Cambridge professors will set tough new maths A-levels after the university became the first to intervene in the stuttering exams system
Cambridge University yesterday denied a Daily Telegraph story that it would be involved in the setting of maths A-level exams in future as part of the Government’s education reforms.
It said that it had received instead a government grant of £2.8 million which would help it provide new resources for the teaching of maths in the sixth-form.
The Daily Telegraph reported that Cambridge's department of pure mathematics has outlined how new-style maths A-levels should be structured, in a report sent to the Department for Education.
Under the changes pupils would study A-levels that focus around a series of "key mathematical ideas", such as complex numbers, trigonometry, combinatorics, probability and centres of mass.
PA
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