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Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Finishing year 13 in 2017 part 2

491 replies

user9512736123 · 17/08/2017 19:46

New thread as the old one is at 990 messages!

OP posts:
Oldie2017 · 07/09/2017 12:00

(On the remarks one of mine who got a very weird D on one paper - As all year, AAA at AS etc which brought his A down to an B (in his university subject too of which he was best in the school and won the school prize etc and where everyone in the class got a D on that paper).......... was reduced to an E on that paper from his D so so much for bothering with the remark. Luckily his other As were so high for tht subject there was no chance the remark would make his B a C and at least he tried. If he had not he would always have regretted not hiaving a go and AAB is not that bad. I just feel he should probably have got AAA like his twin (who did one different A2 subject) but that's the luck of it sometimes. Perhaps the whole year just did a bad paper on that one or the question was difficult).

tobee · 07/09/2017 12:17

Presumably most remarking will be swept away in the next couple of years? Only one of ds's A levels was reformed. The other two were legacy so had break down of marks. English literature was reformed and just had the single letter and no more than that. So, naturally, no indication of how far off a grade the result was.

Oldie2017 · 07/09/2017 12:20

I didn't even know that as I just left it to my sons and the school to decide if any remarking were needed. The one I mention above was an unreformed A level. I did the very old style - all on the upper sixth and we only got the grade itself for overall, not by paper.

Majaso12 · 07/09/2017 12:55

Oldie what subject was that that went down 12 marks? My ds has just had a remark put in and I'm very nervous about it going down a grade.

Teta 8 raw marks (13 ums) is such a lot to go up in maths. That's what my ds needs in maths and we've just put 1 paper in for a remark for now. We were told not to bother because maths won't go up that much.

bigTillyMint · 07/09/2017 12:57

Congrats Errol!

Teta, sounds like she's got it all sorted - good on her Smile

DD is getting a little bit stressed - worrying about getting all finances and option choices sorted, etc. Its a big transition!

Oldie2017 · 07/09/2017 13:04

Her kmay not want me to post his subject and it is his university subject. He had a D on that one of 4 papers first and I think had 50/100, a very low mark for him and now it's an E. i don't even know what the process is of a remark. I think he said the original marker had put lots of comment on the paper explaining the original mark and that was one reason it was less likely to be altered too much although that does not seem to have stopped it going down on that paper to an E..... He challenged his GCSE B grade 2 yars ago too (his only B - rest were A and A*) and that was moved down in mark but not grade - remained at a B. Risky business remarking can be if you are not at the top of the boundary I think.

BehindTheBlueDoor · 07/09/2017 15:16

Really good news about remark teta. My DS was 2 UMS off his A so only 1 mark needed. Had 2 papers remarked in the hope they would find that 1 mark but they both came back exactly the same. A real shame as he worked so hard and IMHO he deserved the grade he just missed. He's still very fed up about it but he has his uni place and I suppose they have to draw the line somewhere-literally in the case of exam grades. He's talking about retaking next summer just so he can prove himself. We'll see. This summer was tough in some subjects and his 'off' paper was that C4 maths paper that made the news. I'm hoping he gets over it when he gets started on his degree. He's such an able lad and I don't want this one bad experience to knock his confidence.
Sorry to crash your discussion I just needed to vent that I think!

Majaso12 · 07/09/2017 15:58

I know how you feel! My ds is also thinking about retaking the c3 exam next year while at university to bring his grade up to an A. It's hard to move on when he was expected to get A/A*. I'm trying to get confirmed whether he can cash in his grade now, retake c3 and use his other 5 modules from this year to calculate a new grade next year.

BehindTheBlueDoor · 07/09/2017 16:07

I'd be interested to know the answer to that. His view is that he would have to take both C3 and 4 papers and M2 again. Be great to know he could cash in and just retake the other one.

dingit · 07/09/2017 16:13

It's interesting to see others with disappointing C3 and C4 grades. Dd was predicted an overall A, and got As on all papers except those where she got a D. She had the added complication of the unexpected death of her beloved granddad just before she sat her last exams, but she also blames some of it on the leaked exam papers. She was getting consistent As on practice papers. She maintains that only the people that took further maths escaped those papers unscathed.

Majaso12 · 07/09/2017 16:26

I think they can retake just 1 exam. If they have to retake more than that, then my ds won't be retaking. He's been told he'll have a heavy workload at university. I've been trying to phone Edexcel again to get it confirmed, but they disconnect the call, so I've now emailed them. My ds got 65 ums in c3 which was the lowest of all papers and 76 in c4. He thought c4 went much better than that, but knew he'd messed up c3. What was strange was that he got 87 ums in c1 last year and this year got 77 ums! Not sure when he should start revising for it again; it's tempting to get him to do a past paper before he starts university but feels a bit mean! Need to get it confirmed first though.

Majaso12 · 07/09/2017 16:46

Edexcel have emailed back saying you can only confirm all this from the school where your son will be taking his exam and sent the link to next year's exam timetable. So that's helpful. Surely the Exam Board should know, the Exam Officer at school doesn't seem to.

ErrolTheDragon · 07/09/2017 17:06

She maintains that only the people that took further maths escaped those papers unscathed.

Yes, or at least less scathed. When I was looking askance at DD's offer including A* in maths and A in maths we didn't expect thats what she'd get.

I'm almost tempted to start a thread asking if anyone had a DC who did AQA maths who didn't get unexpectedly low C3 and C4 marks and if not do they think the kid might have cheated

olliepolly · 07/09/2017 19:21

Driving test pass here on Monday for DD too Errol, much to my surprise.

ono40 · 08/09/2017 14:20

Hello everyone, catching up after my week in Ireland visiting family. Well done to Errol and Ollie's DCs for passing their driving tests. And well done to Teta's DD on the remark. It is a shame that she can't take up her place now but she will have a wonderful year and lots of opportunities to do voluntary work and to earn some pennies before starting on a five year course so it may have been stressful but she will look back and think of it as a blessing.

I do hope we are all going to continue on this board (with a name change or move to Higher Ed?)as you've been a wonderful support for me (and DS).

DS is still on his travels, not back until next week and then has two days to pack up all his worldly goods before leaving on 17th. I have been consoling myself with shopping for him from my very long list of unnecessary items which has made DH laugh. Bedding choice has been approved of via WhatsApp.

I've also been busy moving DS2 into DS1's room, redecorating both, dejunking (how did they accumulate so much rubbish) oh yes and working pretty much full time.

DS has been awarded the school history prize so I am very proud of him but the ceremony is during freshers so he doesn't want to come home (might resort to bribery).

ErrolTheDragon · 08/09/2017 14:38

Well done him! DDs school does its speech day/prizegiving at the start of the xmas vac (but still school term time) so the ex yr 13s look forward to it as a good chance to reunite with their dispersed pals. That seems much more sensible than in freshers.

JugglingFromHereToThere · 08/09/2017 17:58

Just realised DD is going to be away in Slovenia for speech day, oh well, she's not bothered, and they do a more exciting thing just before Christmas where they collect their certificates - and nice for lots of them to meet up again after a term away.

Horsemad · 08/09/2017 18:26

Well done to the driving test successes 🚗☺️

Waiting on moving in info here. They don't do arrival slots Confused that could be interesting! Got most stuff now, just need to get him some more clothes.

teta · 09/09/2017 07:48

I don't think I am attending dd's speech day in protest.Some of the sixth form parents are attending to be disruptive.I couldn't bear to sit through the headmasters speech saying how wonderful the school is when it's not.Then 2/3 of the school will be going on a 'gap' year because of poor grades.I have moved my other Dd to another school and they have put Ds in the bottom sets for everything this year ( was in top sets last year).So looks like he will be going too😟😡
The only thing is can we do the a level repeat at another exam centre?
I really want to tell the school exactly what I think of them but I can't if we have to go back for the exam.

Oldie2017 · 09/09/2017 08:40

Abroad child got back last night (big brother met him at a tube with the car) and then he went out with twin to London and they got back just before 4 (I heard them although they weren't noisy). I can tell he got back safely as I have found his passport (now filed away) and his shoes are downstairs. His twin at last did the university photo upload he'd been dreading and then registered. I think in my day you had to join a massive queue to register at the main university building so at least this on line way is much easier.

We had speech day in July and we did go and both won a prize and one was playing music so it was a ncie day - no disruption from anyone. Good speech from an old boy who seemed to have failed just about everything at school or at least did not do too well, but rose very high in the navy - he came in his full uniform which was rather fun.

ErrolTheDragon · 09/09/2017 09:24

Gosh, teta, that school does sound like its let a lot of people down. As your DD is 18, presumably if she was registered for the exam with them (Is it just for sitting it, no teaching?) she could disassociate herself from views expressed by her parents.

BizzyFizzy · 09/09/2017 09:32

I dropped off DD at Kings Cross early this morning for her journey to Edinburgh.

user327854831 · 09/09/2017 09:37

olliepolly driving test on Monday here as well!

LineysRun · 09/09/2017 19:37

You all right, Bizzy?

Teta, that's tricky. I can understand protest, though. Could you do private candidate entry as a Plan B? But dear God it gets on my wick how self promoting these sixth forms are that have let teenagers down. My son's didn't really understand the new science specs, it transpires.

Tell that to his friends and their parents. They could have been the (shortage) medical specialists of tomorrow.

DS got into Reading, so all good. But only just.

HSMMaCM · 09/09/2017 21:04

All those going to Reading. If they have an emergency, I'm nearby 👍.

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