Dear Editor,

“Considering that Barbadians live better and Barbados functions better when the DLP is out of office, their time in the wilderness is for the best.”

The Deceased Labour Party – Part One

The above assertion from the first article in this series is perhaps contentious and thus, a point worthy of excavation. 

Firstly, from an economic perspective, in its first period in office, the Democratic Labour Party claimed to ‘accelerate industrialistion and job creation’. However, when they left office in 1976, they left a country with inflation sky-rocketing and unemployment had reached 25% of the ‘true labour force’. Waste and inefficiency had become pervasive in the public sector. In absolute terms, the same number of people were employed in 1976 in light industry as when they came to office in 1961. Acreage available for agricultural production had declined, as well as output. The cost of living was also rising with phenomenal increases in prices and few will forget the mismanagement of the 1973 oil crisis. 

In the DLP’s second period in office, the economic calamity of the 90s is well known to all. Again, this was originally induced by the international economic realities of the 90s, but the situation was handled terribly, resulting in the social upheaval and economic chaos of that period. 

Finally, there are few who can deny the stark economic reality of 2018. There had been a complete erosion of investor confidence, Barbados’ credit rating was on a perpetual track of ‘downgrade’, foreign reserves were through the floor, ‘home-grown plan’ after ‘home-grown plan’ had failed to achieve its objectives, taking us around a roundabout of economic calamity, or what the then government called ‘turning the corner’. Cost of living again was sky-high, and taxation was unevenly distributed, thereby disproportionately affecting the working classes. 

Turning to the social aspect, Barbados has had to confront a chequered colonial past, necessitating a suite of social programmes for the aggrandizement of the working classes. 

Before the DLP came to office in 1961, free education had been introduced at four secondary schools, a basic feeding programme was instituted at primary schools providing children with milk and biscuits, the feasibility study and draft legislation for the NIS was prepared, the first public housing units were constructed, a myriad of legislation to protect workers was introduced and loans were provided for higher education and housing for civil servants. 

One wonders how many of those achievements have been misleadingly attributed to the Democratic Labour Party?

After the DLP was booted from office in 1976, minibus operations were legalized allowing small players into the industry, illegitimacy was removed from the statute books, plantation tenants were given the opportunity to own their land, phenomenal strides were made to make men and women more equal in society delivering a ‘new deal’ to women, electricity was provided to the entire island including rural areas, unemployment benefits were introduced and the NCF and NSC were created. 

In the DLP’s column, they have Mr Sandiford’s work in education in the Barrow years, the School Meals Service started by Mr Barrow, and the expansion of the previously started free education, national insurance and public housing. 

Clearly then, much of the social infrastructure on which this country is founded was not built by the DLP. To a large extent, the Democratic Labour Party has continued and expanded the programmes of others. 

Finally on the political front, Mr Barrow must be credited with leading Barbados into independence and his vision and inspiration and Mr Sandiford for creating the Social Partnership.

However, the DLP did not win universal suffrage and full ministerial government for Barbadians. Their commitment to regional integration has also wavered, particularly in the last dispensation, with scarce interest being shown to CSME, as well as the fanning of xenophobia by Mr Thompson’s administration.

It was the DLP that dismantled local government for short-term political gain, and in the process stripping Barbadians of an important layer of democracy. Few might remember, but the DLP also opposed the creation of the EBC, clearly being more comfortable with an electoral office operating out of the PM’s Office.

Concludingly, when one looks at what has been achieved when the DLP has been out of office as well as the failures when they have been in office, what conclusion can be drawn? Does it not appear that the DLP has not been more successful than their political rivals, in terms of achievement? Does it not appear that, especially since the passing of Mr Barrow, they have been stripped of any vision? Does it not appear that Barbados has done better when the Democratic Labour Party has been kept out of Bay Street? When we answer those questions based on the unimpeachable evidence above, is it not so that we are much better off for their time in the political wilderness?

Finally, next week, an assessment of the 65th Conference itself.

Khaleel Kothdiwala 

133 responses to “The Deceased Labour Party – Part Two”


  1. Let me put in my two cents.
    The missing and absent should be felly explained.

    For the grading, this will not be the first time that students got better or worse grades than they expected.

    I am slightly amused at the slogan ‘We Will Not Pay For Your Mistakes, Fix Our Grades and Give Us the Grades We Deserve” as this is quite different from ’We Will Not Pay For Your Mistakes, Fix Our Grades and Give Us the Grades We EARNED’.

    Could there be a difference between what the think they deserve and what they EARNED.


  2. The missing and absent examination should be fully investigated and an explanation provided.

    It is quite possible the BU Scholar got the grade he earned.


  3. Somebody need to piss in the morning coffee.

    ‘I think the notion that there is widespread achievement of less than acceptable grade is not borne out.’

    I struggle with the ‘less than acceptable grade’.

    In my world, you get what you earn and accept it. You want a better grade, put away your placard and resit the exam.

    Perhaps, you are not as smart as you think you are. Perhaps, your school is not as good as you think it is.

    Life can be a bitch. Accept it.
    +++++++X+—–
    Let me add this… in my world, the examination boards need to have quality checks in their markings methods. Their examination answers need to be 100% correct.
    Lip service and going through the motions is not part of the process.


  4. WURA-War-on-U 7.33 am
    Are you using a school that the students have to fight against all stereotypes to achieve to justify that CXC did something wrong? As a parent of a child that went to six form at Springer and did very well and is now at UWI,I can tell you that Springer never had no students on Scholarship watch this year. It was strictly rumour to show that some schools in the public mind cannot get scholarships but were getting scholarships. What I can tell you that the Six form at Springer has been a tremendous success and the students are well rounded and like the high flyers earn degrees and go on to be worthwhile citizens of this country.


  5. Yall can blame Barbados’ whoring sellout negros governments for what is happening now.

    “There is also the avenue of injunctive relief in the interim, to delay CXC from declaring prelim results as final results, as Guyana is reported to be exploring.

    The CXC HQ Agreement with the Bds Gov needs to be examined carefully.

    I will tell you though that CXC will say they are not subject to the jurisdiction of local courts, based on an agreement signed with the Barbados government so they tend to pretend to cooperate with the local legal process and then declare that they are not subject to it and abruptly stop “cooperating”.

    There are several other regional organizations that are immunized with similar agreements “


  6. Those immunity clauses signed 60 years ago after the demise of the illfated Federation in some people’s estimation should no longer be in effect…but i won’t put it pass any of the sell out negros in the parliament to have renewed it in exchange for bribes or to retain their membership amongst devil worshiping criminals.


  7. “As a parent of a child that went to six form at Springer and did very well and is now at UWI,I can tell you that Springer never had no students on Scholarship watch this year. ”

    this is not about Springer, as i said the LYING REGISTRAR will have to EXPLAIN why he pulled back any scholarships from Springer, if indeed they did…in addition, Springer is on of the schools all the bright kids who were DISENFRANCHISED of all their colonial 11 plus grades were HERDED INTO in the 70s…using a method resembling the nasty crap CXC is using now…Springer, Ellerslie, etc always had the potential to cough out scholars, but the funding was always withheld by sell out negros of parliament..


  8. Repeating myself here.
    As a part of the website of these examination boards, there should be a description and reasons for these anomalies (ungraded, missing, …).

    These sites should also have links that readily provide a variety of summary statistics for previous years. The partial statistics provided by CXC are woefully inadequate.

    We need to abandon the blackbox approach and make systems more transparent. I am quite certain that these organizations can provide more information without divulging proprietary secrets.

    _______*****_______
    I suspect that the grading may be the one thing that is correct. We will hear little from those who performed as expected or better than expected. They are those.


  9. This CXC brouhaha is the gift that keeps on giving, it should give the KK kid enough material to fill six columns


  10. Sargeant,

    you think he can somehow link the DLP to the CXC foul up or praise MAM and the BLP for their help? lol

    still i feel the young man’s pain. this is not a good look on CXC.


  11. @Hal

    what are you saying mate? i did CXCs and GCE and CXC are far more taxing. the UK watered down GCEs to iGCSEs or simply GCSEs. it has been my experience that those are inferior to CXCs. my children did the International Baccalaureate program instead of A levels and that is far superior to A levels in terms of preparation for Uni where they gained firsts. CAPE is also superior to A levels


  12. TheoGazerts
    CXC refuses to even publish mark schemes for exam done. Cambridge publishes all of its mark schemes for O Level and A level once the exams are completed and results are back.The reason is clear that the persons who set especially the Multiple choice papers for CXC are lazy.They recycle 98% of the questions on average every year.The students who are complaining know that their SBAs marks were high and they practiced five years MC papers and knew the answers for every question CXC set in the last five years. CXC is not really a transparent Examination Body..


  13. Jo-anne Tull

    · So how is it that UWI the regional tertiary institution must continually seek Quality Assurance approvals which include a system of exam querying and review, and CXC the regional examining body for subjects required to enter UWI does not? What am I missing here 🙆🏽‍♀️ Make it make sense for me please.

    Extracted from Dr. Tull’s Facebook


  14. @ Greene

    I know nothing about CXC/CAPE exams. But an exam with multiple choice questions does not tax the learning of the pupil to my mind. It is a guessing game.
    I would question your assessment that IGCSEs are more taxing than GCSEs. In factf, it is not. And you are mistaken about the so-called watering of GCEs.
    Every year until about five years ago, newspapers would sit and wait for GCE exam results to come out; if the students did well, they will claim exams were dumbed down; if they did badly, they were dumb.
    About five years ago the exams were drastically improved, especially the maths exams, with the Foundation maths, equal to the old GCE, and the higher maths is now the same standard as the old AS or first year of A level. A level maths is now about the first year of university.
    All this was done without any fanfare or megaphones.


  15. Let’s not get carried away.

    I agree that there should be greater transparency, quality assurance processes, etc., but let us not start equating the quest for accreditation of a university with with having standards for CXC.

    What’s next, a ‘screaming test’ parent pointing at UWI because little Susie couldn’t cut it.


  16. “As a part of the website of these examination boards, there should be a description and reasons for these anomalies (ungraded, missing, …).”

    Don’t hold your breath, CXC is a piece of shit…., despite what the lying, arrogant CXC registrar said about the grades being perfect in his delusional world….THEY HAVE STARTED TO FIX THE GRADES THEY CLAIMED DID NOT NEED FIXING for the UNGRADED, so by next week ….all of them should be as the kids expected.


  17. @Hal

    quote] I would question your assessment that IGCSEs are more taxing than GCSEs.[unquote

    i would too becos i made no such comparison.

    the comparison i made between GCEs and IGCSEs is not recent. i am talking about when i sat GCE or what we called O levels and the IGCSEs and GCSEs offered now. i have seen the ones today and they are not as involved as the old GCEs

    multiple choice or objective type questions can be v tricky (you have to know the answer or guess) and sometimes take more studying than long or short answered questions. i prefer the latter where i can bluff and waffle if i dont know the exact answer.

    the International Baccalaureate is better prep than A levels (my experience) for uni. it prepared my children for critical analysis and structured essay writing with citations and referencing and they sailed thru uni getting firsts.


  18. Note the long answer question was eliminated this year by CXC because of COVID-19. Multiple Choice is not the standard measure and evaluation of students.

    >


  19. THe parents around the Caribbean must now put pressure on ALL GOVERNMENTS to GET RID OF CXC out of the region permanently…..first opportunity they get, they will do this evil shit again or even worse..

    ….of course Barbados’ uppity, whoring, sellout bribetaking governments have a secret pact with these freemasons so we shall see what we shall see…but ah want them to know that MORE PEOPLE KNOW about all their NASTINESS and WHO THEY ARE…..than they think or would believe, so they can keep fcuking around and see what else falls out, this was just a prelim..


  20. @David,

    hence the issues as to the weighting given for that and the SBAs. at any rate the multiple choice paper was a part of the overall individual exam subject back in my time too


  21. I understand that C(shit)C will be reviewing the grades.


  22. Barbados’ arrogant, uppity fools can always fight against it, show us how bad their DEVIL CULT is.

    your black leaders are the ENEMIES OF BLACK PEOPLE, even from before 1966 AND STILL ARE..

    ….they IMMUNIZED entities/organizations/cults against Black people across the region decades ago, without your knowledge, they are traitors and back stabbers.


  23. DavidSeptember 26, 2020 3:11 PM Note the long answer question was eliminated this year by CXC because of COVID-19.

    ++++++++

    That is utter madness. Total and utter.


  24. CXC’s credibility at stake
    The issues raised by the controversy surrounding the recent results of CXC examinations are not to be brushed aside, with facile answers comparing previous years’ results with this year’s.
    They are serious issues deserving of serious treatment.
    The fact that so many students from this region have issues with the results published on Tuesday last is remarkable. There is a widespread carpet of complaints within the region.
    And it is not only students who are concerned. Students have a direct interest in the results. Rather on this occasion, regional ministries of education are concerned and teaching administrators are asking questions or making statements.
    The president of the Barbados Association of Principals of Public Secondary Schools, Juanita Wade, for example, is reported as saying that the grades do not align with the abilities of many students.
    As she further said, “We are not accustomed to so many students being disappointed with their results”.
    Queen’s College in Guyana has threatened to leave CXC and take legal action over what they call “botched results”. Complaints have also been raised in Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, St Lucia and in Grenada.
    The interesting thing is that there were some changes this year, with Paper II not being administered. Yet Wade believed that without Paper II, CXC had the ability to provide a fair process. We agree. CXC has proven ability in providing a fair examinations process.
    Endorsements of faith in this regional body seem reasonable given CXC’s earlier track record. But then CXC’s previous good record begs the question of why so many students and their schools are disappointed with their results this year.
    The large numbers speak their own narrative.
    In the last edition of Weekend Nation, Dr Wayne Wesley, registrar of the CXC, is reported to have said that no investigation is needed but that clarity will be provided.
    We cannot believe that this view is a final view. If these were isolated cases one could probably agree with this approach; but when more than 10 000 students sign a petition of complaint, then CXC
    has a problem of credibility and a concurrent duty to be transparent as they solve it.
    Sometime last month, Wesley told us that for these examinations the Paper II would not be administered.
    What we think needs to be clarified for a start, is whether the absence of Paper II has anything to do with what appear to be skewed results. Perhaps the registrar can explain the statement attributed to him that there is no adjustment to the weight of papers since the modified approach being used excluded Paper II. What was the modified approach?
    Clear answers may suggest to more learned educators how the modified approach, as this year’s new factor, worked out in the examination marking process and in the allocation of the grades.
    CXC must also explain how students who wrote the examination can receive a grade which says they were absent from the examination.
    These matters all deserve careful attention. The integrity of regional associations is still being attacked in some quarters, where some of our own argue that we cannot get it right.
    Until now, CXC has been regarded as a regional success. Any factors which militate against the credibility of such an important regional entity must be dealt with in a responsible and urgent manner. High stakes are at stake.

    Source: NAtion


  25. “That is utter madness.”

    nah…it’s utter freemasonry EVIL…the black governments gave them free rein and immunity to create mischief in the lives of our children ….they have always been our ENEMIES and should not be allowed to set any exams, standards or curriculi for our kids, the damage they created over the decades has been total….now they have been exposed on Facebook, people are understanding better, they are voicing they always had doubts about them, but could never pinpoint exactly what was wrong UNTIL NOW, but since C(shit)C is criminal by nature, it was just a matter of time before they OVERSTEPPED…what has blown their minds is they never expected that LEVEL OF BACKLASH….or people with the acument to UNMASK THEM….although it’s only more pronounced because EVERYONE from across the strata of the societies has been impacted and not only the Black majority in the individual islands, so these are the unintended consequences.

    the good news, everyone now knows where CXC is headquartered and they know where to find it and alyuh done know i too love to know where everybody live..

    so, when is Mia’s next trip to Guyana to interfere in their business….ah can’t wait..


  26. Oh…and we know where to find all the lodges on the island too, oh yes we do..

    and am quite sure the populi in every island knows where they’re located too…..so dazzle us with devil cult badassness.


  27. “Prince Hall Freemasonry is a branch of North American Freemasonry for African Americans founded by Prince Hall on September 29, 1784.”

    So the 236th anniversary for this evil shit is September 29, 2020…but ah telling alyuh now, that lodge business was created in the days when Black people were so ostracized they had no choice but to come together and copy something to indicate cohesiveness for self protection. WE GET THAT….but all that FCUKERY should have DIED WITH THEM and not continue into 2020.

    Yall are NOT USING that #11 GATEWAY shite to SACRIFICE OUR CHILDREN AND FUTURE GENERATIONS in no goddamn NEW GATEWAY…fcukoff… it is white magic and it’s PURE EVIL.

    Just wanted yall to know that i know that and so much more.


  28. Hope everyone is seeing what happens when the negros of parliament sell out their own people AND THEIR OWN SOULS to savages and gave them blanket immunity from as far back as the 1940s or 1950s. When these people have their RITUALS to perform, the shitehounds of parliament cant stop them because they are a part of the cult and it’s our children, granchildren and other innocent people end up being human blood sacrifices.


  29. Sometimes, I am not able to see things as clearly as some here do. I am still struggling to see the role of the free masons in this brouhaha and I am waiting for the connection to be made.

    I have a strong suspicion that the grades, in the absence of outright dishonesty, will remain as they are; in fact, this may be the one item that they got right.

    Changing of grades would signal that there is a major problem with administering/marking/reporting the results of these examinations. And whilst we would like to lay the blame at the feet of the dog with a bad name (COVID-19), changes would also make me question the results of the previous years,

    How many promising young men and women had their trajectories altered (significantly) by the incompetence of these examination boards? Should we then do a “deep-dive” into past CXC grades or should we accept that this is as a single big screw-up?

    Is our success/failure system unable to accurately classify success or failure; Is it generously passing some and unnecessarily failing others?

    What if these “inaccurate grades’” are also for the sciences? Could it be possible that the ‘markers’ were provided with incorrect multuiple choice answers? And if they were, what does it say about the knowledge of those marking the papers?

    The one thing that cannot change or must not change are the grades.

    (Side note 🙂 An inaccurate grading system might explain two of our Barbados scholars 🙂 . It is a joke. There is no need to point out that your time was before the era of computers/cxc 🙂 Geez. It is a joke that I couldn’t resist. )

    However, missing and ungraded papers are still a cause of concern.
    The shipping of papers must be traced from source to destination.
    Reconciliation of payments for paper supposed to be marked and those actually marked (not missing or ungraded) must be performed.
    Where discrepancies are found, then a sample of the papers marked by those who were found to be dishonest must be performed.

    I tire, but I tried to put some real flesh on the discussion.


  30. Theo…even if you can’t see or don’t know, the culprits see and know well Enuff…that is what i love about this, they have instilled such fear in the people for decades that they themselves cannot come out and say anyone is lying when there are more than Enuff people who know who they are….upclose, upfront and personal..

    so far some of the ungraded have gotten back their results in Barbados, don’t know about the ones who they claim were absent but have receipts and proof that they were present for the exam, you will have to ask Donna how her son fared.

    ….the problem is Santia came out once telling CXC to review the grades etc and they told her to shove it…..notice CXC Grenada and Guyana complied.. after both countries threatened to withdraw from the entity, ….so why the disrespect for Barbados’ government minister who made no such threat….and Mia is silent…when you see that there is something else going on…but the parents are not stupid and their intelligence should not be insulted.

    ..let’s see what happens this week.

    notice that the fowls are very silent, another tell.


  31. CXC is one organization. CXC Guyana ? CXC Grenada?


  32. Donna…all organizations have SATELLITE OFFICES…they would have separate offices in other jurisdictions…BARBADOS IS HEADQUARTERS….where all the evil shit originates…

    most people did not know that Barbados hosts that shitshow, that is why directed their anger at their local cxc reps…


  33. BTW…many kids who were marked down as ungraded or failed…upon review got 1s and 2s….if you know what your relatives are capable of you do not accept C(shit)C and their evil shit…..you go batshit crazy and go after them, that’s what you do..they are to be rejected AT ALL TIMES…….our children are not to be made and left systematically and calculatingly catatonic.

    they OWN ya shite ministers in Barbados, they are the only ones who have to accept them, lay in bed and dance with the devil and that’s what ya will get.

    hopefully your son will be sorted out this week..


  34. many kids who were marked down as ungraded or failed…upon review got 1s (SOME WITH DISTINCTION) and 2s.

    am not taking away one thing from these kids…

    as long as that devil cult knows that someone is on their ass…tomorrow is the 29th MFs.


  35. CXCs devil organization totally dessimated Guyana’s children, so just imagine Jamaica and other really vulnerable islands, if you know anyone there and you speak to them they will tell you….but they are not getting away with it, no other relatives of mine are to ever come crying to me again about a devil cult from the 1700s intellectually disenfranchising them, in this nor in any other lifetime.


  36. The decision to regrade would have to be made at headquarters not satellite offices. If they are regraded in one country, they would have to be regraded in all.

    I have not rushed to deal with my son’s erroneous returns. He’s not looking to enter any educational institution. I am letting those desperate children go first. We haven’t even picked up the certificates from last year yet.


  37. CXC matters are handled via the respective ministries of education.

    >


  38. “BTW…many kids who were marked down as ungraded or failed…upon review got 1s and 2s”

    Failed? You mean missing; ungraded or missing.

    Changes in “fails” mean exams were regraded.

    But even more importantly, to move from a failed to Grade 1/2 is inconceivable. The reporting/grading system is seriously flawed.

    I suspect you mean missing.

    If I was in a leadership role at CXC, I would strenuously resist revision of existing grades. To have grade changing (on a large scale)


  39. “BTW…many kids who were marked down as ungraded or failed…upon review got 1s and 2s”

    Failed? You mean missing; ungraded or missing.

    Changes in “fails” mean exams were regraded.

    But even more importantly, to move from a failed to Grade 1/2 is inconceivable. The reporting/grading system is seriously flawed.

    I suspect you mean missing.

    If I was in a leadership role at CXC, I would strenuously resist revision of existing grades. To have grade changing (on a large scale) makes it a shot show.


  40. Wifey, a very smart woman, wonders if the grades also reflect the difference in ages of some teachers.

    A younger teacher may be able to use the computer more effectively than an older teacher. An older teacher may be covering the course, but may not make full use of the power of the computer.

    Just a thought.


  41. TheOGazertsSeptember 28, 2020 8:46 AM

    Wifey, a very smart woman, wonders if the grades also reflect the difference in ages of some teachers.

    A younger teacher may be able to use the computer more effectively than an older teacher. An older teacher may be covering the course, but may not make full use of the power of the computer.

    Just a thought.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    For your amusement!!


  42. Thanks a million. I shared the first with my son. The 8:00 a.m. is on the dot.

    The last one was impossible to reach, but I will Google.

    Thanks.


  43. TheO,

    What do you mean that you would resist regrading? Suppose the grades are unfair. We have ‘A’ profile students getting Grade 4s! Never heard of such!

    Are you not interested in getting it right?????

    This is twice lately you have been strangely illogical wrt students and their welfare.

    David,

    That is what I thought. No satellite offices. I don’t know what WURA is on about. CXC matters are handled through the MoEs.

    From the begining she prefaced her replies to me with “FYI” and “For future reference” and I wondered if I had been asleep and unaware since 1982.


  44. “The decision to regrade would have to be made at headquarters not satellite offices.”

    no need to make it more difficult than it needs to be, CXC HAS TO HAVE REPRESENTATIVES in every island….all concerns must be directed to those reps AND THEN REACH HEADQUARTERS in BARBADOS…it’s just like a banking organization, if you have an issue you take it up with your local branch who then……

    …..communicating directly with HEADQUARTERS is a LAST RESORT…..and best left to their reps in CXCs case… but.not to their jackass registrar…that IDIOT SHOULD BE FIRED…

    “I am letting those desperate children go first.”

    yep…some kids already got dropped by universities…

    “Changes in “fails” mean exams were regraded.”

    am sure you remember the minds of teenagers, who will see it as a fail and their parents who don’t understand would also, some kids got kicked out of their parents’ homes, until they realized it was not the kids, it’s that nasty organization destroying the families.


  45. “No satellite offices.”

    am an old corporate girl ok, it matters not….they MUST APPROACH THEIR LOCAL REPS FIRST..

    Grenada’s government said they communicated directly with CXC Grenada, Guyana said the same thing..


  46. Some students were told on Saturday to check the portals that they use and surprise, surprise, would you know it…ungraded SUDDENLY got the expected grades as per their marks through the last year… etc.

    i really don’t give a shit how they grade or whatever, i care ONLY that they DO NOT get away with this…


  47. Donna,
    Let me add a little more depth to my statement.

    I was not trying to be unfair to students, that is why I feel that a detailed explanation and grading must be provided for missing and ungraded exams.

    Changing of grades is a completely different matter. At the magnitude suggested here, this represents a complete failure of the system. A catastrophe. The answer sheets had incorrect answers; the graders were lazy/dishonest; the system is a sham?

    Then I begin to worry not only about this year, but about past years. About how many students over the years were wronged by a flawed marking system? How many children began to doubt themselves after giving their best, doing a good job and then be told they failed.

    I would not want to be part of that charade.

    If grades are changed then the administration needs to be sacked; all processes – exam creation, marking, grading … need to be examined with a microscope and remedied.

    I would not be hard on the students. If I was part of the fiasco (changing grades), I would resign. I would be hard on myself.

    I cannot believe that grades need changing as this represents a real failure of the system.

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