I’m not specifically aware of the Bournemouth School appeal requirements, but generally be aware that appeal panels find good mock results of very limited use: this is because there is the potential for them not to be under true exam conditions/another child to have sat them in lieu of the appelant/the cohort sitting the mocks not being representative of the actual test/the difficulty level of the mocks not being the same as the actual test. You can submit them but be aware it may not have much effect.
It’s good that your DS is at greater depth for all subjects: do you have any predictions from school about his KS2 predictions (I know if he’s at an Indie they may not do KS2 SATS, but they may have alternative scoring such as PIRA or PUMA assessments).
Hopefully the exenuating circumstances will help, presumably he became unwell during the exam itself, but not enough to tel the invigilators? (if he did, good, because it gives proof he was impaired on the day, conversely if he said nothing it can be harder to prove he was unwell. Generally the exam boards ask you not to attend if feeling significantly unwell before the exam starts)
Good luck
It’s good that your DS is at greater depth for all subjects: do you have any predictions from school about his KS2 predictions (I know if he’s at an Indie they may not do KS2 SATS, but they may have alternative scoring such as PIRA or PUMA assessments).
Hopefully the exenuating circumstances will help, presumably he became unwell during the exam itself, but not enough to tel the invigilators? (if he did, good, because it gives proof he was impaired on the day, conversely if he said nothing it can be harder to prove he was unwell. Generally the exam boards ask you not to attend if feeling significantly unwell before the exam starts)
Good luck
Statistics: Posted by Aethel — Sun Apr 07, 2024 12:29 pm