BBC NEWS Americas Africa Europe Middle East South Asia Asia Pacific Arabic Spanish Russian Chinese Welsh
BBCi CATEGORIES   TV   RADIO   COMMUNICATE   WHERE I LIVE   INDEX    SEARCH 

BBC NEWS
 You are in: Education
Front Page 
World 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Education 
Hot Topics 
UK Systems 
League Tables 
Features 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 


Commonwealth Games 2002

BBC Sport

BBC Weather

SERVICES 
Friday, 14 September, 2001, 17:49 GMT 18:49 UK
Test results 'disappointing'
tests
While maths results fell, English results were unchanged
Maths results in primary schools across England fell this year, to the embarrassment of a government which has vowed to raise standards.

The Education Secretary, Estelle Morris, admitted she was disappointed that the proportion of 11 year olds achieving the expected level at Key Stage 2 had fallen from 72% in 2000 to 71%.


I'm a bit disappointed in the Key Stage 2 results and I wish we had seen a further progress this year

Estelle Morris
The figures put a stop to what had been an upward trend in maths results - in 1999, 69% reached the required level, which was in turn a marked improvement on the previous year's figure of 59%.

Schools now face added pressure to reach the government target of 75% of 11 year olds scoring the required level in maths by next summer.

The table below shows the overall percentages of children achieving at least the level expected for their age:

  1999 2000 2001 +/-
Key Stage 1 (age 7)
English        
reading 82 83 84 1
writing 83 84 86 2
spelling 71 72 75 3
maths 87 90 91 1
         
Key Stage 2 (age 11)
English 71 75 75 0
reading 78 83 82 -1
writing 54 55 58 3
maths 69 72 71 -1
science 78 85 87 2
         
Key Stage 3 (age 14)
English 64 64 64 0
maths 62 65 66 1
science 55 59 66 7

Click here for the results by gender

In English, the results showed no change, with 75% reaching the expected level for their age group.

But there was better news in science, with 87% of pupils passing at the expected standard.

Key Stage 3

In the tests sat by 14 year olds there was no change in the percentage of pupils hitting the target for English, at 64%.

But there was an improvement of one perecentage point in maths to 66% and an improvement of seven points in science, also to 66%.

The government is to publish 14 year olds' results in league tables from next year.

It has set interim targets that, by 2004, 75% of 14 year olds will be expected to reach Level 5 - the level expected for their age - in English, maths and information and communication technology (ICT). The figure for science is 70%.

David hart
David Hart wants more resources in schools
In this year's tests at age seven there was general improvement.

The proportion of pupils reaching the expected level rose one point to 84% in reading, two points in writing to 86%, three points in spelling to 75% and one point in maths, to 91%.

Ms Morris, said: "I'm a bit disappointed in the Key Stage 2 results, the 11-year-old results, and I wish we had seen a further progress this year."

But she said she remained confident that the literacy and numeracy strategies could deliver the Key Stage 2 targets for 2002.

The 2001 results showed wide variation between schools and local education authorities.

While performance in 60 of England's 150 authority areas had continued to improve, others - including some that had been high performers - had fallen back.

Praise for teachers

"I congratulate teachers every bit as much this year as in previous years," Ms Morris added.

"They continue to work tirelessly for their pupils. I will do everything I can to help them."


Raising achievement is a long-term objective and not a short-term fix

Secondary heads' leader, John Dunford
David Hart, general secretary of the National Association of Head Teachers, said the government could not simply rely on literacy and numeracy strategies to raise standards year after year.

"It must inject substantial additional resources into primary schools if improvements are to continue," said Mr Hart.

Head teachers would not be prepared to sign up to targets which they regarded as unrealistic, he added.

John Dunford, general secretary of the Secondary Heads Association, said the results demonstrated that the government should not over-emphasise the figures for a single year.

"What is right is that the trend is upwards and that young people continue to achieve more highly at GCSE and A-level.

"Raising achievement is a long-term objective and not a short-term fix," he stressed.

Shortages to blame

Nigel de Gruchy, general secretary of NASUWT, put the drop in Key Stage 2 standards down to staff shortages.

"I congratulate the teachers and the pupils concerned, especially bearing in mind the difficult background which many schools have faced in the light of the staff shortages," he said.

The government should not be surprised that improvements in performance vary between schools and local education authorities.

"This is inevitable as schools compete one with another to secure the best staff available against a background of overall shortages," said Mr de Gruchy.

Head cleared of fiddling

A head teacher who let a pupil take her English and science tests early, so her family could fly to Bangladesh to be with her dying grandmother, has been cleared of irregularities.

Rod Weatherhead of Heybrook Primary School in Rochdale had been suspended while investigations were carried out.

The Qualifications and Curriculum Authority concluded there had been no security breach - although it quashed the girl's results.


As in later public examinations, girls do better than boys at almost all points.

The table below shows the percentages getting the levels expected for their ages, and the gender gap:

    Boys   Girls  
  2000 2001 2000 2001 gap*
Key Stage 1 (age 7)
English          
reading 79 80 88 88 8
writing 80 82 89 90 8
spelling 67 70 77 80 10
maths 89 90 91 92 2
           
Key Stage 2 (age 11)
English overall 70 70 79 80 10
reading 80 78 86 85 7
writing 48 50 63 65 15
maths 72 71 71 70 -1
science 84 87 85 88 1
           
Key Stage 3 (age 14)
English 55 56 72 73 17
maths 64 65 65 67 2
science 61 66 58 66 0
*amount by which girls' results exceed boys'

Back to main text

  • All the figures are provisonal and might change up or down by one percentage point after appeals, and checking by schools, in the final school-by-school performance tables at the end of the year.

  •  WATCH/LISTEN
     ON THIS STORY
    The BBC's Kim Catcheside
    "The national average score masks big variations... between local authorities"
    'I am disappointed'
    Education Secretary Estelle Morris
    See also:

    02 Jul 01 | Education
    Maths goal for teenagers lowered
    16 Oct 00 | Education
    Secondary schools in targets drive
    28 Jun 01 | Education
    Head resigns after 'fiddling' tests
    20 Sep 00 | Education
    Primary school test results improve
    20 Sep 00 | Education
    Schools challenge test results
    Internet links:


    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

    Links to more Education stories are at the foot of the page.


    E-mail this story to a friend

    Links to more Education stories