The Department for Education has confirmed today that most GCSE and A-level exams will be conducted three weeks later than usual in 2021, to give students more time to prepare.
However, the department said one English and one maths GCSE exam will still take place before May half term “to help manage potential disruption”, along with some A-level exams in subjects with “typically low” student numbers.
All other exams will start after June 7 and will continue until July 2.
As a result of the change, GCSE and A-level results will be handed out in the same week of August, rather than a week apart. A-level results day will be August 24 and GCSE results day will be August 27.
The DfE has also confirmed there won’t be any further content changes beyond what has already been announced.
But the government has also said it plans to engage with schools over measures needed to address potential disruption, meaning schools could be left waiting as much as six weeks to hear ministers’ “plan B”.
The DfE said more detail would be published “later in the autumn”, in order to “ensure students have confidence that they will be fairly treated in terms of assessment in 2021”.
Ministers announced in June that they were considering to delay exams in 2021.
Today’s announcement confirms rumours that the DfE was proposing a three-week delay, and details of how the system will work.
The government said the decision to hold the two English and maths GCSE exams before half term, which means a longer gap between them and other exams in the subject, will give year 11 pupils affected by Covid-19 “the best possible chance of still sitting a paper in each of these core subjects”.
The DfE has confirmed that it is an English language GCSE paper that will be sat before half term. While a maths paper was sat before the half term last year, it appears the first English language exam was not – meaning an exam for this subject is actually being brought forward.
The department also said that “no further subject-level changes to exams and assessments will be made for GCSEs, AS and A-levels” beyond what was set out by Ofqual in August.
Education secretary Gavin Williamson said: “Students have experienced considerable disruption and it’s right we give them, and their teachers, the certainty that exams will go ahead and more time to prepare.
“I will continue to work closely with stakeholders and I’m grateful for the commitment and willingness that’s been shown in delivering this additional time to ensure young people have the best opportunity to succeed.”
However, the DfE said today that its engagement exercise with the sector would last for six weeks, meaning schools could be facing a long wait to hear what other contingency plans are to be put in place.
Geoff Barton, general secretary of the ASCL school leadership union, said he was “dismayed” by the announcement, and said delaying the start if exams would be “of marginal benefit when compared to the loss of learning from the national lockdown and ongoing disruption”.
“It has taken the government an eternity to reach a very inadequate response to the scale of the challenge which lies ahead for students who are taking GCSEs and A-levels next year.”