Reporting malpractice concerns
Everyone involved in Scotland’s qualifications system has a role to play in supporting the delivery of fair and credible assessments and upholding the integrity of qualifications. This is essential to ensuring fairness for all learners.
It is important that all users of qualifications are confident that the qualifications genuinely reflect what learners know, understand and can do. Ensuring fairness of assessment, which includes preventing and addressing malpractice in the design and delivery of our qualifications and assessments, is fundamental to our purpose, and is the cornerstone of the qualifications system on which learners depend.
Where concerns of possible malpractice arise, they must be dealt with, by SQA and by others, sensitively, robustly and above all fairly. These can be difficult situations for the individuals involved. SQA is always focused on maintaining the integrity of certification and ensuring fairness for those involved, particularly any candidates affected. All concerns of potential malpractice must be investigated consistently, fairly and impartially.
What is malpractice?
SQA malpractice information for centres
Malpractice: Information for centres (306 KB), applies to all qualifications other than those regulated by Ofqual or Qualifications Wales. It:
- describes the arrangements that we expect our centres to put in place to minimise the risk of malpractice
- explains how we expect concerns of malpractice to be handled, if and when they arise
Qualifications regulated by Ofqual or Qualifications Wales
Malpractice policy and procedures for SQA Qualifications regulated by Ofqual and/or Qualification Wales (197 KB), explains how we expect concerns of malpractice to be handled, if and when they arise, for those qualifications.
Reporting concerns of potential malpractice to SQA
SQA takes all concerns of potential malpractice very seriously. They will be considered very carefully and sensitively by our team of experienced staff.
There are different ways of reporting your concerns to us.
Candidate malpractice
Use the tabs below to open each section individually. Alternatively you can show all the sections.
Examples of candidate malpractice
NQ external assessment candidate malpractice enquiries
If you are concerned that candidate malpractice may have occurred, or have general enquiries about candidate malpractice for external assessments for National Qualifications marked by SQA Examiners, contact:
For Higher National (HN), vocational and qualifications regulated by SQA Accreditation, OFQUAL and Qualifications Wales
Candidate malpractice concerns that relate to internal assessments marked by the centre should be referred to the head of centre in the first instance. If you feel you are unable to do this, you should refer your concerns to SQA.
Centres can report the findings to SQA of a centre led investigation into suspected or confirmed candidate malpractice by completing this form:
Centre malpractice
Examples of centre malpractice
If you are concerned that centre malpractice may have occurred, you can report this to:
- malpractice for all qualification types
To help us investigate your concern, we need as much information from you as possible.
The information we need to investigate your concern is:
- centre name
- qualification/subject name
- date the incident occurred
- details of individuals involved
- nature of the concern
- is anyone else aware of the concern?
Without the information listed above we may not be able to fully investigate your concerns.
Contact details
We understand that you may wish to remain anonymous. However, if you do not provide SQA with your name and/or contact details we may not be able to fully investigate your concerns. If you do provide us with your name and/or contact details, we will always seek your consent before providing your details to a third party, unless legally obliged to do so.
SQA manages investigations of potential centre malpractice discreetly, and we will normally discuss the progress and outcome of a centre malpractice investigation only with the head of centre or their nominee.
Equality
SQA is committed to ensuring that its centre malpractice related work enables fair decision making, and that action is taken to address any unnecessary barriers that arise related to equality. If you have been involved in a centre malpractice investigation and have identified any difficulties that arise from participants’ protected characteristics (age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex and sexual orientation) or care experience, please let us know in order that we can consider any actions we may need to take to help others in future.
Have you been asked to investigate a malpractice concern?
Malpractice: Standards for Devolved Investigations (169 KB) sets out our expectations when we ask centres to complete a malpractice investigation.
SQA malpractice reports
Candidate
National Qualifications
- Candidate Malpractice Report for 2023-24
(217 KB)
- Candidate Malpractice Report for 2022-23
(168 KB)
- Candidate Malpractice Report for 2021-22
(225 KB)
- Candidate Malpractice Report for 2020-21
(242 KB)
- Candidate Malpractice Report for 2018-19 and 2019-20
(130 KB)
Higher National and Vocational Qualifications
Centre
- Centre Malpractice Report 2024
(162 KB)
- Centre Malpractice Report 2023
(165 KB)
- Centre Malpractice Report 2022
(213 KB)
- Centre Malpractice Report 2021
(187 KB)
- Centre Malpractice Report 2020
(232 KB)