Leaving Cert 2022 to be held as exams only, as Foley rules out hybrid model

Timetable for ‘radically different’ exams this June to be published within days

Minister for Education Norma Foley has said significant changes to the Leaving Cert will provide more question options and students will be required to cover less material. Photograph: Gareth Chaney/Collins Photos
Minister for Education Norma Foley has said significant changes to the Leaving Cert will provide more question options and students will be required to cover less material. Photograph: Gareth Chaney/Collins Photos

Minister for Education Norma Foley said this year's Leaving Certificate will be held as exams only as she ruled out a hybrid approach to the State exams.

The structure of the Leaving Cert will be "radically different", she said, while the Junior Cert exams will run for the first since 2019.

The move came despite repeated calls from students and the Opposition for another hybrid Leaving Cert, which includes written exams and accredited grades, on the basis that many students have experienced significant disruption to their studies due to the pandemic.

Speaking after Tuesday morning’s Cabinet meeting, however, Ms Foley said the exams will be “tailor-made” in recognition of the challenges faced by students. There will more question options available and less material for students to cover.

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“The exams will be structured in a familiar way, but with more choice and a reduction in the number of questions to be answered. This will not be the traditional Leaving Certificate exam,” she said.

“For example, in maths students would have 10 questions to answer, now they will have six . . . I want to make clear that the alterations on the exams extend beyond the papers, they extend into the oral, the practical and coursework,” the Minister added.

“Students also raised concerns over the potential disadvantage the class of 2022 would face when compared to the class of 2021 in terms of grade inflation.

“To alleviate this concern, I have asked the SEC [State Examinations Commission] to put in place measures to ensure that the overall set of results in the aggregate for this year will be no lower than last year,” said Ms Foley.

Details of all the changes to the examinations will be sent to schools next week.

‘Alternative exams’

Ms Foley said an “alternative set of Leaving Certificate examinations” will operate this year, limited to certain students, “such as those who experience a close family bereavement, Covid-19 illness and certain other categories of serious illness during the first examination period. There will be strict eligibility criteria applying to this contingency sitting.”

Changes to the junior-cycle examinations include a reduction in the number of classroom-based assessments to be completed, the removal of the requirement to complete assessment tasks and adjustments to the requirements in coursework and practical performance tests. These adjustments provide for more teaching time in schools, Ms Foley said.

The timetable for the written exams – both junior and senior cycle – in June will be published by the SEC in the coming days.

Earlier, Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney said it was important "the integrity of the Leaving Cert is protected".

Mr Coveney said he understood it had been “incredibly stressful for students” but said the problem with the hybrid model was that “one in four students doing their Leaving Cert this year didn’t do their Junior Cert because of Covid”.

‘Desperate decision’

Opposition parties said they were opposed to any move that would rule out a hybrid option. Sinn Féin education spokesman Donnchadh Ó Laoghaire called the decision to proceed with written exams “desperate”.

“Absolutely gutted for Leaving Cert students,” he tweeted. “The Minister has refused to listen to students and failed to understand the level of disruption. Tradition should not trump sense or fairness.”

Labour TD Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, who has been campaigning for the hybrid model, said he was "devastated" for students.

In a post on Twitter, he said: “This is a betrayal by a [department] with no imagination, welded to tradition having convinced themselves that all is fine.”

Ms Foley defended the Cabinet’s decision on Tuesday afternoon, saying she engaged with and listened to students, parents, teachers and school management bodies and had responded to as many concerns as possible.

She told RTÉ radio's News at One there will be significant accommodations for students this year which involved "an enormous overhaul" of exam papers.

Ms Foley said to attempt to provide accredited grades without Junior Cert data would not be as fair as last year. The Minister added that she was not aware of any jurisdiction that was considering accredited grades.

She said she was very disappointed that details of the plans for State exams had been leaked on social media on Monday night. When asked if the leak had come from her department, Ms Foley said: “I’m certain that it didn’t come from me.” – Additional reporting PA

Jack Horgan-Jones

Jack Horgan-Jones

Jack Horgan-Jones is a Political Correspondent with The Irish Times