At long last, the BSL GCSE moves closer
The British Deaf Association (BDA) welcomes
today’s launch of a new official consultation
on the long-promised GCSE in
British Sign Language (BSL),
and applauds the long-awaited progress
toward recognition and equality in education.
Deaf CEO Rebecca Mansell -
“Let’s be clear, it’s a step in the right
direction, but there is much further to go,”
"After a lengthy period of silence from the
authorities, we appreciate this development"
The BDA statement comes in response to
this week’s announcement that Ofqual has
launched a further ‘technical’ consultation
on the British Sign Language (BSL) GCSE.
Whilst the GCSE’s content has already
passed through a 2023 consultation led by
the Department for Education (DfE),
this week’s initiative focuses on examination
and assessment procedures.
“Only last month in Parliament,
during Sign Language Week (17-23 March),
MPs from the new All-Party Parliamentary
Group on BSL quizzed the Minister for Disabled People,
Sir Stephen Timms MP, on the ongoing
delay with the GCSE,” points out Mansell.
“Sir Stephen spoke of the government’s ‘
continuing commitment’ and of being
‘generally reassured about the progress that’s
been made and the commitment to deliver’.”
The BDA remains concerned about the long
delays in the development of the new BSL GCSE.
The previous government target for
“first teaching” was September 2025,
and the BDA believes that this
target will be missed by two years.
The reasons for this delay are unclear.
Whilst the BDA has been expressing the
BSL community’s concerns about the
GCSE project for many years,
it took Ofqual until this month to directly
ask to meet the BDA – which is recognised
up to United Nations level as the
UK’s representative organisation for the
signing Deaf community –
for one-to-one talks.
“Almost everything has happened behind
closed doors,” Mansell notes pointedly.
“And here we are, with even Ofqual
acknowledging that an award promised
in 2018 will not actually result in anyone
receiving a certificate until 2029 at the earliest!”
“BSL is a rich and complex language,
different in many respects to the spoken
languages already studied at GCSE level.
We appreciate DfE’s and Ofqual’s diligent
work to get the GCSE right. It’s a challenge
to schools and examination boards.
But it’s really not rocket science.”
The BDA has repeatedly highlighted the
significant potential for Deaf teachers to be
afforded a leading role in the delivery of
BSL GCSEs, in keeping with the spirit of
the 2022 BSL Act which received all-party
support in Parliament. It notes that Deaf people
been firmly at the forefront of BSL
teaching in adult education since
BDA itself trained a generation of
BSL teachers at Durham University
in the 1980s – a programme taught by
Deaf people to Deaf people entirely in BSL.
In this light, four decades have passed
in which Deaf linguistic and cultural
expertise in the teaching profession
has been acknowledged and promoted.
“Now,” says Mansell, “we face an unclear
roll-out of the GCSE – if indeed we ever
there – with every school at liberty to
offer BSL courses but no programme in place
to build a sustainable Deaf-led workforce.
Who will teach our language to the highest
quality if not Deaf people
who are fluent in it?”
The BDA stresses its willingness to
support the relevant authorities
clear throughout, and that it will continue
to press for a timely, high-quality GCSE
that protects and promotes BSL as a
vibrant language, respects the long-term
of the Deaf community, and secures
the contributions of Deaf professionals.