Keep the results in-house (which would curb the stress and the school's obsession).
It does make me wonder why the results need publishing anyway? Leave it to schools to publish in their own websites if they want
Keep the results in-house (which would curb the stress and the school's obsession).
Pretty much.
There are schools that stop all other subjects at Christmas and just so reading, maths and grammar. It’s ridiculous they even have to do that to ‘achieve’ results.
Indeed. It's sad as **** - kids' lives we're talking about here.

Everyone has their own story but I never had any homework until I was 11.
At primary school, the emphasis was play until I was 7 or 8. Now, at this age, kids will have done Phonics screening, KS1 SATS and possibly the new multiplication assessment in Y4
But it’s okay because they’ll know how to present a verb in its progressive, perfect, passive and subjunctive form.![]()
Oh if I were a … Secretary of State for Education
But it’s okay because they’ll know how to present a verb in its progressive, perfect, passive and subjunctive form.![]()
The grammar test is the most pointless part of this debate. Don’t know why it was added.
It'd be interesting to know the percent of kids that retain the information post KS2 and into adulthood.
Like phonics, the children actually learn bona fide linguistical terminology (phonemes, graphemes, split digraphs etc).
It'd be interesting to know the percent of kids that retain the information post KS2 and into adulthood.
Like phonics, the children actually learn bona fide linguistical terminology (phonemes, graphemes, split digraphs etc).
Thank you. You've given me a better understanding. Misdirected use of resources.In short:
For all of these tests, particularly at KS2, they matter not, apart from to be able to rank primary schools. At the start of KS3 most secondary schools retest their intake, in some form or another, anyway.
They cause untold stress and schools are often literally dropping the teaching of other subjects, to literally teach-to-test in English SPAG and Maths (in Y6).
Meanwhile, as the Nat Lit Trust report, shockingly low levels of critical literacy are apparent in these school kids.
Any teacher worth their salt will know their children's abilities, as they use formative assessment day-in-day-out and whilst I'm not all out opposed to exams per se, SATS, in my opinion, need scrapping or reforming.
Thank you. You've given me a better understanding. Misdirected use of resources.
"Worth their salt" perhaps suggests there may be a degree of inadequacy in the teaching levels and/or too much pressure on the teachers themselves ?