My DS (Year 11) has been told this story by somebody he knows who is now in in Year 12, and DS clearly believes it. DH and I have said to DS that we are having a great deal of difficulty believing the truth of the story, so I wondered what those more experienced with the GCSE boards, and AQA in particular, thought.
The story goes that AQA lost the English papers that this boy sat for his GCSEs last year, that the boy didn't know until he asked for a re-mark, only to be told that his exam papers had been lost because they were sent (by post!) to some examiner who had recently moved but had not redirected her post, and so they have never shown up.
Apparently therefore, AQA had to make up a mark, so they based it on what the boy had received for his mocks, which apparently the boy was annoyed about because he had only started working after his mocks. Apparently not only did they take the grade from the mocks, but they then lowered it a grade.
DS had told me this story before, although not quite in so much detail, but it has come up again now that DS is facing his own mocks, as he used the story to justify why instead of using the mocks to establish what one does or does not know, it is legitimate to panic, because apparently it might, if the board lost the exam paper, be used as the basis to calculate one's grade! He has also been told by this boy that in fact the boards lose lots of exam papers each year.
Please can some of those out there who know the inner workings of the GCSE boards, particularly AQA, tell me whether in fact boards do lose exam papers, in what kinds of numbers, and what they really do if this happens so as not to penalise students.