The National Audit Office (NAO) has today published its
investigation into the Home Office’s response to widespread
cheating by international students in English language tests.
Clearly widespread cheating did take place but some people may have
been wrongly accused and in some cases, unfairly removed from the
UK.
Evidence shows there was extensive fraud in the
student visa system prior to 2014. In February 2014 BBC Panorama
uncovered evidence of organised cheating in two English language
test centres run on behalf of the Educational Testing Service
(ETS). This included providing English-speakers to take speaking
tests instead of the real candidates and staff reading out
multiple choice answers for other tests. The Home Office
responded vigorously, investigating colleges, test centres and
students.
After the Panorama programme the Home Office began
cancelling the visas of those it considered to have cheated in
the Test of English for International Communication (TOEIC). It
used evidence from ETS on who had cheated to do this. It
suspended all ETS testing and initiated criminal investigations
into test centres. It also prevented colleges associated with
cheating from sponsoring international students’
visas.
It is still difficult to estimate accurately the
exact scale of cheating and how many people may have been
affected because of the quality of evidence used to determine who
cheated and the data kept by the Home Office on the action taken
against individuals.
ETS used new voice recognition technology to uncover
who had cheated by having someone else sit their test. After
review by human listeners and other checks, ETS identified 97% of
all UK tests as “suspicious”. It classified 58% of 58,459 UK
tests as "invalid" and 39% as “questionable”. The Home Office did
not have the expertise to validate the results nor did it, at
this stage, get an expert opinion on the quality of the voice
recogonition evidence. Individuals with “questionable” results
were allowed to re-sit the tests, but the Home Office started
cancelling visas of those individuals given an “invalid”
test.
There have been competing views of the validity of
the technology. In 2015, the National Union of Students (NUS)
commissioned an expert who said the software could have made
mistakes in up to 20% of cases and human listeners in up to 30%
of cases.
In 2016, the Home Office sought an independent expert
who said that the error rate would be significantly less than 1%.
The expert had more information but still needed to make a series
of assumptions about the performance of the technology and the
people checking the results. The expert’s evidence backs up ETS’s
overall assessment of widespread cheating, but neither proves
definitively that an individual’s test was
invalid.
Most tests considered invalid by voice recognition
checks did have very high marks compared to people who were
cleared. 49% of invalid tests were taken by highly fluent English
speakers. Some scores are not easily explained by the methods of
cheating Panorama identified and have not been investigated by
the Home Office. For example, thousands of people suspected of
cheating had low scores in multiple choice tests, indicating they
were not provided with the answers. 100 people with invalid
speaking tests (0.3% of invalid results) had lower scores than
the level required for study in the UK, meaning supposed proxies
were actually people with limited English language
ability.
It was not possible for the Home Office to directly
check ETS’s assessments of cheating. Some appeals challenged the
handling of data by ETS and the test centres, particularly
because some centres were run by criminals. People have been able
to get hold of ETS voice recordings used in voice recognition
checks but not the original audio recordings, although this
evidence has stood up to challenge in criminal
trials.
Thousands of people accused of cheating have still
won the right to stay in the UK. 4,157 invalid cases have been
granted leave to remain, including 477 who are now British
citizens. 12,500 people appealed immigration decisions with 3,600
winning their cases. The Home Office has not tracked the reasons
why people have been allowed to stay. Some have disproved
allegations of cheating, others have remained on human rights
grounds.
At the end of March 2019 Home Office data indicates
11,000 people who had taken TOEIC tests had left the country
after the discovery of extensive cheating. Approximately 7,200
left voluntarily after April 2014, around 2,500 people were
forcibly removed and almost 400 were refused re-entry to the UK.
These numbers may be an underestimate.
Widespread action to close colleges also affected
students who did not sit the TOEIC exams, as they had to find
other courses. Some have struggled to secure new places,
impacting on their visas and their ability to remain in the
country. The Home Office offered help to 4,795 students and 837
students used this support.
Amyas Morse, the head of the NAO, said
today:
“When the Home Office
acted vigorously to exclude individuals and shut down colleges
involved in the English language test cheating scandal, we think
they should have taken an equally vigorous approach to protecting
those who did not cheat but who were still caught up in the
process, however small a proportion they might be. This did not
happen. ”
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