Exams are increasingly popular because we are living in a competitive environment. We are also seeing a return to traditional values in education and training. Exams suit the mass market. In some ways they are quite efficient as a method of selection.
Because exams are easy to assess and are
free from the issues of plagiarism and other forms of cheating that have
proliferated in coursework, they are back in fashion across the education sector.
Cheating in exams in quite difficult and it is easy to detect when it happens. In contrast, my research shows that with the
right money ($100) it is now very easy to purchase online a plagiarism-proof,
first class, or A* Essay for your coursework.
In that context I believe that we will be seeing greater reliance on
exams in the future, and more of them will be marked by machines in a
move toward improved technological efficiency of the educational
production line. Their place in the system is secured.
Over a million young people in the UK will receive their examination
results this month. For 300,000 British students their results in these
exams will determine whether they can proceed to University.
In my view, examination
procedures involve a special kind of
discipline and they operate as a regime, such as that which we might
encounter in a prison. Foucault was not wrong when he linked knowledge
and power at an institutional level. Many people find these pressures very difficult to cope with.
And
exams are also a theatre of persecution, where the performance is
loaded with expectations,
rituals, and associations, most of them negative. For many candidates,
the personal experience of the examination is tantamount to sadistic
dehumanisation.
As in all power scenarios, the entire event is staged
according to simple rules and queer conventions. With a little effort we can step back from
that and see examination for what it is: the play of institutionalisation and a game of
power.
But
with the right tactics in place you could become a master of the game,
and
not its pathetic victim. Yet inevitably those who succeed will become
the new advocates for more probing examinations as the only way forward.
If you learn to play by the rules the whole process can be exhilarating and very rewarding.
It will also be your most unforgettable performance and may affect much of your future life prospects.
In the previous blog I listed 15 specific reasons why
students fail to meet their exam expectations. If you address these
issues methodically, you will significantly improve your exam
performance!
What has been your experience of exams? Are you a student, parent, teacher, or an examiner?
If you have any exam tips, advice, or recommendations, please feel free to comment below.
For many people, the examination is worse than a trip to the
dentists for a tooth extraction, or an episode of surgical examination that results
in your guts being ripped out. It's the worst form of dehumanisation.
How did you get over the trauma of examination?
We are all in this together! If you would like to receive my weekly exam success tips, please drop me a line.
Dr Ian McCormick
More information will be posted in the next blog.

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