External examiners must be properly trained and supported, and institutions should consider the increase in workload that the post entails, in聽order for the system to聽properly function, according to聽new guidance published for the UK sector.
Two of the main bodies that represent higher education institutions 鈥 Universities聽UK (UUK) and GuildHE 鈥 have developed a聽set of聽principles alongside the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA) to safeguard the system, which has come under increasing strain in聽recent years.
The guidance is聽not mandatory, but universities are being urged to follow the 12聽principles to ensure that external examination, which has been in use for almost 200 years, remains a聽鈥渒ey mechanism鈥 to ensure that academic standards are maintained and that public confidence in the quality of degrees remains high.
The stress that examiners appointed should have 鈥渆xpertise in the subject discipline in question鈥 and should be impartial, with institutions told to聽review processes for avoiding conflicts of聽interest, such as appointing individuals with close personal links to staff in the department they will be assessing.
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Universities should ensure that examiners鈥 views are 鈥渃arefully considered鈥 and should outline 鈥渃lear reporting processes鈥 for their feedback, which聽should be 鈥渁ctioned appropriately鈥 or the institution聽should give reasons for disregarding it.
Universities should also support their own staff who act as externals for聽other institutions聽in recognition that 鈥渢he external examiner system as a whole depends on the nationwide availability of suitable and qualified staff who are supported to carry out the role鈥.
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This could involve paying for training and recognising the impact of the additional workload, with the staff member potentially being given less to do in their day-to-day role as a聽result.
In recent years, many universities have been forced to enact emergency procedures that have allowed them to bypass the external examination system in the face of disruption聽caused by Covid and after hundreds quit as part of industrial action taken over pay, pensions and working conditions.
The principles聽were developed after 鈥渋nconsistencies鈥 were identified in the system, and they have been agreed by the UK聽Standing Committee for Quality Assessment (UKSCQA). They will be added to the .
Debra Humphris, the chair of UUK鈥檚 student policy regulation network and vice-chancellor of the University of Brighton, said the principles聽would 鈥渇urther enhance academic rigour, ensuring that students can be confident their degrees will stand the test of聽time鈥.
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