By Daily Mail Reporter
Quiet please: Invigilators say allowing iPods will add to their workload and disrupt exams (picture posed by models)
A schoolgirl has won the right to use an iPod while sitting her exams - after claiming she can only concentrate while listening to her favourite music.
The girl won the unprecedented concession after threatening legal action against her school and examination authorities.
The Mary Erskine School for girls in Edinburgh, where boarders pay nearly £18,000 a year, has been forced to buy a new iPod that is loaded with the girl's choice of music by a teacher - to ensure no exam answers are hidden among the tracks.
Staff had initially refused the request, fearing it would open the door to the possibility of cheating.
The girl's parents then took her case to the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) examination board, which also ruled it out.
However, it was forced to back down after reportedly being threatened with legal action under the Equalities Act because the girl, a year six pupil, (equivalent to year 13 in England) often struggles to pay attention in class.
SQA bosses have allowed the pupil, who is in the middle of her Higher exams, to listen to the iPod as long as it can be 'proved not to contain any prompts'.
School staff are understood to be unhappy with the decision but were forced to comply as the SQA is the governing body for Higher examinations.
The pupil has to sit in a separate area to prevent the noise from her headphones distracting other students.
The move has been allowed under what the SQA calls 'special arrangements'. Now, SQA chiefs are bracing themselves for a flood of similar claims. Exam invigilators are also furious because loading the iPod has added to their workload.
They fear traditional exam invigilation will be severely disrupted because hundreds of other pupils' iPods may have to be checked.
One insider said: 'Everyone is very angry that this has been allowed to happen. The implications are massive. Once this girl has been allowed to do this, there's nothing stopping all pupils bringing in their iPods.
'The amount of manpower it will take to put music on every student's iPod and check they don't contain study notes will be overwhelming.
'It will also present quite a logistical challenge to ensure those who do not have them are not interrupted by the noise.'
The Mary Erskine School for girls in Edinburgh has been told to allow one of its pupils to listen to music on an iPod while she is sitting her examinations
Nick Seaton, spokesman for the Campaign for Real Education, said: 'I would have thought the whole idea of using an iPod, or any other portable music device, in an exam would be ridiculous.
'Exams are a serious matter and they lose their integrity when some pupils are treated differently from others.'
Thousands of Scottish schoolchildren are in the middle of their Standard Grade, Intermediate II and Higher exams at the moment.
All other schools have a blanket ban on iPods inside the exam hall.
Linda Moule, deputy head at The Mary Erskine School, confirmed that the pupil has been allowed to use an iPod.
The SQA said the ruling would not automatically open the floodgates for other pupils.
A spokesman insisted: 'This decision sets no precedents. We receive many requests for "special arrangements" to be made every year and each is treated on its individual merits.
'In this case the iPod is new and the music is loaded by the school and given to the candidate in the hall. It is removed by staff once the exam is over.'
source:dailymail
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