Gcses And A Levels Won T Go Ahead As Normal As All Schools In England Shut Under Lockdown 3 Rules
GCSE and A-Level exams will not go ahead “as normal” this summer, Boris Johnson warned, as he imposed England’s third national lockdown.
In a televised address to the nation on Monday night, the Prime Minister confirmed that all primary schools, secondaries and colleges would need to close to almost all pupils from Tuesday.
(Evening Standard) – They will remain open exclusively to vulnerable students and children of key workers until after the February half-term, with all other teaching to move online.
However, early years settings, such as nurseries, will still be accessible to families under the new restrictions, while university lessons will remain online until mid-February for all except future critical worker courses.
Announcing the plans for schools, the PM said: “We recognise that this will mean it is not possible or fair for all exams to go ahead this summer as normal.”
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson will work with regulator Ofqual to put in place “alternative arrangements”, Mr Johnson stressed.
He added: “We will provide extra support to ensure that pupils entitled to free school meals will continue to receive them while schools are closed, and we will distribute more devices to support remote education.”
The decision to close schools came after education unions warned that bringing all pupils back to class could fuel the pandemic and put teachers at “serious risk” of falling ill amid the new variant of Covid-19.
The Government’s “chaotic” handling of the opening of schools has caused confusion for parents and teachers, according to the bodies representing school staff and headteachers.
All of London’s schools and those in some surrounding areas worst hit by the virus had not yet returned to class, but primary school pupils elsewhere in England began heading back to school on Monday.
Secondary schools and colleges had already been told they would have a staggered return, with those taking exams expecting to return on January 11 and other year groups on January 18.
But now all students in England – except children of key workers and vulnerable pupils – will learn from home until the February half-term.
Mr Johnson said he recognised the “inconvenience and distress” that the late change would cause millions of parents and pupils up and down the country.
Speaking on Monday, he said: “Parents whose children were in school today may reasonably ask why we did not take this decision sooner.
“The answer is simply that we have been doing everything in our power to keep schools open, because we know how important each day in education is to children’s life chances.”
Mr Johnson added: “And I want to stress that the problem is not that schools are unsafe for children – children are still very unlikely to be severely affected by even the new variant of Covid.
“The problem is that schools may nonetheless act as vectors for transmission, causing the virus to spread between households.”
Last month, Education Secretary Mr Williamson gave an “absolutely” cast-iron guarantee that exams in England would not be cancelled this academic year.
He made the pledge in December as part of a package of measures designed to compensate exam students for disruption to their schooling during the pandemic.
Pupils in England were told they would be given advance notice of some topics ahead of their tests and they would be allowed to take in exam aids, like formula sheets, to ensure this cohort of students is not disadvantaged.
Now the Department for Education and Ofqual will discuss what shape GCSE and A-level assessments will take this summer.
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