Who decides what the 'expected score' is then? This would have to be the teacher, and as I mentioned in the post, the teachers cannot be trusted to be fair.
Also, it's just 2 scholarships per class of 30 people per term. So one just has to pick 2 people from the class.
for polling teachers, you might suggest that each teacher recommend 4 students.
for polling students, you might suggest that each applicant write 2 essays: why they should receive the award, and which of their fellow classmates should as well.
correlating these with exam scores might provide a clearer picture still.
The students get one teacher per year. I.e, they don't have multiple teachers for each subject, they just have 1 teacher who takes them for an entire year, then they get a new teacher.
The essay suggestion would work maybe for the 10-12 year olds, but the 6-10 year olds would not be able to write that well. Also, would they not just pick their 'clique'?
- students only pick one other person, so picking their entire clique wouldn't fit as an answer. further, as good students tend to find one another, it's a good filter for finding people that should be recommended by the teacher but aren't (or vice-versa).
- if a full essay is too much, just ask them to write what they'd do with their scholarship in a few sentences (prose, poem, any form will do). since you're only looking for 2 kids, you only need a question that will highlight the top candidates. no need to properly rank the entire class.
Also, it's just 2 scholarships per class of 30 people per term. So one just has to pick 2 people from the class.