The upcoming GCSE exam season may be returned to normal after the pandemic - but after all the disruption, some pressure might this year be taken off pupils who studied through Covid-19.
The Department foe Education has confirmed there will be no ‘Progress 8’ reports published for schools for the 2024/25 and 2025/26 academic years.
The score is a measure for assessing schools based on how well pupils did in their KS2 results compared to the end of KS4 when they did their GCSEs. Positive scores would indicate that children did better than predicted as a result of their time at the school.
But, as TES Magazine writes, primary tests were cancelled for pupils in Year 6 in the academic years 2019-20 and 2020-21 because of the pandemic - meaning there is no prior KS2 attainment data available to use as a baseline for Progress 8 calculations for students sitting their GCSEs in the next two years.
The system has been criticised as being open to bias due to catchment areas, entrance exams, or even how rich parents are. However, it is used as the DfE’s measuring stick for how pupils have progressed across their secondary school career.
However, this week, Daniel Kebede, general secretary of the National Education Union, called Progress 8 “fundamentally flawed” and that “no single score or measure could ever” describe what happens in a school.
He said: “The fact it will not be calculated for the next two years is welcomed but it is not the sign of a government understanding that a school is about more than the results of tests taken by a small proportion of the school, over a few weeks in summer. It is being done because they have no other choice, and they intend to return to it once the pandemic-affected cohorts have passed through Year 11.
"Other flawed data, focused on attainment not progress [Attainment 8 scores], will still be published this year which will allow people to mistakenly rank schools and lead them to inaccurate conclusions about their ‘quality’ on the sole basis of exam results. So the problems will not disappear, even in the years without Progress 8.
"This should be an opportunity to rebalance what is a blunt, misleading and ineffective school accountability system in England.
“Rather than simply judging or labelling a school, with just one inaccurate word or number, the focus should be on how to help the education system share in its successes and to support each other’s continual development and improvement."
It comes after figures show - if the Progress 8 scores are indeed used to ‘rank’ schools as Mr Kebede criticises - that Sheffield fell behind in its grades last year.
The DfE uses Progress 8 scores to publish its own ‘league tables’ each year.
They show that, out of some 30 schools in Sheffield at the end of the 2022/23 academic year, just six are were considered as getting 'above average' progress - while an overall majority of 17 schools scored in the red as being 'below average' or 'well below average'.
Below, The Star has compiled and ranked all of Sheffield's secondary schools by their Progress 8 scores.
Schools that did not have their Progress 8 scores published included Bradfield School, Sheffield High School, Seraphic School, Bethany School, Westfield School, Westbourne School and Becton School, as well as the vast majority of special schools.
![The best performing school in Sheffield for 2022-2023 was Mercia School. Still celebrating from its 'Outstanding' Ofsted rating this year, the academy's pupils earned a 'well above average' score of +2.22. For comparison, the second best performing school in Sheffield scored +0.79, placing Mercia well and truly top of the pile. The school was also the best performing in the entire country for how much progress its disadvantaged pupils made.](https://www.thestar.co.uk/jpim-static/image/2023/10/24/8/Mercia%20school%20building.jpg?crop=3:2&width=800)
1. In first place, Mercia School
The best performing school in Sheffield for 2022-2023 was Mercia School. Still celebrating from its 'Outstanding' Ofsted rating this year, the academy's pupils earned a 'well above average' score of +2.22. For comparison, the second best performing school in Sheffield scored +0.79, placing Mercia well and truly top of the pile. The school was also the best performing in the entire country for how much progress its disadvantaged pupils made. | National World
![The second best performing school in Sheffield in 2022-2023 was High Storrs School, with a Progress 8 score of +0.79. At GCSE results day this year, 46 per cent of all grades were a 7, 8 or 9.](https://www.thestar.co.uk/jpim-static/image/2023/10/24/8/20230817_082951.jpg?crop=3:2&width=800)
2. #2 - High Storrs School
The second best performing school in Sheffield in 2022-2023 was High Storrs School, with a Progress 8 score of +0.79. At GCSE results day this year, 46 per cent of all grades were a 7, 8 or 9. | National World
![Tapton School may have now been waiting over a decade for a fresh Ofsted report, but this year earned a 'well above average' Progress 8 score of +0.71, making it the third best performing school in Sheffield.](https://www.thestar.co.uk/jpim-static/image/2023/10/24/8/tapton%20school.jpg?crop=3:2&width=640)
3. #3 - Tapton School
Tapton School may have now been waiting over a decade for a fresh Ofsted report, but this year earned a 'well above average' Progress 8 score of +0.71, making it the third best performing school in Sheffield. | Google Maps
![Silverdale School earned a commendable Progress 8 score of +0.64, placing them 'well above' the national average.](https://www.thestar.co.uk/jpim-static/image/2023/10/24/8/ahpix_silverdalegcse_22%20media.jpg?crop=3:2&width=800)
4. #4 - Silverdale School
Silverdale School earned a commendable Progress 8 score of +0.64, placing them 'well above' the national average. | Silverdale School