Solving the Exam Officer Recruitment Crisis: Why Staff Leave and How We Can Keep Them

Across schools and colleges the growing recruitment and retention crisis in exams staff continues. Exams officers and exams managers play a critical role in delivering safe and compliant assessments. Yet it continues to be increasingly difficult to attract and keep experienced staff in post.

Is this challenge unique to exams? Or is it simply another example of a wider problem across the low-paid, high-pressure workforce?

Why Exams Officers Are Leaving

1. High Responsibility, Low Pay

Exams staff shoulder significant accountability  – compliance, Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ) regulations, deadlines, accuracy, contingency planning, budget control and more.
But the pay often does not align with this level of responsibility.

2. Seasonal Pressure and Burnout

January and summer exam series place enormous pressure on already stretched teams.
Many report:

Unlike some roles, a single mistake can have high-stakes consequences.

3. Isolation in the Role

In many centres, the exams officer works alone or as the only specialist in their department.
This creates:

4. Increasing Administrative Burden

More access arrangements, awarding bodies all having different processes and digital platforms.  Schools have also seen a big move within the management information (MIS) sector so staff are having to learn new systems.  The workload has expanded significantly but staffing levels have not.

 

Is This Different From Other Low-Paid, High-Stress Roles?

Not entirely. Many sectors (care and hospitality for example) face similar issues.

What makes exams roles different is the regulatory pressure and the absolute need for accuracy.
The margin for error is smaller and the reputational risk for schools is far higher.

So while exams staff share challenges with other professions, the complexity and risk profile of the role is unique.

What Can Be Done to about the Exam Officer Recruitment Crisis and Keep More Exams Staff?

1. Improve Pay and Role Evaluation

Leadership teams often underestimate the strategic importance of exams.
Updating job descriptions, reviewing pay scales and recognising the seniority of the role can make a measurable difference.

2. Provide Proper Induction and Training

Many new exams officers walk into the role with no structured training.
Access to:

 

3. Build Exams Teams – Not Just Exams Officers

Where possible, centres should consider multi-person exams teams or at least cross-trained staff who can support during peak periods.

 

4. Encourage Flexible and Hybrid Working Where Appropriate

While much of the job is site-based during exam series, some administrative tasks can be completed remotely. Flexibility is now one of the biggest factors in retention.

 

5. Prioritise Wellbeing and Workload Management

Workload planning, smart use of MIS systems and realistic deadlines make a huge difference.  Regular check-ins from SLT also help exams staff feel recognised.

 

6. Promote the Professional Status of Exams Officers

Many leave the role because they feel invisible.
Celebrating success, involving exams teams in wider centre strategy and acknowledging their contribution helps strengthen long-term commitment.

Final Thoughts

The recruitment crisis in exams  is not going away but it can be improved with the right culture, investment and professional support.

When exams staff feel valued, trained and empowered then retention rises and students benefit directly.

 

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