Exam season at Bauhaus is officially over for the first time!
Over the past four weeks, we have welcomed students from across the globe to take their GCSE, IGCSE, AS-Level, and A-Level exams at our centre. Some were students we have been working with for a long time taking their GCSEs a year or two earlier than they usually would, and some were fresh-faces hailing from our own little hometown of Northampton, as well as further afield like Milton Keynes, Birmingham, and even Canada!
It was the talk of the office, our first ever exam season, and one unlike any other. Internally set assessments quickly replaced the traditional exam format as exam boards requested tutor-assessed average grades instead of the usual "do the exam and send it off" approach of the past.
Even after the four week exam stint and the hours upon hours of invigilating (which led to some very cute drawings from our newest member of staff and some strange musings from others), we have been wading through stacks of paper, all giving newly-anonymous copies of exams the marks we feel they deserve.
But now it's over.
And something much worse, but equally interesting, begins.
We all watched in horror at the controversial decisions made by exam boards across the country last year, where students up and down the country were appealing grades that they did not know would be taken forward and used as their final result. This year, things should be different, with students being made aware that the exams or assessments they have been sitting are the basis for their final grades.
Theoretically, this means that the results should reflect the students' abilities. But how are the effects of lockdown being taken into account? Almost every student in the country has missed portions of their teaching, or been forced to experience a new way of learning they may not have felt comfortable with. Will these factors be taken into account and grade boundaries lowered, or will those who struggled with new ways of learning be further disadvantaged going forward?
It is worth stating that the November exam series will be offering resits to all students who are unhappy with their results, and this exam series will be offered in all schools and private examination centres like ourselves. If you would like more information, either keep an eye on our website or contact exams.officer@bauhaus-education.co.uk.
Bauhaus Educational Services Ltd.
4 Notre Dame Mews,
Northampton,
NN1 2BG