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"Richard J." wrote the following in:
Paul Terry wrote: In message , Richard J. writes The problem is that students in any subject other than English are not penalised for poor language skills, so they never have an incentive to improve those skills. At A level, marks are allocated for SPG (Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar) in all papers involving prose answers, whatever the subject. This has been the case for many years. That directly contradicts a report I saw recently in The Times which quoted an A-level examiner as saying he was under strict instructions *not* to penalise even gross errors of spelling such as "he would of" instead of "he would have". A level (and I believe GCSE) papers do have marks set aside for spelling, punctuation and grammar. It's a very small percentage of the total though. What the examiner probably meant is that if someone writes "he would of" and the meaning of the sentence is clear (and deserving of a mark), they should receive marks for their answer. They would probably still lose marks for SPG. -- message by the incredible Robin May. "The British don't like successful people" - said by British failures Who is Abi Titmuss? What is she? Why is she famous? http://robinmay.fotopic.net |
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