Hi, I have not heard of further changes to come but the rules have already tightened, in response to concerns that too many pupils were getting extra time. My DD moved school after GCSE so her new school had to provide evidence of her need for extra time. When they tapped her scores into the exam boards computer programme it came back that she was not entitled to extra time because her working memory and processing scores were in the average range, sorry don't remember the exact scores, and they had to be below average to qualify. We were then compiling the further evidence from her previous school and from her Ed Psych, including that her writing and reading speeds are at the tenth percentile in the hope of convincing the exam board that there was sufficient additional evidence of need, when we realised she would need a new assessment for her UCAS this Autumn anyway. That assessment put her processing score in the below average range. However it all added to her stress levels pre exam.
Her Ed Psych was extremely angry about the changes because they discriminate against the brightest pupils with SpLds and goes completely against the way in which they are diagnosed, based on the gap between ability, and the processing and working memory scores and attainment you would predict for a pupil of that ability and the actual scores, as well as tests of speed. The gap can be a source of considerable difficulties for a very bright child with only average working memory and processing. As she highlighted universities assess students on that basis and they will get support there but face disadvantage in proving they deserve to be there.
I have seen the minutes of a meeting online between representatives of selective schools and Ofqual at which this unfairness was highlighted and it was clear that the Ofqual representatives just didn't get it. They even minute that after all a lot of pupils who do not have SpLds would like and would benefit from extra time to check their work
Sorry I can't find the exact minutes but they seem to have not grasped moved away from the principle of levelling the playing field.
The school did seem pretty confidant that with all the additional evidence we could have convinced the exam board but obviously we can't know for definite, and also the minutes of that meeting suggested that Ofqual would be investigating alternative means of defining evidence of need so as to overcome the problem.
I will be interested to hear other comments, it seems to me more education strategy driven by politicking to appease the prejudices of readers of the Daily Mail. I certainly don't feel that schools are anywhere near as good at spotting SpLDs as they could be, there will continue to be a steady increase in the number of pupils getting extra time as awareness and diagnosis improve. There may have been the odd unscrupulous school / ed psych but I am equally sure that tightening up the regulations in this way is going to make life harder for pupils with genuine difficulties, along with grade deflation and tightening up on spelling and grammar.