Achieving top grades in science subjects more difficult, proves researchJuly 01, 2008Schoolchildren studying science and technology subjects like Maths, Physics and Chemistry find it much harder to achieve the top exam grades than candidates of similar ability studying subjects like Media Studies and Psychology, proves a new report. Durham University researchers analysed and compared data from nearly one million schoolchildren sitting GCSE and A-level exams and reviewed 28 different studies of cross subject comparison conducted in the UK since 1970. They found significant differences in the relative difficulty of exams in different subjects with the sciences among the hardest. On average, subjects like Physics, Chemistry and Biology at A-level are a whole grade harder than Drama, Sociology or Media Studies, and three-quarters of a grade harder than English, RE or Business Studies.
A student who chooses Media Studies instead of English Literature could expect to improve their result by half a grade. Choosing Psychology instead of Biology would typically result in over half a grade's advantage. Preferring History to Film Studies, however, would cost you well over a grade at A-level. The study found that these differences were consistent across different methods of calculation and were remarkably stable over time. Durham University's analysis runs contrary to a report released by the exams regulator the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority in February this year which found that some exams may be harder than others, but concluded that subjects were broadly in line and no immediate action was needed to even things out. The researchers, from Durham University's Curriculum, Evaluation and Management (CEM) Centre publish their findings in a report commissioned by the Institute of Physics and the Royal Society on behalf of SCORE (Science Community Representing Education). . Researchers voice concerns that students will be more likely to choose to study 'easier' subjects and will not opt to study science subjects that are desperately needed by employers in the knowledge economy. They are calling for marking for 'harder' subjects to take account of their difficulty, perhaps introducing a 'scaling' system similar to that already used in Australia so that some subjects are acknowledged to be worth more than others. The findings come 3 years after the UK Government vowed to improve the rapidly falling numbers of students taking Physics, Chemistry and Maths. Between 1991 and 2005 figures show the numbers of students sitting A Level Physics dropped by more than a third. Report author, Dr Robert Coe, Deputy Director of Durham University's CEM Centre, said: "This research shows that science and technology subjects are much more severely graded than subjects like media studies and art. I can't see how anyone could claim that all A-levels are equally difficult. If universities and employers treat all grades as equivalent they will select the wrong applicants. A student with a grade C in Biology will generally be more able than one with a B in Sociology, for example. "The current system provides a disincentive to schools to promote take up of sciences while league tables treat all subjects as equal. "It also puts pressure on students to take particular subjects which may not be best educationally. I know students and schools will try to make the right choices, but we should have a system where the incentives support doing the right thing, not act against it." However, the Russell Group of universities has warned that pupils at some state schools put themselves at a disadvantage for accessing top Universities by studying so-called "softer subjects" like drama, art and media studies. Cambridge University has already published a list of subjects that together provide a less effective preparation for degree studies and may be a bar to a successful application. Durham University | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Related Media Studies News Articles How do children think about technology? Children growing up in the West today cannot imagine a world without mobile phones. They use high-tech gadgets without thinking much about them. An international research project will now examine what these skills mean for the society. "For better career options and higher salaries, take A Level physics, not media studies" warns Institute As this year's A Level results are announced, the Institute of Physics warns that thousands of A Level students are choosing subjects that won't provide them with good job prospects in later life, because of poor careers advice in schools. Dr Julia King, chief executive of the Institute of Physics said: "Students who take physics at A Level enjoy higher salaries in later life and have a much wider variety of career options open to them - yet physics is in decline and other subjects, such as media studies and art, are increasingly popular despite the poor career prospects they offer. It's a crazy situation." Dr King continued: "One of the reasons so many students are making poten Media invite: Live performances and debates at `Sounding Out` - an international symposium on sound. Journalists are invited to the first ever international symposium on sound being held at Staffordshire University in Stoke-on-Trent this Thursday, Friday and Saturday (July 11 - 13). The event will bring together film and radio professionals with academics to debate the role of sound in today`s media. The media may be particularly interested in the live performances: On Thursday evening from 9pm to 10.30pm, there will be performances of new material by Birmingham Electroacoustic Sound Theatre (BEAST) and radio drama by Lucy Gough, who is also a scriptwriter for TV`s Hollyoaks. At 9.30pm on Friday evening, delegates will join students at the campus` Odyssey Bar to hear work by Robin Rimbaud, Engineering and education - it's good news"¦ and bad The number of British undergraduates studying engineering is up by six per cent in the last ten years - but their 'drop-out' rate before graduation exceeded that of any other subject. This picture of good news countered by bad emerges from a focus on engineering and education in the Engineering Council's latest annual Digest of Engineering Statistics. The study reveals that 15,931 UK students were accepted onto engineering undergraduate degree courses in 1999 - six per cent more than a decade earlier - and that they boasted higher average A-level scores than their counterparts of a few years previously (19.6 compared to 18.7). Yet the 'drop-out' rate in the first year among the 1996-97 inta More Media Studies News Articles |
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