pencho: I simply ask myself (and try to answer) this question: If there were no mickey-mouse exams to hold them back, what would be the best possible mathematical education that my students could be provided with?
I think the problem here is you are very much trying to generalise. Many schools around the country can and do push the very best students with their mathematics. Beyond GCSE (which many are ready to attempt early) there is additional maths, then there is A-level maths and Further Maths and clearly STEP papers.
I do agree that there are good schools that push their best students (presumably with a strong bias towards the fee-paying ones or grammar schools), however I think most schools have, almost by necessity, become obsessed with achieving top grades in exams to the expense of the students' education. This would be fine if today's exams were as well-designed and challenging as they were in the past, where to do well required a very sound understanding of the topics covered, often requiring knowledge of several different topics to answer a single question, as well as sophisticated problem-solving ability. However today's GCSE and A level exams are simply not like this by any stretch of the imagination and the vast majority of students are having their education crippled as a result. The development of the Pre-U, which is much like the A levels of old, is an explicit attempt to counter this trend and return the more rigorous standards of the past. As I have already alluded to, I do not have an issue with STEP papers, but like the Pre-U, only the elite few actually take these. If the Pre-U were made compulsory and A levels abolished (with the GCSE being replaced by a Pre-U version of the old O levels, with perhaps a new CSE for those students who have no intention of further study), then we might see a change. But even if this were miraculously to happen, the new problem would be (and indeed is) in finding teachers with adequate ability and training to actually teach the course. Best wishes, Sabbir
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