Category: Social Mobility

  • Centre update 9: guide for adapting Speech assessments – 8th of June, 2020

    COVID-19 restrictions have led to the cancellation of exams and prevented many assessments from being taken as planned this spring and summer.

    Ofqual has designed an approach to ensure, as far as possible, that learners receive results to enable them to progress to the next stage of their lives without further disruption.

    Following consultation, Ofqual has published guidance on its Extraordinary Regulated Framework, which allows ESB International to adapt its Speech assessments for some Speech qualifications.

    This means that ESB International centres can book their adapted Speech assessments from Monday, 15th June.

    ESB International has produced detailed centre guidance and further supporting documentation for teachers and learners to support those who are planning to adapt Speech assessments.

    There are two separate folders to download, depending on which qualifications you are planning to adapt:

    Adapted Speech Assessments under ERF 2020 is for the following qualifications:

    • ESB Level 1 Award in Speech (Grades 1)
    • ESB Level 1 Award in Speech (Grades 2)
    • ESB Level 1 Award in Speech (Grades 3)
    • ESB Level 2 Certificate in Speech (Grades 4)
    • ESB Level 2 Certificate in Speech (Grades 5)
    • ESB Level 3 Certificate in Speech (Grade 6)
    • ESB Level 3 Certificate in Speech (Grade 8)
    • ESB Level 3 Award in Travel and Tourism Oral Communication Skills for Overseas Resort Representatives
    • ESB Level 4 Award in Professional Presentation Skills
    • ESB Level 1 Award in Using Oral Skills for Interviews
    • ESB Level 2 Award in Using Oral Skills for Interviews
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Graded Examinations in Speech (Entry 1) (EAL – A1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Graded Examinations in Speech (Entry 2) (EAL – A2)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Graded Examinations in Speech (Entry 3) (EAL – B1)

    Please download the guidance documentation for adapting these qualifications here:

    Adapted Speech Pre-entry and E1-E3 Speech is for the following qualifications:

    • ESB Pre-Entry Level Award in Speech
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Speech (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Speech (Entry 2)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Speech (Entry 3)

    Please download the guidance documentation for adapting these qualifications here:

    Contact

    If centre staff have any questions on the process or the content of this document, they should put these in writing to product@esbuk.org.

  • Centre update 8: FAQs for adapted Speech assessments under the Extraordinary Regulatory Framework – June 1st, 2020

    What assessments are being adapted?

    • ESB Level 1 Award in Speech (Grades 1, 2, 3)
    • ESB Level 2 Certificate in Speech (Grades 4, 5)
    • ESB Level 3 Certificate in Speech (Grade 6, 8)
    • ESB Level 3 Award in Travel and Tourism Oral Communication Skills for Overseas Resort Representatives
    • ESB Level 4 Award in Professional Presentation Skills
    • ESB Level 1, 2, Awards in Using Oral Skills for Interviews
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Graded Examinations in Speech (Entry 1, 2, 3) (EAL-A1, A2, B1)

    The following speech qualifications are not in scope of the Extraordinary Framework and we are seeking clarification to offer them as adapted assessments:

    • ESB Level 1, 2, 3 Awards in Debating
    • ESB Level 1 Award in Group Speaking
    • ESB Level 1 Award in Oral Skills for School Interviews
    • ESB Level 3 Award in Using Oral Skills for Interviews
    • What are the possible adaptations?

    ESB is offering three forms of adaptation:
    1) Synchronous assessment via video conferencing.
    1.1 The assessor is remote, but the learners and teacher are in the centre together, or
    1.2 The learners, teacher and assessor are all remote, in different locations.

    2) Asynchronous assessment. Learners are filmed performing their assessments, with a teacher acting as interlocutor and facilitating the interactive phase of the assessment. Videos are submitted to ESB International for assessment. This could be for a situation when teachers and the learners can be at school together, but an external assessor is not permitted to come in.

    3) Asynchronous assessment for more independent learners who are still based at home. Learners or their parents film the performance and send it to the teacher, who will submit the videos.

    What are the technical requirements for each type of adaptation? Type 1: Synchronous assessment via video conferencing
    We envisage that schools and centres who choose this option will already be using a video conferencing platform with which they are familiar and which is secure and safe. The centre will be responsible for ensuring that all the learners, the teacher and the assessor can access the platform, and that the platform conforms to the centre’s safeguarding, security and privacy policies.

    Type 2: Asynchronous assessment: learners and teacher together and Type 3: learners and teacher are all remote
    Filming can be done using a good quality smartphone or tablet, or any good quality audio-visual recording device (e.g. digital video cameras, laptops) which will allow the assessor to accurately complete the assessment. Centres will be told where to upload the videos to a location will they will be stored securely by ESB and then deleted.

    When can we start to make a booking?
    You can start to make booking for adapted Speech assessments from Monday, June 15th. Please do not attempt to make a booking prior to this date as the system will not yet be live.

    Who will select the extract in the assessments where the learner has to read an extract aloud?
    The teacher can choose the extract.

    What about the discussion parts of the assessments where learners are supposed to show they can listen and ask questions?
    If you are doing asynchronous, filmed assessments, we will ask you to submit a calculated result for the discussion stage, based on the assessment criteria and grading criteria in the Specifications. For the ESB Level 3 Award in Travel and Tourism Oral Communication Skills for Overseas Resort Representatives, the face-to-face complaint will also be a calculated result. ESB International will provide centres with a pro-forma document for the submission of these calculated results.

    Do we need to book an assessment for a specific date?
    Yes, you need to register your learners on the system and book for the day on which you will hold your synchronous assessment, when an assessor will be assessing your learners via video-conferencing. If you are doing an asynchronous assessment and submitting pre-recorded videos to ESB, your booking should be for the date on which you will upload the videos.

    When will we get our results?
    We are working towards the usual time-frames for results and certification.

    What about learners with special educational needs and disabilities?
    Where learners have an agreed reasonable adjustment or an agreed access arrangement, the assessment should be conducted accordingly. If there is a calculated result component, this should take account of their likely achievement with the reasonable adjustment/access arrangement in place.

    There may be an opportunity for learners with significant special educational needs and disabilities – and therefore unable to complete any of the adapted assessment options – to have calculated results using evidence of learning and teacher judgements. This would need to be approved by Ofqual, please contact product@esbuk.org if you wish to discuss further.

    Will there be guidance for parents if they are helping their children with filming?
    Yes, guidance will be provided. Videos should not be edited and should be filmed without pausing or stopping. If the learners make a mistake, they should just carry on, as they would in a live assessment.

    When will there be more guidance?
    ESB will send guidance for centres to share with learners and parents on Monday 8th June.

    Who can I contact if I have any questions?
    For any further information, please contact us at product@esbuk.org and a member of the team will be in touch as soon as possible.

  • Centre update 7: guidance for calculating results during COVID-19 pandemic – Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) qualifications

    [Download this document here for offline viewing].

    This guidance relates to the following qualifications:

    • ESB Entry Level Award in Communicating with Art/ Drama/ Music/ Others (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Developing Independent Communication Skills (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Developing Oral Interview Skills (Entry 2)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in First Steps in Communicating with Others (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Independent Communication Skills (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Inspiring Confidence in Employability (Entry 1, 2 and 3)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Introducing Oral Skills for Interviews (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Oral Communication in the Community (Entry 2)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Oral Communication with Others (Entry 1)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Oral Interview Skills (Entry 3)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Preparing for Performing Within a Team (Entry 2)
    • ESB Entry Level Award in Reading to a Child (Entry 3)

    Introduction

    COVID-19 restrictions have led to the cancellation of exams and prevented many assessments from being taken as planned this spring and summer.

    Ofqual has designed an approach to ensure, as far as possible, that learners receive results to enable them to progress to the next stage of their lives without further disruption.

    In early April, Ofqual opened a consultation on its Extraordinary Regulatory Framework, asking awarding organisations to compile a list of qualifications available for public funding that fell into one of three categories, which were:

    • Where the primary use is to progress to FE/HE
    • Where there is a mixed use to progress to FE, HE or employment
    • Where the primary use is to provide a License to Practise/access to a profession or certificate of occupational competency.

    Ofqual also asked awarding organisations to put forward their mitigation approach for each qualification, i.e. how they plan to support learners and centres with getting final results. The options were to

    • safely estimate or calculate results to issue to students
    • adapt assessments so that they can be taken in different contexts but still safely and validly measuring the same skills, knowledge and understanding
    • delay/reschedule (only used as a last resort).

    This consultation is now complete and it can be confirmed that ESB International will be calculating results for learners completing SEND qualifications because they have a mixed purpose.

    Aims of calculated results 

    Ofqual has clearly set out the proposed aims of providing calculated results, which are as follows:

    1. To provide learners with the results that they would have most likely have achieved had they been able to take their assessments in summer 2020.
    2. To enable the maximum possible number of learners to receive results based on a principled evidence-based approach, such that in similar situations, similar approaches to calculated results would be used.
    3. To protect, as far as is possible, learners from being systematically advantaged or disadvantaged, notwithstanding their socio-economic background or whether they have a protected characteristic.
    4. For the methods to be sufficiently transparent and easy to explain to promote confidence.
    5. To be deliverable by awarding organisations with sufficient oversight from Ofqual.

    This document sets out the guidance for centres that plan to calculate results for their learners who are unable to take their assessments in the spring and summer due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    These arrangements apply to learners who were due to take assessments between 20th March and 31st July 2020.

    The process

    Step 1

    E-mail product@esbuk.org confirming your intentions to submit calculated results for your learners.

    Step 2 

    Bookings can be made from Monday, June 8th. Please do not attempt to make a booking prior to this date as the system will not be live.

    Create a new booking in the ESB hub and register ALL learners with ESB International whom you intend to calculate results for, including previously cancelled bookings. In choosing a booking date, you are identifying the date when you will be submitting your calculated results. If you have already made a booking that has since been cancelled due to COVID-19, you will need to make this booking again. 

    Note – As part of its quality assurance process ESB International may also ask centres for learner enrolment evidence. This is because Ofqual expects awarding organisations to carry out due diligence to ensure all non-registered learners are authentic.

    Step 3

    At the date of your booking, complete and submit to product@esbuk.org the Calculated results for SEND Qualifications spreadsheet (this can be downloaded from the hub when you make your booking), indicating:

    • Learner name and ULN
    • Calculated result (pass or unsuccessful*)
    • Evidence available for audit

    *It is important that all learner results are submitted, including those who would have been expected to be unsuccessful. This will allow ESB International to compare overall cohort performance with previous years.

    Submissions to product@esbuk.org must be via We transfer, not attachments to an email to manage the security of personal data.

    Timing and number of submissions

    Centres are not limited to one submission. ESB International is accepting calculated results as per your normal booking pattern. For example, if you had a cancelled booking in March, and a cohort of learners for summer assessments, you may submit separately for these cohorts, at any point between 8th June and 31st July.

    Sources of evidence

    Centres are required to make available suitable evidence that supports their calculated result decisions, should they be requested by ESB International for quality assurance purposes. We recognise that evidence will vary across centres and there may be some challenges in accessing certain pieces of evidence.

    The strength of evidence has been split into three groups, with group A being the strongest and the strength of evidence lessening from group B through to group C. A minimum of one piece of evidence must come from group A or a minimum of two pieces of evidence from group B. Evidence from Group C may be put forward to support the calculation, however it will not be considered without evidence from groups A and/or B.

    Group A Group B Group C
    Mock exam results Previous achievement of ESB Awards by the learner Lesson observations
    Evidence from formative assessments, e.g. completed assessment checklists and teacher feedback Portfolios Schemes of work/lesson plans
    Individual Learning Plans/progress trackers Teacher profiles of individual learners
    Class work/homework or examples of student engagement documented by teachers Initial assessments and diagnostic assessments
    Evidence of attendance and guided learning hours
    Tutor records of curriculum delivery

    Examples of accepted evidence groupings:

    Mock exam results (1 x A)

    • Teacher profiles of individual learners, portfolios and lesson observations (2 x B and 1 x C

     

    Note – Learner evidence must be made available on request; however, it does not need to be submitted alongside the spreadsheet.

    Note – Evidence that has been acquired following the closure of schools on 20th March, through distance learning or other means, will be considered. However, centres must ensure any such work can be authenticated and considered in a consistent manner that improves rather than compromises wider validity, comparability and fairness of judgements. Where additional work has been completed after 20 March, centres should exercise caution where that evidence suggests a change in performance. In many cases this is likely to reflect the circumstances and context in which the work is done.

    Minimum evidential threshold

    Ofqual requires all awarding organisations to ensure that its approach uses sources of reasonably trusted evidence along with a sufficiently robust basis for quality assurance.

    This means that where there is –

    1. little or no banked component data,
    2. insufficient trust in information provided by a centre in relation to learners’ likely performance, and
    3. little opportunity or evidence to undertake quality assurance of that evidence,

    ESB International may determine that it is unable to issue a calculated result which has sufficient validity and reliability to meet one or more of the principles of the Extraordinary Regulatory Framework.

    In addition to evaluating evidence of a group of learners, ESB International must also consider whether there are some learners, but not others, for whom the available evidence does not meet the minimum threshold.

    Centre responsibilities

    Judgements

    Centres must consider each learner’s performance over the course of study and make a realistic, professional judgement of the result that learner would have been most likely to receive if he or she had completed the relevant component or qualification. This should include unsuccessful outcomes.

    This should be a holistic professional judgement, balancing the different sources of evidence, using knowledge of the assessment aims and criteria.

    ESB International recognise that teachers will not know precisely how each learner might have performed on assessments and examinations that had not been encountered. However, they will have a good understanding of how learners with similar achievements have performed in the past on the same or similar assessments. They should use this knowledge when coming to their judgements.

    Where the centre has no evidence upon which to base a centre assessment result, the centre should not provide a centre assessment result.

    Reasonable adjustments and equal opportunities

    Centres should also consider the likely impact of any Reasonable Adjustment to which a learner would have had access. For example, if a learner qualifies for extra time in an assessment by examination, in the information it provides in respect of that learner, centres must reflect how it considers the learner would have performed having the full amount of time to which he or she would have been entitled.

    More broadly, centres must make any judgements in an impartial, balanced and unbiased way such that, as far as possible, the information provided by them avoids bias and learners are not systematically advantaged or disadvantaged by having or not having a characteristic or special educational need.

    Review

    The information provided by a centre needs to have been reviewed by both:

    (a) subject teachers or assessors, and

    (b) the relevant head of department or equivalent or, where there is no person in such a role, the head of centre or equivalent.

    Quality assurance

    Once ESB International is in receipt of a cohort of calculated results for learners, it will carry out appropriate quality assurance activities, as required to ensure it complies with the principles set out in Ofqual’s Extraordinary Regulatory Framework.

    This will always involve:

    • A comparison of centre performance with previous years.

    This may involve:

    • A request for the evidence identified to calculate results.

    ESB International may consider the evidence submitted for individual learners, or a group of learners as not strong enough to provide a trusted calculated result.

    Where this occurs, ESB International will take one of the following steps:

    • Request to the centre for further evidence to support their judgement.
    • Rejection of the calculated result.

    Results, certificates and invoicing

    ESB International will only issue confirmed results once the quality assurance processes have been carried out. Certificates will be issued in accordance with current advertised timeframes.

    Invoicing of centres will occur in accordance with current advertised practices.

    Appeals

    ESB International recognises that learners should have access to a right of appeal if they feel the relevant process was not followed correctly when calculating results for learners.

    An appeal should be focused upon whether the process was followed and, where applicable, should not involve second-guessing the judgement of teachers, tutors or trainers, who know their learners best.

    Please follow the process set out in ESB International’s Enquiries, Complaints and Appeals Policy for any appeal relating to calculating results for learners.

    Contact

    If centre staff have any questions on the process or the content of this document, they should put these in writing to product@esbuk.org.

  • ESB Launches New Speech Pathways

    We are delighted to announce that our ESB Level 2 Certificate in Speech (Grade 4) qualification has been updated and you can start booking today! The qualification now gives more options to explore oracy in the classroom. Learners can develop their oracy skills in a way that suits them, playing to their strengths and interests.

    Mr Carl Bennett with the learners of Ellis Guilford who participated in the 2019 ESB Level 2 Certificate in Speech (Grade 4) Pathways pilot.

    We have now implemented the following new Pathways to give greater flexibility to your learners – read about them below:

    ESB Logo

    What do Learners and Teachers think of our new Pathways…

    To put our new Pathways to the test, we piloted them in 10 centres with over 300 learners and the results were impressive! These Pathways retain our core values that makes ESB an enjoyable learning experience, but add a new format of assessment with new learning outcomes. For each Pathway, learners improved their oracy skills in almost every category.

    Improves Communication Skills

    Teachers observed that an overwhelming 50% of learners felt that their communication skills had improved after their Pathways qualification, and there was a 44% increase increase in the number of learners who felt they became more competent in delivering short speeches and presentations.

    Boosts Employability

    The Speech for Employability proved a great success with participating schools. 75% of learners left feeling their communications in mock employment scenarios were ‘good’ or ‘very good’ – a dramatic improvement on just the 25% who felt they were at this level before the qualification.

    Mapped to the National Curriculum

    Our Level 2 (Grade 4) Pathways are designed to match the National Curriculum requirements in Spoken English at Key Stage 3 and 4. Teachers from the participating schools saw a dramatic increase in learners achieving the following KS3 criteria: discussing language and meaning, expressing own ideas and high competency in using Standard English competently.

    Personal Development

    The Pathways help teachers deliver Personal, Social, Health and Economic (PSHE) education, as well as the promotion of citizenship and British values. They also contribute learners’ Spiritual, Moral, Social and Cultural (SMSC) development. The results prove that ESB qualifications benefit every learner, regardless of ability. In the Speech to Inform qualification, the number of learners who felt they had “bad” communication skills dropped by 50% after they had completed their assessment.

    ESB Logo
     

    • Curriculum for Wales – The Pathways allow learners to meet the Statutory Oracy Requirements at Key Stages 3 and 4.
    • The Irish Curriculum – The Pathways meet the statutory communication related requirements for Language and Literature (English and Media) and Skills and Capabilities at Key Stages 3 and 4.

    We’re really excited to give your learners’ even more choice. They are available to book now!