Consultation outcome

Assessment arrangements for GCSE computer science

Applies to England

This consultation has concluded

Read the full outcome

Decisions on GCSE computer science assessments regulated by Ofqual

Regulatory impact assessment on our consultation on revised arrangements for GCSE (9 to 1) computer science

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Detail of outcome

The responses to the consultation have confirmed our view that, regrettably, the current situation is untenable and must be addressed to make sure the qualification is fair for all students and to preserve the credibility of the qualification itself. The responses have not persuaded us there is a better model to that we proposed in the consultation. We have therefore decided to implement the approach we proposed with immediate effect. We set out in the attached decision document how the responses to the consultation have informed our decision and the alternative options we first considered.

Update

We announced a decision on the assessment arrangements for GCSE computer science 2020 on 20 April 2018, the details of which you can find here.

Feedback received

Detail of feedback received

We received 2,556 responses to our consultation. 353 of these were from organisations and 2,203 were personal responses. We thank everyone who responded.


Original consultation

Summary

Ofqual consults on changes to non-exam assessment for GCSE computer science.

This consultation ran from
to

Consultation description

We have seen evidence that the exam boards’ rules for non-exam assessment in GCSE computer science are being broken.

Students who will take their exams in the subject next summer were able to start their non-exam assessment from 1 September 2017. Shortly after that date we became aware that, contrary to the exam boards’ rules, the tasks and solutions to them were being discussed in on-line forums.

Our concerns have been heightened because of the degree of malpractice that was found among students who took GCSE computing in summer 2017.

We are also conscious of wider concerns about the burden being placed on teachers by the non-exam assessment, and how the nature of the non-exam assessment may be leading to an approach to problem solving that does not reflect real-world programming practices.

The proposals in this consultation, on which we are seeking views, are intended to address these concerns in the short term by:

  • making non-exam assessment no longer count towards a student’s 9 to 1 grade in GCSE computer science; their grade would instead be based on their performance in their exams alone
  • continuing to require all students to complete one of the non-exam assessment tasks set by the exam boards to meet the curriculum requirements of the course
  • no longer requiring teachers to formally mark the task, or provide marks for the task to the exam board. But they would be able to use the task – a significant piece of work - to provide formative feedback to students, strengthening their knowledge, skills and understanding, and better preparing them for their exams
  • requiring exam boards to:
    1. collect statements from schools and colleges confirming that students have been given reasonable opportunities to complete the programming task and that 20 hours has been set aside for this. This would ensure students covered all of the subject content. The statement would build on existing exam board processes for authenticating students’ work.
    2. continue monitoring of schools and colleges – through visits and scrutiny of students’ work – but with a focus on ensuring that sufficient time is being dedicated to the programming task.

Documents

Consultation on revised assessment arrangements for GCSE computer science

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If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of this document in a more accessible format, please email [email protected]. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Updates to this page

Published 27 November 2017
Last updated 20 April 2018 + show all updates
  1. Updated consultation outcome to include a link to the decision for GCSE computer science 2020, announced on 20 April 2018.

  2. Regulatory impact assessment published.

  3. First published.

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