them in order, and think about how you might use this additional material/research as case studies, examples or data to support your exam answers.  Sometimes you are asked to use the data provided in the exam question itself and your own knowledge when answering a question.  Make sure you have some good examples of your own that you can draw on to support your exam answers.

If the last Tutor-marked assignment is a practice exam, think about whether you want to do your revision first, before you do this assignment.  When you get your marked paper back from your tutor, use his or her comments as aids to further study, to improve upon your mark.

2.  Make the most of information about your exam

When you go to the AQA and Edexcel websites to look at the subject specification, you will find that this includes the following details for every assessment:

  • how many papers you will need to sit
  • how long each exam lasts
  • how many sections each exam contains
  • how many questions you will need to answer in each section
  • how marks are allocated across sections and questions
  • what criteria the assessor will use to mark your exam
  • what the achievement objectives are and how these are marked

If you look at sample assessment papers and past papers on the AQA and Edexcel websites, these show you:

  • what exam papers look like
  • what instructions are on the first page
  • how much space you have for writing answers to questions in the answer booklets
  • what kinds of questions you can expect to find in your exam
  • where the marks for each question appear on the exam paper
  • how long the exam is, and sometimes how much time you should spend on each question

On both websites you can also find :

  • specimen answers to old exam papers with examiners comments: these can be very useful.  You can find examples of an A grade answer or a C grade answer to a question and compare these with some of your own TMA answers to get an idea of where you stand;
  • webpages for private candidates.  As a student at Oxford Home Schooling, you will be entered for your exam as a private candidate;
  • webpages of advice for students taking exams: make sure you have a look at these as there are lots of useful tips.

3.  Ask your tutor

If there’s something you are not sure of, then do ask your tutor: tutors have helped lots of students to prepare for exams and they can draw on their experience to help you prepare for yours.

4.  Ask your student adviser

Don’t forget that our student advisers are also here to help you.  You can contact us, too.  We are here to help.  Good luck!

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