After
a gap of three years, I have in recent weeks been back doing my post-retirement
job as an invigilator of GCSEs and A-Levels at the school where I taught for my
entire working career.
It's
nice to be back: a taste of the teaching vibe which I loved so much, but it's a
strange and in many ways deadly boring way to spend a working day - pacing up
and down a hall full of young people, trying to strike a balance between
ensuring that they are actively supervised yet not disturbed. No squeaky shoes,
no phone notifications, only whispered and strictly functional conversations with
fellow invigilators, and nothing to do except watch the clock ticking along.
For the candidates, a two hour exam flies by, whereas for the invigilators time
crawls. However, it's been nice to see this (admittedly less than fun) piece of
normality returning to school life.
Almost
everyone is familiar with the strange and stressful routines of school exams,
but if you haven't been directly or indirectly involved with them for a few
years, you might well be startled by how much more complex and regulated they
have become than was the case a generation or two ago.
Exam
security and fairness of access have made the organisation and execution of exams
into an incredibly demanding logistical exercise for all involved, and I
thought it worth drawing attention to what goes on in schools of every type and
size during these five weeks or so – as well as, on a more limited scale, at
other times of the year. I hope that in doing so I can help to foster added respect
and understanding for all involved in the process.
Let's
start with the students. Well nearly all of us have been there
and done that. We all have memories of sitting in those rows of desks, 1.5
metres apart, with the sun shining outside and hay fever season peaking such
that everyone is either sneezing, being disturbed by others sneezing, or both.
We remember the invigilators pacing up and down like prison guards – in the
past they were familiar teachers, but these days they are more likely to be outsiders
recruited just for this role. We remember the ticking clock, the aching hand,
the annoying desk that wobbles, held steady by a folded piece of paper, the
distant sound of a playground as exams cut across the school day and its
breaks, the occasional disturbance caused by a delivery van or a teacher outside the room forgetting it's exam
time and shouting to a colleague.
And
above all, we remember the panic as we leaf through the question paper and see
the topic we were hoping wouldn't come up and did – or the silent “yesss” as
the one we revised only yesterday pops up. And we remember the uniquely focussed
chatter as we were released from the gloomy hall into the sunshine outside, all
comparing reactions and hoping that even the bright kids would agree that
“Number 7 was impossible”.
It's
all so familiar to everyone over school age. However if you're over about 40
and not involved in a school you'd be amazed at what now has to be monitored
and what is and isn't allowed. A photo id card must be displayed on each desk. All
writing must be black. Pencil cases must be transparent. Mobile phones are
banned from the room, as are watches of any kind. Drink bottles must be transparent
and have the label removed. Walls must
be free of any written material which might help in any way. Toilet breaks are
discouraged, but if taken must be accompanied by an invigilator as far as
outside the toilet. A prolonged stay in the loo would render the candidate
under suspicion of malpractice. All this in the name of fair play.
Secondly,
spare a thought for the invigilators. As already mentioned, these
days they are an army of people, often with an oblique connection to the
school: my invigilator colleagues at present are a delightful crew: retirees
like me from this and other schools; part-time non-teaching staff redeployed
from their usual roles; off-duty school nurses; a semi-retired doctor; the
adult son of a teacher earning a few extra pounds to supplement his student
loan; or just friends of the exam officer who were persuaded to help out. All
of us have had to undergo DBS checks and take online training for the
invigilator role, and are required to follow all the rules listed above, whilst
also presenting to the stressed out students an air of supportive, empathetic
yet suitably strict supervision. Not an easy balance to strike!
Let's
not forget the teachers! These days, they are not allowed
anywhere near their own subject exam until it's finished, yet most are nearly
as nervous as their pupils: “did I get it right when I suggested there would be
a question about topic ‘x'?” “Was that twilight revision session last week
helpful?” “Will the clever but lazy ones have crammed it all in at the last
minute?” “Will the hard working ones who really struggle get the breaks they deserve
with the questions we've practised?” Some confident and conscientious teachers
want to see their pupils after the exam, but others may understandably hide in
the staffroom.
And
what about the markers? Only those who have done it know what a
tough and poorly paid gig that is. Again, it's changed beyond recognition in
the past decade or so. Markers are a hidden and highly qualified army of
current and former teachers, stay-at-home parents, retirees, or ambitious
newcomers to teaching seeking added insight into the assessment process. These
days, virtually all exam papers are scanned (hence the compulsory black pen),
digitised and marked using an online platform which helps markers to add up
totals and, in many subjects, ensures that different questions are marked by
different people. Markers' work can be, and is, remotely and anonymously
sampled and standardised by team leaders and senior examiners. The proverbial “rogue
examiner”, a mythical ogre created in peoples' minds to explain away a poor
grade, does not in practice exist any more, even if s/he did ever exist. Marking
requires sustained attention to the task in hand over many days and weeks. And
it does not pay well: nobody is in it for the money alone.
I
leave the best until last: examination officers: in many ways the most put-upon, under-appreciated
supermen and women in the whole process. Every school or college has them, sometimes
combined with another role, sometimes not.
Back
in the day, EO was a job often done by a teacher, either a senior figure as
part of a managerial/leadership post or a junior as a deserving incremental
point on the pay scale. These days, it's almost always a non-teaching post, one
for which there is no formal qualification but which requires a list of
qualities and competences only found in a few individuals. S/he must have
strong admin and ICT skills, limitless patience, physical stamina, kindness, tact,
firmness, adaptability, creativity, problem-solving skills, and anything else
I've forgotten.
The
challenges faced by EOs are many, varied and unpredictable. During exam season,
they are often the first to arrive on site and the last to leave. Having
already ahead of each day arranged rooming, invigilation, seating plans, secure
storage and recording of the arrival of papers, they then have to fetch all
that day's papers (often well into double figures on any given day if a school does both GCSEs
and A-Levels) and check, count and assign them to the correct room. All this
must take place within a secure room, with the papers kept in double-locked filing cabinets
protected by keys held in a separate safe. Papers must be checked off by a
second pair of eyes, who must countersign for all papers, and once out of the safe, they must stay in the hands of the EO or an invigilator at all times until they get to the exam room. Only then can they be opened.
And
it's not just a matter of sitting a whole cohort in one big hall, as was once
the case. If you haven't recently been involved with school exams, you would
perhaps be startled, reassured or even slightly jealous of the concessions and
arrangements made to ensure a fair chance is given to all. Students with a
variety of reasons for such a concession will be given the chance to sit their
papers separately in a smaller room, including some who are granted 25% extra
time (if they have a formally diagnosed SEN need such as dyslexia), and some
who are allowed to work on a laptop (again with a formally diagnosed need). Any
laptop used must be supplied by the school and have access blocked to anything
other than basic offline word-processing.
Likewise
students with certain medical or mental health conditions may also be allowed
to take the exams in a smaller group or an individual room, and may be allowed
rest breaks. This applies, for example, to students with Type One Diabetes who
are permitted rest breaks to test their blood sugar and administer correction
injections or pump dosages when required. The current (June 2022) Coronation
Street storyline of a girl with Type One taking and cheating in her A-Levels
failed to recognise this reality in order to make a good story.
All
such concessions require exam officers to facilitate separate, quiet, secure
rooms in already crowded school campuses, and to find separate invigilators. Packs of exam papers have to be opened under
secure conditions then resealed in separate envelopes. And at any time, with no
notice, exam boards can and do send inspectors to spot check that all such
conditions are being fully met.
Another complication is where a student has clashing exam papers in the same session. When this happens, one paper must be taken out of the published time slot, and the candidate kept under constant supervision between the papers, to avoid him or her either hearing or divulging the content of a paper sat out of sequence. Again, a significant logistical challenge for the EO.
And the EO fields all the problems or hitches: if a
student gets upset or disturbed during an exam, then the EO will deal with it. If a parent complains about any aspect of
the exam, the EO gets the email or the call. And when results get published in
August, s/he will oversee the logistics of distribution of those, and deal with
the huge and growing burden of requests for re-marks.
And
nobody thanks them, gives them cards, boxes of chocolates or bottles of wine,
as happens for teachers at the end of term.
So
yes, exams are back after Covid. Students are stressed, especially the hugely
unfortunate Year 13 cohort of 2022, who are taking A-Levels having never had
the practice of GCSEs. For all their weaknesses, exams do, by and large,
deliver fair results, develop valuable transferrable life-skills and form an
integral part of most advanced education systems. But I hope that this brief
and personal insight has given those whose lives are only fleetingly touched by
exams a sense of the many challenges that they pose, in addition to the burden
on those who sit them.
“We
don't need no education” sang Pink Floyd's choir of North London schoolchildren
in their iconic anti-school song, Another Brick in the Wall (Part Two) from 1979. Well actually they did need some
education if they didn't recognise a double negative when they saw one. A
glorious song nevertheless which will serve, suitably modified, as a good title
to this post. We do indeed need an education, and exams are a necessary evil. Please,
however, spare a thought for ALL involved in this colossal annual enterprise.