A2AS AICT Chief ExaminerPrincipal Moderator Report MayJune Series 2013 13163
A2AS AICT Chief ExaminerPrincipal Moderator Report MayJune Series 2013 13163
A2AS AICT Chief ExaminerPrincipal Moderator Report MayJune Series 2013 13163
Chief Examiners
and Principal Moderators Report
applied
Foreword
This booklet contains the Chief Examiners and Principal Moderators Reports for CCEAs
General Certificate of Education (GCE) in Applied ICT Single and Double Award from the
Summer Series 2013.
CCEAs examining teams produce these detailed reports outlining the performance of candidates
in all aspects of the qualification in this series. These reports allow the examining team an
opportunity to promote best practice and offer helpful hints whilst also presenting a forum to
highlight any areas for improvement.
CCEA hopes that the reports will be viewed as a helpful and constructive medium to further
support teachers and the learning process.
This booklet forms part of the suite of support materials for the specification. Further materials
are available from the specifications microsite on our website at www.ccea.org.uk
Contents
Assessment Unit AS 1: Information and Communication
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Contact details
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Subject Code
QAN
QAN
2652
100/4260/x
100/4259/3
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
An online document;
A slide presentation.
Portfolios from centres were generally well presented. Most Candidate Record Sheets were very
well completed and signed by the teacher and candidate. The majority of centres provided very
good annotation highlighting where assessment objectives were achieved. These were well
related to the page referencing in the Candidate Record Sheets.
Marking was generally fair and consistent although there were a few cases were marking was
slightly high in some of the higher ranking candidates. Marking was mostly within tolerance.
Navigation of portfolios is always greatly enhanced by the inclusion of an accurate contents page.
This inclusion is expected of any candidate scoring highly in AO1.
Excellent use of ICT was evident across most portfolios. Candidates achieving highly in AO1
demonstrated a high standard of presentation that included good use of pagination;
paragraphing; headers and footers; page numbering; integrated graphics; fonts and textual styles;
formats and layouts; templates and a range of special features.
Some candidates make excellent use of appendices referencing them correctly in the portfolios.
Candidates also included suitable bibliographies. Candidates who demonstrate poor use of
spelling and grammar, use of paragraphing and pagination and other techniques are unlikely to
be placed in Mark Band 4.
As emphasised in previous reports, it is essential that candidates commence their report with a
full discussion of the nature, importance and use of information within organisations. This
places the subsequent examination of documents in a suitable context and demonstrates
understanding of important concepts. Some candidates however commenced their portfolios
with the analysis of documents without any discussion or explanation.
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Centres are advised to instruct candidates to examine three different types of document from
each of two organisations. Comparisons must be between similar documents in all cases.
Analysis of documents should be factual and specific. Candidates must demonstrate their
understanding of the intended purpose of each document in the organisation. Candidates must
apply appropriate evaluative techniques when conducting their analysis of the documents and
draw valid conclusions as a result of their findings. Full justification of strengths and weaknesses
and the likely impact on an audience must be explained.
Documents produced by candidates should be professional and fit for purpose. They should
include high quality solutions demonstrating understanding of the problem. Not all candidates
achieved this.
Candidates should demonstrate thorough understanding of legislation and its application to
achieve marks. Candidates must not reproduce hand out material without explanation
To achieve high marks in AO4, candidates must use relevant detailed language and provide
detailed evaluations. Evaluation must be detailed and relevant to achieve higher marks in mark
band 4. Marks were over generous in some cases in this area.
Centres are advised to follow the weekly teaching plan for this unit available on the CCEA
website.
Centres should make use of notes available on the CCEA website that provide information
on the presentation of coursework.
Centres submitting work for the first time should attend agreement trials where possible.
Centres should make use of the Portfolio Clinic service available in February 2014.
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Database
DB1
Most candidates identified the appropriate primary key, but some selected StaffID.
DB2
A few candidates did not connect the ServiceNo field in the SERVICE table to the
ServiceNo field in the JOB table resulting in an incorrect relationship.
DB3
Some candidates incorrectly used <7 leaving out the equal sign or they used >7.
DB4
Candidates performed well in this question but many did not edit the labels to match
the exam paper.
DB5
Only a few candidates obtained the correct answer using group and sum; however
most obtained marks for field selection/de-selection (although some omitted the fields
rather than de-selecting) and criteria. Candidates should be aware of the need to
examine data types in order to apply the correct notation for criteria (for example
>100; not >100); they should be encouraged to run the query to reveal these
errors.
DB6
Few candidates sorted by postcode. Care must be taken to ensure labels are modified
correctly. Note that we asked for a print out of the first page of the report and not the
design view. The creation of this report proved difficult for weaker candidates.
Spreadsheets
SS1
SS2
SS3
Most candidates were able to apply the VLOOKUP formula to some extent. Some
candidates did not utilise the named cell range identified in SS2, although they were
not penalised if a suitable alternative was provided.
SS4
Most candidates performed well in this question. Care must be taken to use absolute
cell referencing for the TAX RATE in the TAX calculation. Marks could not be
awarded for printing on one page, gridlines, and row and column headings if a
screenshot was produced instead of the printout requested in the question.
Word Processing
WP1
WP2
WP3
Candidates lost marks for inaccurate text entry. Candidates should not block view of
evidence with dialog boxes. Evidence of the 3pt border was not shown by many
candidates in WP3.
Multimedia
MM1
MM5
Accurate text entry was important in MM2, MM3, MM4 and MM5. Most candidates
performed well in this section. Account was taken in the mark scheme of the arrows
available in different software versions.
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
General Comments
In general the paper was well answered with a wide range of skills demonstrated by candidates.
Candidates are advised that they should ensure printouts show evidence of the task they have
carried out. Candidates should be careful to produce evidence in the appropriate format as
outlined in the question (if asked to print a range of cells in the spreadsheet, for example, do not
provide a screenshot instead).
Candidates should demonstrate high accuracy in text entry and formatting especially in the word
processing section.
As expected it was difficult to achieve full marks in DB5 and DB6. SS3 which used the
VLOOKUP function also proved challenging for many students in particular centres. These
questions however allowed discrimination between strong and weak candidates.
Candidates were required to investigate the organisation as outlined in the case study and
provide detail relating to:
The current status of the company;
How information is communicated in the company;
Four examples of the type of information in circulations;
Problem areas;
How ICT resources could assist the circulation of information;
How and MIS could help the company at present and in the future;
Two examples of MIS reports designed by the candidate and accompanied with a full
explanation, that could be generated by a new MIS system;
How the company might exploit e-commerce opportunities;
Two examples of on-line documents likely to be used if an e-commerce solution was
pursued; and
A presentation of no more than 10 slides outlining the future vision of the company.
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Portfolios from centres were generally well presented. Most Candidate Record Sheets were very
well completed and signed by the teacher and candidate. However some paperwork was not
adequately completed by a few centres with candidate numbers unchecked and candidate
signatures missing. It is important to review this.
The majority of centres provided very good annotation highlighting where assessment objectives
were achieved throughout the portfolios. Page referencing in the Candidate Record Sheets was
well related to annotation in most cases.
Most centres marked portfolios very well and awarded marks appropriately for the achievement
of criteria. Some centres provided excellent comment throughout which greatly assisted the
moderation process.
Inclusion of a contents page with accurate page numbers is important and adds to the
professional appearance of the report.
Candidates demonstrated good knowledge and understanding of the case study, providing detail
on the background, organisation structure.
Problems were mostly well explained and their consequences noted. Some centres followed this
through by explaining how solutions related to the problems.
Candidates achieving highly in AO1 produced comprehensive reports that were presented to a
high standard making excellent use of ICT. High scoring candidates produced professional
reports that were well structured and used appropriate formal language. Features used in
WORD to create reports included good use of pagination, paragraphing, headers and footers,
page numbering, integrated graphics, fonts and textual styles, formats and layouts, templates,
presentation styles and special features .
Candidates must include examples of four types of information in circulation in the organisation.
Some candidates provided over detailed evaluation of these documents and did not emphasise
the importance of their current function in terms of information and communication. These
documents should be included in an appendix and referenced in the report. The documents
could help emphasise the necessity for better ICT resources in the organisation.
Some candidates did not provide sufficiently detailed explanations of how ICT resources could
be used to assist the circulation of information in the organisation. There were a few however
who were innovative in considering smartphones, tablets and made good reference to current
technologies such as the use of Cloud. This demonstrated currency in their understanding.
All discussion of ICT resources, network topologies, e-commerce and legal issues must explicitly
relate to the case study.
Some improvement was noted in the production of MIS reports with more candidates
attempting to produce meaningful information likely to assist a manager in decision making.
Most centres used Spreadsheet and Database software to produce MIS reports. There were
instances of excellent use of software to produce reports. However there were also poor quality
MIS reports presented that had little detail and lacked real connection with their function.
There was evidence of the production of very detailed on-line forms that were professional and
fit for purpose.
Presentations explaining the future vision of the organisation were quite well produced and
demonstrated an improved focus on their purpose.
Evaluation still tends to be somewhat over marked in some centres. However most candidates
provided good evaluative comment throughout their reports as well as a final overall evaluation
with a summary, recommendations and limitations and personal reflective comment.
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Centres are advised to follow the weekly teaching plan for this unit available on the CCEA
website.
Centres should make use of notes available on the CCEA website that provide information
on the presentation of coursework.
Centres submitting work for the first time should attend agreement trials where possible.
Centres should make use of the Portfolio Clinic service available in February 2014.
Client requirements;
Marketing requirements;
Accessibility requirements;
Legal issues;
Timescales.
As previously noted in earlier reports, moderation is greatly assisted if each page is annotated to
include:
Meta tags;
Navigation issues;
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Consideration of accessibility.
Work from centres was well presented and Candidate Record Sheets were completed and signed
by the teacher and candidate. Marking was appropriate.
Many candidates provided clear statements of user requirements. However in some cases there
was a lack of precision and requirements could have been more focused.
Some candidates made proper use of story boards to assist the design process. This is very
useful when properly conducted.
Candidates explained site structure and details of content requirements well.
Many candidates created professional websites with a range of features including tables, forms,
rollovers, scrolling marquees, hover features and hit counters as well as downloadable content.
Candidates considered a range of relevant issues as required by the assessment evidence. These
included hosting issues, legal issues, accessibility issues and marketing and e-strategies. These
were relevant and well explained.
Candidates considered the concept of marketing the website and provided relevant ideas for the
development of an e-strategy.
Evaluations were brief in some cases but were marked accurately. Candidates included
completed questionnaires and some consideration was given to the use of on-line surveys.
Evaluations must demonstrate how user requirements were met and indicate how the candidate
performed in terms of the solution achieved. Appropriate technical language should be used.
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Work presented by centres was of a similar standard to previous years and was marked
accordingly.
The problems presented were of suitable complexity to allow the development of suitable
solutions.
It is very important to state user requirements as precisely as possible. This facilitates evaluation.
Candidates should adhere to the suggested format on the CCEA website.
User guides should be properly directed to the intended novice user audience.
Candidates should ensure that suitable language is used for novice users.
Technical guides should be properly directed to technical staff and should contain relevant
technical language.
Code should be appropriately annotated.
Timescales.
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
This was generally well answered although many candidates selected the option of
Doreen gets annoyed as a valid reason for developing a new system over time is
being spent with customers who have genuine grievances. which was correct.
Q2
(a)
(b)
Q3
This was well answered. Most candidates were aware of the different stages in the
systems development lifecycle.
Q4
Some candidates may have lost marks if they supplied a general answer without
specifically identifying users from the case study, describing their needs and the
benefits a new computerised system could offer them.
Q5
The calculation of latest start and finish dates in part (a) caused most difficulty. Quite
a few candidates did not know how to determine the shortest project time in part (b)
and instead totalled the duration of all activities. Candidates were penalised if they did
not include the unit days in their answer. Most candidates were able to calculate float
in part (c). Whilst most candidates knew the project would be delayed in part (d) not
many specified it would be delayed by 1 day.
Q6
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
correctly suggested that evolutionary prototyping may reduce the cost and time of
development, as the system is not built again from scratch; but this may mean that
design is compromised.
Q7
Candidates performed well in part (a) but many did not correctly draw the new data
store in part (b). In part (c) many candidates did not use a verb to describe the
processes identified; some candidates suggested processes which were more
appropriate for a Level-2 DFD.
Q8
Most candidates performed well in this question but many did not include foreign keys
in part (b). Candidates should learn to identify the primary key for each table and post
a copy from the one to many side of the relationship as a foreign key.
Q9
(a)
Many candidates incorrectly thought that results would be included in the test
plan.
(b)
The majority of candidates knew that hardware should be tested but had
difficulty suggesting another item.
Q10
This question was well answered. Some candidates mixed up phased with pilot and
parallel was often spelt incorrectly.
Q11
This was well answered but some candidates did not know that if a hard drive fails it
would be better to invite the technician to fix this.
General Comments
Higher ability students gave answers for the stretch and challenge questions that were well
organised, concise, specific to the question asked and provided examples related to the case
study when appropriate; weaker students found it difficult to gain marks in these questions. It
was good to see that candidates have studied the case study in detail and they were able to select
relevant examples to justify their answers.
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Work from centres was well presented with Candidate Record Sheets completed appropriately.
Candidates work was well marked by most centres and generally demonstrated where assessment
objectives were achieved.
Many candidates completed this unit to a high standard producing complex database solutions
and accompanying detailed documentation.
Normalisation from some centres requires development.
Comprehensive data modelling was evident in many portfolios from higher scoring candidates.
Correct conventions for data flow diagrams must be observed. Relationships on E-R diagrams
must be named.
Some centres produced too much superfluous documentation.
Separate, concise User and Technical guides should be produced. These were generally good.
Detailed Test Plans and evidence of testing were provided by many candidates.
Evidence of testing by three users should be provided.
Some centres did not adopt a best fit mark band approach and placed candidates in a much
lower mark band if there was something missing.
Some high scoring candidates provided very detailed evaluations covering all required aspects.
Self-evaluation of personal performance was also included.
A project plan that described how the candidate managed time and resources;
CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Accessibility issues;
Legal issues;
Timescales.
Work from centres was well presented and Candidate Record Sheets were completed
appropriately. In most cases, good annotation was evident throughout the portfolios and this
assisted the moderation process.
A high standard of work was achieved by most centres and good understanding of the need for
communication in this type of development was apparent.
Candidates should include storyboards and design sketches that reflect the design of the website.
Some candidates displayed little evidence of the design process and were awarded high marks.
Many candidates however did provide clear evidence of their ability to research and plan the
design of their websites.
Centres should encourage candidates to consider their project plans from a more detailed
perspective to provide more consideration of all tasks associated with the development process.
Candidates generally showed good ICT capability in using available software to create web based
solutions. In many cases, the use of advanced dynamic features was very good. There was some
evidence of good creativity in the development of solutions to meet specific client needs.
Candidates must host their web sites. Screenshots with active URLs should be included.
Evaluation of website performance also requires websites to be fully hosted.
Assessment Unit A2 10
Multimedia Technology
This unit requires candidates to understand multimedia requirements and to design, document
and present multimedia solutions using a range of techniques in a given context. Candidates
must work with others to develop multimedia solutions.
Candidates were required to produce:
An interactive multimedia presentation which included video, animation and edited video;
storyboards.
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Candidates were required to show evidence that their work was presented in a structured,
coherent, concise manner that showed continuity.
Candidates had to demonstrate proper use of technical language within the design and
production process and present a detailed analysis of the production task.
Work from centres was generally well presented. Portfolios should be arranged in rank order.
Candidate Record Sheets were well completed and signed by the Teacher and Candidate. Work
was well annotated and marking was accurate and consistent overall.
There was good evidence of group work from centres although it was not always clear which
student was responsible for specific aspects of the work. Some groups presented very good
creative ideas and produced fit for purpose end products.
Research into the different types of multimedia software was evident. However, candidates must
demonstrate thorough understanding of the hardware and software requirements of multimedia
systems. They must show understanding of file formats and compression.
Candidates used design sketches and storyboards effectively to present their designs. This is an
extremely important aspect of the development process.
Most candidates covered all aspects of the required assessment evidence and some demonstrated
excellent use of multimedia and used a good range of software. Candidates must make advanced
use of software at this level to achieve in the higher mark bands.
Original sound and video was not always evident in portfolios. There must be evidence of video
and animation as well as edited audio. This is essential for candidates to achieve in AO4.
Assessment Unit A2 11
Assessment Unit A2 12
Visual Programming
This unit requires candidates to understand the fundamental concepts of modern programming
in a visual language. Candidates must design and create event driven programmes based on user
requirements. Candidates must use storyboarding as a suitable design tool. They must
demonstrate the use of prototyping and present detailed evidence of thorough testing.
Candidates must also critically evaluate the effectiveness of their solutions.
Candidates were required to produce:
A working system designed to meet specified user requirements and produced using a visual
programming tool;
A design document storyboarding the system to be developed and detailing the data
requirements and output to be produced by the system;
Evidence of implementation by the inclusion of annotated screen dumps and code listings of
the GUI application built;
User documentation, making use of graphics and suitable for a novice user; technical
documentation which enables the installation of the package from the deployment media;
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Comprehensive testing documentation with a test plan and evidence that the tests have been
carried out;
Work from centres was well organised, presented and mostly well annotated. There was
evidence of consistent marking and Candidate Record Sheets were well completed and signed by
the teacher and candidate.
Candidates did present statements of user requirements based on research and analysis. User
requirements should be clearly stated in terms of functional and non-functional requirements.
These should be used in the evaluation process.
Some candidates presented project plans which again form an important part of any
development process and assist in the evaluation process.
Some candidates made excellent use of storyboarding providing detailed graphical representation
of their proposed systems. This is to be commended. Story boards should contain all relevant
detail such as labels, text boxes, list/combo boxes, images, menus and toolbars. Navigation
through the system should be noted.
Some candidates demonstrated good use of prototyping showing very good understanding of its
application. Initial prototypes should show an overview of the proposed system at a high level.
This should provide an indication of the screen designs, navigation, controls used and the output
achieved. Refinement of the prototype should be conducted based on user feedback until the
desired outcomes are achieved.
Candidates produced final solutions of a good standard. Candidates used appropriate
programming structures. Code should be fully evident in the portfolios and extensively
annotated. Evidence of validation of controls, menus and the programs should be annotated
fully.
Candidates demonstrated good evidence of testing. A comprehensive test plan should be
provided and relevant screen dumps included as part of the testing process.
User and Technical guides were presented to a high standard with all necessary sections included
Candidates from some centres provided good structured evaluations. Evaluations should
provide a commentary on the solution and must relate to the user requirements. They should
contain critical reflective comment on the candidates own performance.
This paper contained 12 questions and candidates were allowed one hour and 30 minutes. There
were a variety of question types which tested students on both their general understanding of
and knowledge of specific technical terminology and concepts. Several stretch and challenge
questions were included.
Q1
Q2
Many candidates drew clear and well annotated diagrams for part (a) with many
providing an indication of the type of cabling used. In part (b) only a few candidates
mentioned that one of the main problems with the bus are that we must manage a
greater number of collisions as the network grows; a star network using a switch
reduces collisions increasing performance and allowing larger networks. One student
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
made the important point that on a bus system packets are broadcast to all nodes and
this could be a security risk as sniffing of packets could occur; in system with a switch,
packets could forwarded to specific network devices reducing this risk. Overall this
question was relatively well answered.
Q3
Most candidates performed very well in this question although some candidates did
not recognise the terminology of global and local addressing.
Q4
Most candidates performed well in this question about Bluetooth, although few
provided specific technical detail about the technology in their explanations.
Q5
Some candidates did not know the difference between SMTP and POP3 servers.
Q6
Candidates were well aware of the issues surrounding chat rooms. Several suggested
very good alternative disadvantages such as chat rooms being distracting and the
download of malicious programs. Few mentioned any issues with regard to the risk to
children.
Q7
This question was answered relatively well. Few candidates mentioned the impact of a
move to another location i.e. the idea that MAC addresses tend to be static following
the network device whereas IPv4 addresses are assigned and independent of the
hardware.
Q8
This question asking candidates to describe SSID, WEP and MAC was relatively well
answered.
Q9
Q10
(a)
Most candidates were able to describe the concept of a client and server
although some struggled with VPN.
(b)
Very few candidates mentioned the idea of encryption and tunnelling. Many
students left this answer blank or incomplete.
Q11
Candidates generally mentioned advantages such as cost and speed rather than specific
features.
Q12
Candidates performed well in this question discussing viruses, Trojans and worms.
Q13
Candidates performed well in this question suggesting alternative answers such as makin
backups in the case of fire but did not suggest storage of these back-ups off-site or in a
fireproof safe.
This unit enables candidates to develop a software system based on a user requirements
specification.
The assessment evidence for this unit requires candidates to provide a software solution based
on a case study. Candidates are required to design, develop, test, document and evaluate a
software solution for a specified problem, taking into account the needs of the user. Candidates
are also expected to apply project management techniques to the development process.
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Work from centres was generally well presented with Candidate Record Sheets completed and
signed by teacher and candidate. Some Candidate Record Sheets contained useful comment that
was well related to the annotation in the documents. Where possible, it is best to identify
particular examples on specific pages rather on larger page ranges.
Use of project plans should be detailed and should show consideration of lower level activities.
Centres must pay particular attention to the design process as this is a critical factor in the
success of the solution. The use of Data Flow Diagrams must be properly developed using
correct conventions. There is limited evidence of the use of data flow diagrams in the portfolios
presented. These form an extremely important aspect of design and should follow through to
the design of the solution reflecting the inputs, processes, files and outputs of the new system.
Candidates did attempt normalisation and produced ER diagrams and data dictionaries.
Relationships on ER diagrams must be named.
It is important to produce a comprehensive test plan and to demonstrate representative tests
rather than every single test process.
The documentation from centres was of a high standard with detailed User and Technical guides.
Evaluation is an important part of the development process and generally requires more
development.
Candidates generally showed a good level of knowledge and understanding throughout. More
use could be made of the range of marks within mark bands to allocate marks.
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CCEA GCE Applied ICT (Single and Double Award) (Summer Series) 2013
Contact details
The following information provides contact details for key staff members:
Specification Support Officer: Nuala Braniff
(telephone: (028) 9026 1200, extension 2292, email: nbraniff@ccea.org.uk)
Officer with Subject Responsibility: Michael McAuley
(telephone: (028) 9026 1200, extension 2342, email: mmcauley@ccea.org.uk)
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