The continuous assessment of young people aged between 16 and 18 has been attacked as "barmy" by the head teacher of an independent school.Gwen Randall, head of Framlingham College in Suffolk, said it was little wonder that medical staff at the school had seen an increase in the number of young people suffering from stress.
Reforms to the new AS and A2 system have amounted to no more than mere tinkering
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Gwen Randall, Framlingham College
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Exam treadmill
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Year 9 - English, maths, science tests
Year 11 - GCSEs
Year 12 - AS-levels
Year 13 - A2s
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"Reforms to the new - and rightly maligned - AS and A2 system have amounted to no more than mere tinkering."The minister's crusading words were hollow," Mrs Randall said.
Exam boards
Mrs Randall also spoke of the "glaring inadequacies" of the examination boards."One year, for example, we sent no fewer that 26 A-level papers back for remarking - 26 were upgraded," she said.She went on to criticise the government for unleashing "initiative overload" on the education system.Independent schools were not immune from national reforms in education, she said."As teacher morale weakens in the state sector, so we too find it more difficult to recruit committed men and women into the profession," said Mrs Randall.
Risk taking
Mrs Randall said the college must continue to give pupils the chance to take part in risky activities such as rugby and skiing."We must be utterly responsible in our planning, procedures and preparation, taking every reasonable precaution of course."But you cannot sanitise life. You cannot eliminate danger. There is no magic wand which will eradicate tragedies."Tours to South Africa and Peru must continue, as must the school's strong tradition of rugby."There is a new sinister, insidious danger in society today which threatens to choke us all to death - that danger is vexatious litigation," she warned.
Source by: http://news.bbc.co.uk
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