Some say corruption does not exist around test scores, below is an example from http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2123748/Teachers-bend-rules-boost-exam-scores-Survey-finds-test-marks-fiddled-pupils-bribed.html that clearly shows it does.
Teachers are bribing pupils with pizza nights  and fiddling test results to help their schools secure exam success, a survey  has found.
 
Almost 40 per cent admitted the ‘overwhelming  pressure’ to ensure that pupils achieve good grades ‘could compromise their  professionalism’.
 
The poll, by the Association of Teachers and  Lecturers, reveals the lengths that schools are prepared to go to in order to  climb league tables.
A quarter of respondents said they gave pupils  ‘rewards and incentives’ to work harder. One teacher cited organising ‘pizza  nights’. 
 
In addition, 28 per cent said they felt  obliged to attend controversial exam board seminars. 
 
The admission follows an undercover newspaper  investigation that found some teachers paid up to £230 a day to attend seminars  with chief examiners, during which they were advised on exam questions and even  the wording pupils should use to get higher marks.
One state secondary school teacher told ATL:  ‘I know of an exam meeting where it was strongly hinted which topics would come  up in the exam. I was glad my school was there but I felt sorry for those that  were not.’ 
 
Another said: ‘We don’t go to many exam  seminars because we can’t afford it. We probably lose out to those who can.’  
 
The union surveyed 512 teachers, lecturers and  headteachers working in state-funded and independent primary and secondary  schools, academies and colleges in England ahead of its annual conference, which  begins in Manchester today. 
 
Some admitted fiddling exam scores. A primary  school teacher said: ‘I have been forced to manipulate results so that levels of  progress stay up.’ 
A secondary school teacher added: ‘The school  I work at definitely pushes the boundaries of exam integrity. Maintaining their  “gold-plated” status takes precedence over developing the abilities of the  pupils. 
 
‘Controlled assessments and aspects of  coursework are problem areas for cheating, with senior leadership driving the  agenda.’ 
 
A grammar school teacher said: ‘In some cases  I end up virtually re-writing my students’ homework to match the marking  criteria, rather than teach them my subject, French. I do this because there is  simply not time to do both.’
 
Eighty-eight per cent of those polled said the  pressure to get pupils through exams prevented the teaching of a broad and  balanced curriculum, while 73 per cent claimed it had a detrimental effect on  the quality of teaching. Seventy-one per cent said it affected the standard of  learning.
In addition, one teacher warned that pupils  are ‘close to breakdown’ with the demands being put on them during out-of-school  hours and the Easter holidays.
 
Dr Mary Bousted, ATL’s general secretary,  said: ‘With the Government’s persistent focus on tests, exam results and league  tables, many teachers and lecturers also feel under enormous pressure – often to  the detriment of high-quality teaching, learning and development of  pupils.
 
‘School league tables, school banding and  Ofsted inspections undermine the curriculum and do nothing to support pupils and  their hard-working teachers, lecturers and leaders.’
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