Without a regrade of exams and a full, independent inquiry, young people will never get justice.
In Wales, Education Minister Leighton Andrews ordered the WJEC exam board to regrade Welsh students' English papers.
It has emerged that Mr Andrews was warned his decision to regrade the GCSEs risked "damaging" the qualification's integrity.
Workers are angered by plans by Balfour Beatty and other construction companies to regrade staff in the mechanical and electrical sector.
Appearing before the Commons Education Committee, Mr Andrews defended his decision to order a regrade of last year's GCSE English language.
Ofqual, the exam regulator, has refused to such a regrade and has defended the integrity of the grading process this summer.
Mr Andrews was questioned on Thursday by members of the assembly's children and young people committee about his decision to order the regrade.
The controversy also saw a growing divide between the education systems in England and Wales - with the Welsh government ordering a regrade.
Yesterday's 'call' on the WJEC to regrade has just been, well, upgraded to a formal direction - in other words, a ministerial demand.
The Welsh government is to "carefully consider" a report by England's exams regulator after it refused to order exam boards to regrade English GCSEs.
The alliance has written formally to Ofqual and the exam boards AQA and Edexcel challenging the refusal to regrade GCSE English papers in England.
It refused to order exam boards to regrade this year's exams.
However 2, 400 Welsh pupils have already received better results after the Welsh education minister, Leighton Andrews, ordered the WJEC exam board to regrade Welsh students' papers.
Workers will need to not only remove disabled trains, but also remove the tracks, regrade the rail bed, then lay down the tracks again, according to Finch.
Following an outcry, Mr Andrews - who regulates exams in Wales - decided to order a regrade of thousands of papers set by the Cardiff-based exam board WJEC.
In Wales, ministers ordered a regrade for pupils who got a lower grade than expected with Welsh board WJEC, but Ofqual did not order such a move in England.
BBC: GCSE English: Teachers' anger over generous marking claim
Mr Andrews said the review had persuaded him the pupils had been the victims of an "injustice" and asked the Welsh exam board WJEC to regrade Welsh pupils' papers.
Mr McKenzie's resignation came as the exam boards and the exam regulator Ofqual were given more time to consider a legal challenge from teaching unions, schools and local authorities asking them to regrade English GCSE papers.
"We have now thoroughly examined the case that we have and we are convinced of the merits of our case, and the expectation that we will have a success to get the outcome we want - which is a regrade for students, " he said.
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