19.11
The examiners’ reports
19.11.1
A few points from the
examiners’ reports
The latest reports available at the time of going to press
are for March and June 2006. As in previous years, the
examiners acknowledge the achievements and hard
work of candidates, but they point out that avoidable
mistakes are still being made and marks lost, simply
through lack of examination technique.
The examiners advise that while acquisition of
knowledge and understanding across the syllabus are
clearly a prerequisite for success, examination technique
is an essential. They defi ne this as ‘the skill of reading
a question, identifying the breadth of issues relevant to
defi ne that question and putting them down on paper in
a logical and coherent way and to the depth required’.
Effective time planning is also emphasized.
The fi nal
page of each of the examiner’s reports gives a clearly
worded guide to examination technique
.
Here are some examples from the reports that show
how good examination technique could have improved
candidates’ chances of gaining higher marks:
Paper A1 March 2006 asked candidates to
outline the issues that should be included in a training
programme … on the emergency action to be taken in
the event of fi re. Some candidates lost marks by includ-
ing irrelevant information such as the fi re triangle and fi re
risk assessment, others concentrated exclusively on the
content of a training programme. In another question,
asking about the physical features of traffi c routes,
some candidates did not restrict their answers to this
but included irrelevant material about vehicles and their
drivers.
There are a number of examples of answers being
limited to one or two topics when writing about a range
of issues could have gained a lot of extra marks. For
example, again in March 2006, a maximum of eight
marks could have been gained by describing four
personal factors that may place young persons at risk
and outlining four measures that could reduce accidents
to them. Some candidates concentrated only on one or
two topics, thus losing several marks.
Misreading the question crops up year after year and
2006 was no exception. Asked to outline ways to help
ensure the effectiveness of a health and safety commit-
tee, several candidates gave answers relating to a safety
representative. Asked to identify symptoms in another
question, several people concentrated on diseases.
The report on the June 2006 paper says of one question
‘those who read the question with care and focused
closely on what was being asked … generally provided
good answers’. And later ‘again, many candidates
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