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Nick Wood's avatar

Thanks for this: breaks down the current options clearly.

This year I've taught a year 6 group that relative assessments would only serve to discourage.

I've reported their progress to them insatiably for the very reasons you outlined.

The graphs I issued each were encouraging even if their Sats result appeared bot to be.

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Sammy Wright's avatar

Excellent breakdown. Couple of thoughts. We do of course assess schools by progress - that measure exists for individual students too. But it is never individualised. And I think there is an interesting possibility around thinking about precision and imprecision in assessments. One of the problems with relative assessment is it often implies an objectivity to the ranking that is unjustifiable. But there are ways of assessing - by descriptor or threshold, for example - where the result is deliberately lacking in the fine grained precision that allows comparison and ranking.

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