• 19 hours ago
Transcript
00:00Hello, my name is Amber Allitt and I'm a journalist specializing in education.
00:05Secondary school pupils sitting their GCSE exams this summer are now in their final months
00:10of preparation.
00:11But for them, and for the cohorts that follow in the coming years, GCSEs may end up looking
00:16quite different.
00:17Here are three ways that they could change in the near future.
00:23Number one, moving on screen.
00:25Several different exam boards have been trialing on-screen exam papers in recent years and
00:30a major one, Pearson, was originally aiming to have its English GCSEs available in a digital
00:36format this year.
00:38This is now looking like it's more likely to happen next year, but the exam board is
00:42still aiming to have most of its subjects available in an on-screen format by 2030.
00:48Number two, not memorizing formulae.
00:51Currently a special consideration granted during the COVID-19 pandemic, pupils sitting
00:56GCSEs in maths, physics, and combined science were supplied the formulas that they would
01:02need to use during their exam.
01:04Rather than phasing that out this year as originally planned, the Education Secretary
01:09recently asked for this to be extended until 2027, which brings us to number three, the
01:15National Curriculum Review.
01:17There's currently a full review of what children learn in England's schools, from reception
01:22all the way up to sixth form, taking place.
01:25We don't quite know how this is going to shake out yet, but it is likely to lead to significant
01:29changes to what young people learn in school and how that knowledge is assessed.

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