Appeals are the last-chance saloon. Far better that the assessments of our young people are right-first-time, trustworthy, reliable. But GCSE and A level grades are none of these things.
UK assessments are essay-based, with human markers - in contrast to an unambiguous multiple-choice system marked by computers. Different (human) markers can give the same script (slightly) different marks, for two reasons:
(1) One marker made a mistake. This can, and does, happen, but as CherryPavlova correctly points out, this is relatively rare, and the exam boards have very thorough quality control procedures.
(2) The two different markers have (slightly) different judgements, and so give (slightly) different marks, perhaps just one mark apart. Neither mark is 'right' or 'wrong'; there are no marking errors...
...but that one mark difference in judgement can, and does, have life-changing consequences. If the [x,y] grade boundary is 45, then being marked 44 has huge impact. In my previous note, I referred to this as 'fuzziness', and if a 'fuzzy' mark straddles a grade boundary, the grade awarded is the result of the lottery of which marker marks the script. A lottery with a one-time bet, for Ofqual's new rules on appeals do not allow the original 44 to be changed to 45, even if 50 other markers were to re-mark the script.
An assessment process that awards grades is trustworthy and reliable only if two conditions are always true:
(1) The (large) majority of 'fuzzy' marks fall safely within grade widths, and do not straddle grade boundaries. And
(2) For those few scripts whose 'fuzzy' marks do straddle a boundary, each individual case is considered wisely and fairly, before the results are published.
For GCSE and A level, both of these conditions fail, big time.
Firstly, grade boundary straddling is very common: for intermediate grades in subjects such as history, English Language and English literature, some 50% or more of all scripts do this - only very high 9s/A*s, and very low 1s/Us are 'safe'. I'm not making that up. Look at Figures 12 and 13 in assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/681625/Marking_consistency_metrics_-_November_2016.pdf.
And secondly, you don't need me to tell you that "the individual and wise consideration" of borderline cases just does not happen.
Grades aren't fit-for-purpose. They are untrustworthy, unreliable, misleading. And - most importantly - unfair. There are much better, more reliable, fairer ways of awarding assessments, even in an exam-based system - which itself is a big issue, but if exams are there, then at least the outcomes should be fair!
But Ofqual aren't listening. Their main policy is to make it harder to appeal (which is why the number of appeals has gone down) - so deliberately covering all this up.
So your opinion, your voice, is important. If this makes any sense, tell your friends, speak to your children's school. And here are some links too
www.change.org/p/department-for-education-one-exam-board-for-gcse-and-a-level-exams-to-end-unfairness-in-grade-lottery
www.facebook.com/CAGE-Campaign-Against-Grade-Errors-GCSE-254326905277715/?modal=admin_todo_tour
www.silverbulletmachine.com
Thank you!