Answers:
no. ou'll have to see your subject teacher, and they will tell you whether or not it is a good idea.
dont think so x
No you need to make the first move I am afraid. The number of marks and children involved generally mean that even at this stage the children know as much as the staff. I would wait a few days for your school to re-open and ask to speak to the Examinations Officer and they will be able to tell you much more than YA can.
No..you have to ask them. And do it soon...there's a deadline.
depends whether the subject teacher knows your grades or not. they'll know how the marking seems to have gone and whether they think its been fair.
It depends. my school put my entire Graphical drawing classes GCSE papers (higher tier only) in for remark because many had anly a few marks under A Grades. The didn't tell us either until we were told we'd recieved higher grades
No. Discuss it with your subject teacher, press the point if necessary. If you go ahead and you grade stays the same you'll have to pay up. But if it changes there is no charge.
I challenged my Economics grade ( my subject teacher thought it was about right but I didn't). I (with parental support) insisted and it was remarked and I got a better grade.
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