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Are Science Subjects More Difficult

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Are Science Subjects More Difficult courtesy of xkcd.com
Durham University's Curriculum, Evaluation and Management (CEM) Centre have published research commissioned by the Institute of Physics and the Royal Society (the UK and Commonwealth's national science academy) on behalf of SCORE (Science Community Representing Education) that, according to the press release, "proves" that science and technology subjects are more difficult than "subjects like Media Studies and Psychology":



SCHOOLCHILDREN studying science and technology subjects like Maths, Physics and Chemistry find it much harder to achieve the top exam grades than candidates of similar ability studying subjects like Media Studies and Psychology, proves a new report.

Durham University researchers analysed and compared data from nearly one million schoolchildren sitting GCSE and A-level exams and reviewed 28 different studies of cross subject comparison conducted in the UK since 1970.

They found significant differences in the relative difficulty of exams in different subjects with the sciences among the hardest. On average, subjects like Physics, Chemistry and Biology at A-level are a whole grade harder than Drama, Sociology or Media Studies, and three-quarters of a grade harder than English, RE or Business Studies.

A student who chooses Media Studies instead of English Literature could expect to improve their result by half a grade. Choosing Psychology instead of Biology would typically result in over half a grade's advantage. Preferring History to Film Studies, however, would cost you well over a grade at A-level.

The study found that these differences were consistent across different methods of calculation and were remarkably stable over time.

Durham University's analysis runs contrary to a report released by the exams regulator the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority in February this year which found that some exams may be harder than others, but concluded that subjects were broadly in line and no immediate action was needed to even things out.

Researchers voice concerns that students will be more likely to choose to study 'easier' subjects and will not opt to study science subjects that are desperately needed by employers in the knowledge economy.

They are calling for marking for 'harder' subjects to take account of their difficulty, perhaps introducing a 'scaling' system similar to that already used in Australia so that some subjects are acknowledged to be worth more than others.

The findings come 3 years after the UK Government vowed to improve the rapidly falling numbers of students taking Physics, Chemistry and Maths. Between 1991 and 2005 figures show the numbers of students sitting A Level Physics dropped by more than a third.

Report author, Dr Robert Coe, Deputy Director of Durham University's CEM Centre, said: "This research shows that science and technology subjects are much more severely graded than subjects like media studies and art. I can't see how anyone could claim that all A-levels are equally difficult. If universities and employers treat all grades as equivalent they will select the wrong applicants. A student with a grade C in Biology will generally be more able than one with a B in Sociology, for example.

"The current system provides a disincentive to schools to promote take up of sciences while league tables treat all subjects as equal.

"It also puts pressure on students to take particular subjects which may not be best educationally. I know students and schools will try to make the right choices, but we should have a system where the incentives support doing the right thing, not act against it."

However, the Russell Group of universities has warned that pupils at some state schools put themselves at a disadvantage for accessing top Universities by studying so-called "softer subjects" like drama, art and media studies. Cambridge University has already published a list of subjects that together provide a less effective preparation for degree studies and may be a bar to a successful application.

Source: EurekAlert (Press Release)

Here is a list of A Level Subjects in order - Most difficult A Level Subjects to Easiest A Level Subjects (according to the study)

  1. General Studies
  2. Physics
  3. Chemistry
  4. Biology
  5. Further Maths
  6. French
  7. German
  8. Music
  9. Computing
  10. Maths
  11. IT
  12. History
  13. Spanish
  14. Economics
  15. Politics
  16. Psychology
  17. Psych Sci
  18. Geography
  19. PE
  20. English Lit
  21. Law
  22. RE
  23. English Language
  24. English
  25. Business Studies
  26. DT Production
  27. Art Design
  28. Drama
  29. Fine Art
  30. Sociology
  31. Media
  32. Photography
  33. Film Studies
Last modified on Thursday, 19 May 2011 19:20

2 comments

  • Comment Link Jackie Saturday, 12 November 2011 22:36 posted by Jackie

    How can you say one subject is 'easier' than another or that a C-grade Biology pupil is more able than a B-grade Sociology student? The two subjects are completely different; one looks at behaviour of society and how people and society interact and one looks at people at a very reductionist level. Doesn't interest in a subject matter, or the way in which the subject is taught? It's very easy to say that Film and Media Studies are 'easy', but I doubt most people would be able to explain what they are, other than a basic 'it's looking at films.'

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  • Comment Link David Odhiambo Sunday, 11 September 2011 16:47 posted by David Odhiambo

    I think that yes some of the subjects there are in the right place such as media and sociology however

    subjects such as English Littérateur and Philosophy should also be at the top of the list with chemistry and Physics- the nature of the subjects require different types of thinking but the intensity and the thought process needed for these types of subjects are equally challenging!

    Further more if you look at the pass rate for philosophy and english lit compared to your sciences there is a lower pass rate with higher grades because of the difficulty, despite the fact that students start sixthform with high grades in both the areas.

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Keiron Walsh

Keiron Walsh

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