Exam re-marking in Portugal: grades rise in 76% of cases, yet only 2% of students ask
Only 2% of Portugal's national exams are re-marked, but when students do ask, the grade goes up in 76% of cases. How the review process works.
The numbers speak for themselves: only around 2% of Portugal’s national exams are ever re-marked — yet when a student does request a review, the grade rises in 76% of cases. It is one of the most telling statistics of this exam season, reported this weekend, and it lands at a moment when confidence in the process was already strained by the IT chaos that marred the first phase.
Is it worth asking for an exam review?
Statistically, very much so. If three in every four reviews end with the mark going up, the classic fear that “touching the grade” might backfire has little basis in the data. For anyone who missed their course by decimals, that extra point can be worth a university place: entry averages in Portugal are decided to the hundredth, as we explained in our guide to the national university admissions round.
How does re-marking work?
The process has two steps: first you request to consult the marked paper at your school, to see where points were lost; then, if there is a case, you file for re-appraisal within the deadlines set for each phase by the National Exams Jury and the Directorate-General for Higher Education. It is worth weighing the case with a subject teacher — grades can also go down, though the data shows that is rare.
Why do so few students ask?
Between unfamiliarity with the mechanism, July’s tight deadlines and the paperwork, most families never try. This year add fatigue to the list: between electronic grade-sheet failures and a process dogged by controversy, the ministry had already come under fire in parliament. Numbers like these are unlikely to calm the debate.
Image: Manuelvbotelho / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)