SQA Examinations Controversy - Timeline

Timeline

  • 26 June 2000

The Scottish Qualifications Authority announces 'teething problems' with the marking system, but promises that students will receive their results on time.

  • 9 August 2000

The Scottish Qualifications Authority publicly admits that pupils sitting Higher Grade examinations may not receive the correct results.

  • 10 August 2000

Thousands of students across Scotland receive incomplete or inaccurate exam results. Schools are left in disarray as 5% of all schools have not been sent any results at all, accurate or otherwise.

  • 12 August 2000

Ron Tuck, the Chief Executive of the Scottish Qualifications Authority, resigns, stating his regret and accepting responsibility for "this unfortunate episode". The Labour/Liberal Democrat coalition Scottish Executive ignores demands by the Scottish National Party for Sam Galbraith, the Education Minister, to resign.

  • 13 August 2000

The Scottish Qualifications Authority and Scottish Executive claim that the errors are due to the correct results being incorrectly collated, due to a serious fault in the new computer programme, not exams being marked wrongly in the first place.

  • 14 August 2000

Bill Morton is appointed as acting Chief Executive, to replace Ron Tuck, who resigned.

  • 15 August 2000

Students are assured that their marks will not go down. However this leaves a problem for UCAS, who has no way of knowing if students with high grades actually earned them or not. UCAS accepted the validity of all results.

  • 18 August 2000

UCAS admits in a statement that many of the students whose certificates contained errors could lose out on a university place that they would have received had the results been accurate and on time.

  • 20 August 2000

The Scottish Qualifications Authority claims that over 2,000 students with inaccurate certificates will receive the correct ones the next day, and the rest will be fixed 'in a matter of days.'

  • 22 August 2000

Now realising that the 21 August was not a realistic deadline, the Scottish Qualifications Authority vow to sort out the worst affected pupils' results by 20 September 2000.

  • 27 August 2000

The Scottish Qualifications Authority sorts out Higher Grade exam results.

  • 28 August 2000

Bill Morton orders an internal investigation at the Scottish Qualifications Authority.

  • 29 August 2000

Over 4,000 Standard Grade students are discovered to have received incorrect certificates.

  • 29 October 2000

Jack McConnell, nicknamed Jack the Knife, becomes the new Education Minister. Sam Galbraith is removed to Environment Minister.

  • 31 October 2000

A leak reveals that the Scottish Qualifications Authority failed to sort out non-urgent Higher Grade exam results within the planned deadline — and the new Chief Executive was not told.

  • 9 November 2000

Jack McConnell appoints a new Scottish Qualifications Authority board. 16 of the 24 members have been replaced.

  • 25 November 2000

The Scottish Qualifications Authority begins sending out accurate exam certificates to students — three months after they were supposed to be delivered.

  • 10 August 2001

Media reports suggest that the exam results fiasco cost the people of Scotland over £11 million.

  • 10 January 2002

It emerged that an 18-year-old student has decided to sue the Scottish Qualifications Authority for compensation after she spent her time retaking a subject she had passed in, but wasn't notified until nine months later.

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