My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join the discussion on our Education forum.

Education

I know how H goes on about how thick I am .....

17 replies

carla · 01/11/2005 21:08

Message deleted

OP posts:
Report
sobernow · 01/11/2005 21:10

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

HerRoyalLovlinessMaloryTowers · 01/11/2005 21:11

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

SenoraPostrophe · 01/11/2005 21:12

is it school rsults, carla? in that case cohort= year group and "value added scores" = scores which take into account the children's sat scores when they started at the school (so a fairer score for comparison with other schools)

Report
JanH · 01/11/2005 21:14

Don't worry your little head about it, dear

Report
JanH · 01/11/2005 21:15

I don't know why they can't just say "year group" TBH. Value-added is OK, though it does bring VAT to mind, but cohort is men in helmets, little skirts and sandals

Report
carla · 01/11/2005 21:17

Message deleted

OP posts:
Report
carla · 01/11/2005 21:18

Message deleted

OP posts:
Report
WigWamBam · 01/11/2005 21:18

Carla - repeat after me:

I am not thick. I am not thick. H is an arse. I am not thick.

Report
SenoraPostrophe · 01/11/2005 21:21

see my post below carla. (they take the sat scores or an estimate when the child starts school, and take them away from the final scores).

you're not thick, but you might skim read too much!

Report
JanH · 01/11/2005 21:25

They do "baseline assessment" when the child starts school at 4, carla - they measure loads of skills at that point (shapes, numbers, colours, letter recognition, fine motor skills blah blah) although I don't know how they are marked.

Then when they do SATs in Y2 their scores are compared with the baseline assessment, and if they have achieved higher scores than predicted by baseline, that shows some value added. It's a v imprecise science but better than nothing and at least allows for schools with a lower-ability intake to show what they can do.

Report
Rowlers · 01/11/2005 21:28

"Cohort" is used instead of "year group" as in any given year the cohort (those taking the exams) may include students from different year groups.

Report
mumfor1sttime · 01/11/2005 21:31

I did not have a clue what that meant either!

Report
carla · 01/11/2005 21:39

Message deleted

OP posts:
Report
popsycal · 01/11/2005 21:51

i can whinge on about the whole sentence for you if you want....
or do you have the answer

Report
carla · 02/11/2005 09:07

Message deleted

OP posts:
Report
popsycal · 02/11/2005 19:14

an here now for a while....
I can whinge for you.....

Report
Nightynight · 02/11/2005 19:38

thats just a badly written sentence imo. send it to the Plain English campaign!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.