Nicola Woolcock
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Ed Balls the Schools Secretary refused to apologise today for the testing fiasco that has delayed the return of millions of children’s exam papers.
It was also claimed that some teenagers have been employed to mark the test papers of pupils aged 11 and 14.
Mr Balls was grilled by a committee of MPs about the handling of the key stage tests by ETS, an American company appointed by the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority(QCA), which reports to his department.
He also faced criticism over the amount of assessment in schools, and was accused of refusing to acknowledge that the current regime results in excessive teaching to the test.
Most of the Key Stage 2 and 3 test papers are being returned to schools this week - a week late - however about a fifth of the higher level scripts further delays.
Mr Balls told the Commons’ Children, Schools and Families Committee that the delays had caused inconvenience and were unacceptable.
But when challenged about whether he would take full responsiblity or apologise, Mr Balls declined to give a direct answer.
Douglas Carswell, the Conservative MP for Harwich, asked: “As minister, do you take responsibility [for what happened]?”
Mr Balls said he was responsible for making sure testing happened, which he did “in an arm’s length way through the QCA.”
He added: “It is ETS’s responsibility to deliver the contract. It is QCA’s responsibility to ensure the contract is being delivered.
“The reason I’ve asked for Lord Sutherland’s independent inquiry is because I want to know whether the QCA has managed this responsiblity, so I can then report to parliament. That’s my responsiblity.”
Mr Carswell said: “So the minister for schools doesn’t take responsiblity - he blames others and gets Lord Sutherland to kick it into touch for the autumn. The quango chief won’t accept he’s to blame and passes the buck to ETS. As minister of Whitehall are you sure you’re really in control of what’s happening?
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This hugely expensive and unreliable testing regime tells us nothing that we don't already know. Teachers are expert assessors. Trust them to report assessment and put the money into a robust verification system that show the outside world we can trust their decisions!
Simon Kibble, Wolverhampton,
Of course Ed Balls is not going to apologise! in order for that to happen he would have to take responsibility for his actions and those of his staff. At least when the civil service were doing the marking it was on time. Why have so many 'in-house' tasks been contracted out mainly to US companies?
Les, Southport, England
On this performance, Ball's is odd's on being the next Chancellor!! (that's after they have disposed of Darling during the summer recess)
kevin, Hartlepool,
Is this government capable of being successful at anything?
Failure after failure after failure.
rob, ashbourne, uk
How can Americans mark exams when they can't speak, read or write English? Just take their President as an example.
M Wilson, Bidache, france
In less than 18 months time Ed Balls will be a nobody again on the opposition benches, or if his electorate vote right, a candidate for a real job again in the real world !!!!
Ian Payne, walsall,
Ed Balls ... a fine example of what the Nw Scientist calls Nominative Determinism?
Gill, Southamptn, UK
Mr Arrogance at it again. SATS papers late.....'so what?'
judy, Liverpool, England
Have you noticed the reaction to any error on govt is to
commission a review. What a waste of time and money someone is not doing their job! Always defer the blame and hope you can pin it on someone else, shows a lack of integrity
roger, bridport,
Don't panic: nobody remembers anything that they learnt at school, anyway. School, keeps children off the streets to a greater degree while their parents do other things, such as work.
Abdul Majeed, Bradford, West Yorkshire, UK
Sounds like a bit of a balls-up.
We continually have these problems. Services are privatised and then delivery is lacking. Does no-one in Government know how to write a contract or indeed the meaning of the term "contract"?
Seemingly not.
Alan Hargreaves, Holywell, UK