The link is here, Alison. And people will see that this decision was made by some but not all headteachers in Haringey secondary schools.
As everyone will also realise, schools which have stamped TOP SECRET on their results are not in any way those whose numbers have dipped. On the contrary, they are likely to be the highest achievers - showing modesty.
But these humble heads have led the way in protesting against "a simple league table approach". And by refusing to have their schools pitted against one another. So what about a more general protest against the whole system where every summer the media carry photos of Bodo and Ermentrude smiling and waving bits of paper with their A-Stars or whatever it's called?
Personally, as a once-upon-a-long-time-ago C-stream schoolboy I'm very pleased my results were kept secret until last week. 46% "O" Level maths when the pass rate was 45%. Yess!
Well, Alison, here's the Ham & High website which has the same story as the Haringey Independent. And which quotes headteacher Patrick Cozier giving the same rationale.
It seems to me that an unintended consequence of the "principled" stand of some secondary schools is that public attention now falls on those schools which - for whatever reasons - are choosing to keep their results locked in the head's office.
Phil, I very much hope you are wrong about the official January figures showing that some schools have been "gaming" the results. Surely, that would undermine the case against over-simplified league tables. It would help nobody. Not the school. Not the parents making choices. And least of all a school's students.
A politician and anyone else is welcome to congratulate Haringey students, their families, their teachers and their schools. With perhaps some extra applause for staff in Haringey Education Service who support and advise schools.
But that's as far as it should go. We can do without politicians slapping themselves on the back for "meeting the ambitious targets we've set ourselves".
Perhaps Phil, you also find it distasteful when Cllr Claire Kober does the smug self-congratulation bit. Boasting about young people's exam results as if she had achieved them personally.
Better to pass by 1% than fail by 1%, eh Alan!
Alison, to answer your last question, tbh GCSE results aren't something I took/will be taking into consideration when applying for a place at secondary school.
There are other factors - and constraints.
So, the results for the latest academic will not be published until *after* those having to make choices about their kids moving from primary to secondary will have had to make their decision/application??? Parents will have to rely on the *previous* academic year's results to help inform their choice?
Hmmmm. That does not seem very helpful. Nor does it seem quite right.
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