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Discover the latest news and corporate information from the Cambridge Assessment Group. Please note that CIE, OCR and Cambridge ESOL also have their own dedicated press offices, please see related links.

We welcome the Government's announcement on A Level reform

Today we welcomed the Government’s announcement on A Level reform. We praised the Secretary of State Michael Gove for his radical approach and pledged to ensure our UK arm, OCR, delivered the new style A Levels to the highest quality.


Group Chief Executive Simon Lebus said “For the last two years we have been advocating this kind of policy shift. We have been consulting with Higher Education on just such a change and are pleased that Michael Gove has listened. In addition, our 18 month long HE Research Programme has identified what works and what doesn’t with the current qualifications, who needs to be engaged in the process of rebuilding them and, most importantly, it has definitively established that HE wants to help design A Levels.”

Exam Board OCR is already working with nearly 150 academics from HE and learned societies in ten subject areas. Its Chief Executive Mark Dawe commented “Our parent’s Research Division has provided us with a good evidence base. OCR’s direct contacts with universities and subject experts are enabling us to design the next generation of A Levels to the standards expected by Higher Education. A timetable of first teaching of core subjects in 2014 looks challenging but for those of us already committed to a better education system, it is do-able.”

 

We know what HE wants from A Levels
University academics want A Levels to: include more advanced content for more able students; cover core subject areas in greater depth; and encourage critical thinking, independent study, experimentation, exploration and more extensive reading. These are the initial findings from a Cambridge Assessment study being presented at UCAS’ Admissions Conference on 3 April in Birmingham.

Cambridge Assessment’s 18 month long Higher Education (HE) engagement research programme also discovered that universities want less ‘teaching to the test’ and for A Levels to be reformed they have to be:

The initial research findings support the programme of its UK exam board OCR.

 

Further details regarding Cambridge Assessment’s HE engagement work see ‘A better approach to Higher Education/exam board interaction for Post-16 qualifications’ policy paper and OCR’s consultative forums

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