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Exam regulator 'closely monitoring' marking of difficult A-level maths exam
Exam regulator 'closely monitoring' marking of difficult A-level maths exam 12 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Hannah Karpel Education reporter Getty Images Teachers, students and schools say the A-level maths paper represented a 'significant increase in difficulty compared with previous years' More than 20,000 people have signed a petition calling for a review of an A‑level maths paper that they say was significantly more challenging than any past exam. Wednesday's Pearson Edexcel Paper one exam has left students feeling "overwhelmed" and "uncertain" by questions that required "multiple layers of reasoning" and "extended algebraic manipulation". Ofqual, England's exam regulator, says it is now "closely monitoring" the marking of the paper. A spokesperson for Pearson says the exam board is committed to ensuring a fair exam experience for every candidate. The petition, published on the day of the exam, argues that grade boundaries should reflect the difficulty of the paper. "Many candidates who had demonstrated strong mathematical ability throughout their studies found themselves unable to complete substantial sections of the paper within the allotted time", says the petition. "These students deserve confidence that their grades will reflect their mathematical ability rather than the unusual difficulty of a single examination paper," it continues. Ofqual told the Press Association that their priority is "students and ensuring their grades are a reliable indication of what they know, understand and can do". Caroline Darrington, a spokesperson for Pearson, said: "If a paper is found to be more difficult than previous years, grade boundaries will be set to reflect that. "When setting grade boundaries, we review a range of evidence, including statistical data and expert judgment. "This process ensures students receive results that fairly reflect their performance and are comparable across exam series." Some A-level papers voided for students after exams leaked online Falling pupil numbers should lead to smaller class sizes, says union Third of people say uni degree not worth it, as student loan inquiry begins Exams