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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Burger v Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education [2013] EWHC 172 (Admin) (06 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/172.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 172 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Eric Burger |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Office of the Independent Adjudicator for Higher Education |
Defendant |
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Aileen McColgan (instructed by E J Winter & Son Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 5 February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
1. Did the Deputy Adjudicator make an error when she said at Paragraph 22 of her decision issued on the 6th May 2011 that: "I do not consider that paragraph 6.1 of [the Instructions for for Examiners for Taught Programmes 2008/2009] goes so far as to dictate that the assessment criteria or marking schemes to be disclosed to students in advance of examination"?
2. Was the Interested Party (LSE) in breach of their own instructions and rules by not publishing their assessment criteria for examination EC442 in a form that was available to the Claimant as a student in advance of his taking that examination?
"It is common to assert that a "reduced-form" way to capture an oil shock in a RBC model is a shock to TFP. Suppose, however that you wanted to provide an RBC model with a more structural (i.e. explicit) description of the oil shock. Describe how you would modify the standard RBC model to do so."
The marking scheme merely said in relation to this:
"Not a unique "right" answers (sic). Examples are Finn (JCMB 2000), and Blanchard and Gali (working paper, 2007)."
"21. The School responded by clarifying that the marking scheme for EC442 had been approved by an internal examination board and external examiner and that Mr Burger's examination script was double-blind marked and assessed for a third time by an external examiner. The School explained that the Department of Economics had made a conscious decision not to disclose the marking schemes to students on the grounds that they should prepare themselves to do the best they possibly could, rather than 'targetting' parts of questions and the examination on the basis of accumulating sufficient marks to pass. The School acknowledged that this decision may not have sat kindly with some students but pointed out that the Department had been free to make the decision.
22. In his complaint to the OIA, Mr Burger has argued that the failure to disclose the assessment criteria to both class teachers and students was in violation of paragraph 6.1 of the 'Instructions for Examiners for Undergraduate and Taught Graduate Programmes' (" Instructions"). I am not satisfied that this was the case. I have seen no evidence to support Mr Burger's inference that class teachers were not informed of the assessment criteria for EC442. Furthermore, I do not consider that paragraph 6.1 of the Instructions goes so far as to dictate that assessment criteria or marking schemes should be disclosed to students in advance of examinations. Indeed I have seen no other regulation requiring such disclosure to students. It is clear to me that the Department felt, in its academic judgment, that the information provided to students during the course, including mock questions and problem sets, was sufficient to prepare them for the examination."
"It is deeply regrettable that there are no samples of Assessment Criteria which Mr Burger says LSE did publish for other courses… If Assessment Criteria are just the expectations between different grades then they would not be very illuminating. If they are no more that indicators of the level of marks for the claimant to achieve grades then the publication of the Assessment Criteria would not be relevant. Mr Burger has said the Assessment Criteria is much more than this and involves verbal descriptors of the requirements of the course and examination which I would consider to be part of a traditional Syllabus.
If a properly understood Assessment Criteria involves elements of description of the Syllabus then it should be considered part of the Syllabus and the requirements for the examinations and should be published to students...
It is self evident that students must be able to ascertain the scope and subject matter of the course and if the Assessment Criteria is part of the means of doing this maybe they should be published to students".
"Distinction (70 per cent or higher)
This class of pass is awarded when the essay demonstrates clarity of analysis, engages directly with the question, and shows an independent and critical interpretation of the issues raised by it. The essay shows exemplary skill in presenting a logical and coherent argument and an outstanding breadth and depth of reading. The essay is presented in a polished and professional manner, and all citations, footnotes and bibliography are rendered in the proper academic form.
Essays in the upper range of this class (80 per cent and higher) may make an original academic contribution to the subject under discussion. Answers in the upper range will be outstanding in terms of originality, sophistication and breadth of understanding of relevant themes and material.
Merit (60-69 per cent)
This class of pass is awarded when the essay attempts a systematic analysis of the issues raised, by the question and demonstrates independent thought. The essay shows appropriate skill in presenting a clearly reasoned argument, and draws on a good range of relevant literature. The essay is well-presented and citations, footnotes and bibliography are rendered in the proper academic form.
Pass (50-59 per cent)
This class of pass is awarded when the essay shows understanding of the issues raised by the question, and demonstrates an engagement with relevant literature. The discussion may rely more heavily on description than on independent analysis. There may be some inconsistencies, irrelevant points and unsubstantiated claims in the argument. Presentation and referencing is adequate but may contain inaccuracies.
Fail (40-49 per cent)
The essay shows limited understanding of the subject and lacks evidence of an independent response to the question. It may be based entirely on lecture material, poorly structured and contain significant errors of fact. The essay may be incomplete, including poor presentation and inadequate referencing, and fail to demonstrate an appropriate level of engagement with relevant literature.
Bad Fail (0-39 per cent)
The essay is incomplete or fails to address the question under study. It provides little evidence of reading or understanding. It may be poorly presented and lack referencing."
"70% and over: distinction
This is for outstanding work that achieves all that could reasonably be expected of an MSc student, and will feature many if not all of the following characteristics: original argument, creative selection of sources, highly critical appraisal and analysis, excellent integration of theory and evidence, excellent expression, citation and bibliography norms.
60 - 69%: merit
This is for work of good quality with a well-defined focus. Such work will feature many if not all of the following characteristics: thoughtful arguments, well researched selection of sources, good critical appraisal, well integrated theory and evidence, good, clear expression, accurate citation and bibliography.
50-59%: pass
This is for work that reaches the overall standard required of a Masters student and will feature many if not all of the following characteristics: standard argument and range of sources used, mainly fair synthesis of ideas, adequate presentation and flaws in citation and bibliography norms.
40-49%: fail
This is for work that does not reach the overall standard required of a Masters student. It will feature many if not all of the following characteristics: weak argument, narrow range of sources used, descriptive account, poor presentation, inaccurate citation and gaps in bibliography.
0-39%: bad fail
This is for work that shows a basic lack of knowledge and ability. Such work will feature many if not all of the following characteristics: very weak argument, little use of even standard sources, descriptive, with large gaps, very poor presentation with flawed expression and extensive flaws in citation and bibliography."