exams

Students face results delay after schools and colleges told not to publish results.
Anger as aspiring medics are left in limbo despite their determination to help fight Covid-19: "I hate the fact that the area I live in is what has caused all this."
Education secretary Gavin Williamson said the government was working with the awarding body Pearson to review grades.
Students across the country have been thrown into further "unacceptable" chaos by the sudden withdrawal of appeal guidelines.
Appeals against grades vary between exam boards, with schools facing charges of up to £150 for each independent review.
Nearly 40% of estimated grades were downgraded.
The government’s handling of grades will disadvantage vulnerable students for years, writes Equality Act Review founder Suriyah Bi.
Move follows Scotland scrapping moderated grades after the downgrading of more than 124,000 results was reversed.
With schools themselves admitting grades will not be fair, predictions hold the power to structurally limit equal access to opportunities, Dr Suriyah Bi writes.
Strikes and Covid-19 have meant that some students have had just two full weeks of teaching since 27 January, writes Sabrina Miller.