Universities' current policies on letting students access their
marked exam scripts are harming individual students and
institutions, according to a new report published today by the
Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) and sponsored by the
University of Manchester.
The report, Non-Examinable Content: Student access to exam
scripts (HEPI Policy Note 58) by Rohan Selva-Radov, calls on
universities to improve confidence and transparency in their
assessment processes by routinely giving students to access their
scripts.
Central findings:
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Restrictive access policies harm individual students
and their institutionsby reducing students'
opportunities to learn from past work and undermining
confidence in the exam system.
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GCSE and A-Level exam boards are further ahead of
universities in offering access to scripts and offer a
good example of how transparency can be increased at an
institutional level alongside other assessment modernisation
efforts. Senior leaders at exam boards are emphatic that
increasing openness has been positive for learners, teachers
and their organisations.
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Barely over half of universities (52%) have a published
policy on students' access to exam scripts. Even among
universities with a published policy, the level of
centralisation differs substantially, with universities split
evenly between those which set a single institution-wide policy
(53%) and those which leave the decision about whether or how
to facilitate access up to exam schools and faculties (47%).
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Policies vary significantly between
universities. The most common approach from
universities with a published policy is to give all students
the right to view their script under controlled conditions but
to prohibit them from making any copies. However, this
arrangement is in place at only one-in-six institutions (17%),
demonstrating substantial heterogeneity.
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Universities' concerns about increasing access can be
mitigated by the use of technology. The move towards
online exams allows scripts to be made available automatically
with few administrative overheads, and also makes it easier for
examiners to leave constructive comments on student work.
Key recommendations:
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All universities should publish a policy outlining
their approach to student access to exam scripts, with
input from individual exam schools and faculties. While the
policy need not be overly prescriptive and may include
discretion as appropriate, it should nonetheless set out clear
principles around feedback and exam access for department-level
policies to follow.
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The default position should be that students are able
to view, make copies of and share their scripts, with
the minimal restrictions necessary imposed in exceptional cases
where permitting full access would incur excessive cost.
-
Universities should consider adopting technologies that
help automate giving candidates access to scripts, as
part of assessment modernisation efforts.
Rohan Selva-Radov, the author of the new Policy Note,
said:
The newly gathered data in this report reveal a pressing need
for greater transparency and consistency from universities in how
they approach student access to exam scripts. As expectations on
higher education institutions continue to evolve, it's crucial
that assessment practices keep pace, fostering a culture of
openness and continuous improvement
Many of the senior university staff I spoke with identified
historic inertia as a major reason behind restrictive policies
remaining in place, while also stressing that new technologies
offer a great opportunity for low-cost improvements in this
area.
Professor Gabrielle Finn, Associate Vice-President for
Teaching, Learning and Students at the University of Manchester,
which sponsored the new Policy Note,
said:
This report is hugely important in terms of starting a
transparent conversation within the sector on exam script
access.
For students to see assessment as a learning opportunity, we
must encourage them to have agency over their
learning.
The ability to learn from their assessments is one way in
which this can be achieved.
, Director of HEPI,
said:
The issue of transparency in exams is not discussed within
higher education as much as we believe it should be. It is one
area where the higher education sector seems to have fallen way
behind schools.
Students benefit from knowing how their marks have been
arrived at and can learn vital things from the assessment
process.
This report is a wake-up call for institutions to look again
at their practices and for policymakers to consider if clearer
guidance is needed.