external examiner - meaning and definition. What is external examiner
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What (who) is external examiner - definition

EDUCATIONAL ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION SYSTEM
  • Examination at [[Durham University]], where the external examiner system originated.

external examiner         
The Examiner (Tasmania)         
  • The Examiner building in Launceston
DAILY PAPER IN LAUNCESTON, TASMANIA, AUSTRALIA
Launceston Examiner; The Weekly Examiner; The Launceston Examiner; The Examiner (Launceston); Examiner (Launceston)
The Examiner is the daily newspaper of the city of Launceston and north-eastern Tasmania, Australia.
The Examiner (1710–1714)         
1710-1712 PAPER EDITED BY JONATHAN SWIFT
The Examiner (1710-1714)
The Examiner was a newspaper edited by Jonathan Swift from 2 November 1710 to 1714. It promoted a Tory perspective on British politics, at a time when Queen Anne had replaced Whig ministers with Tories.

Wikipedia

External examiner

The external examiner plays an important role in all degree level examinations in higher education in the United Kingdom. The external examiner system originated in 1832 with the establishment of the University of Durham, the first in England since Cambridge was founded 600 years earlier. Durham used Oxford examiners to assure the public that its degrees were a similar standard to Oxford's. The establishment of more universities in England from the 1880s was accompanied by a requirement that examinations be conducted by internal and external examiners. It is also found in countries whose higher education systems were developed from United Kingdom practice, or strongly influenced by it, after its introduction, including New Zealand, and India. It is one of the oldest systems of quality control within higher education.

It is a requirement for all degree level examinations at British universities, and in countries operating a similar system, that at least one member of the examining board should be from a university other than the one awarding the degree (and should have no recent affiliation with it). This applies both to undergraduate examinations, where there may be hundreds or even thousands of candidates, and to postgraduate examinations including those for the PhD where a special board is convened for each candidate.

Examples of use of external examiner
1. Prisma appointed an external examiner, and this week he submitted a hair–raising report.
2. The shareholders, via their representatives on the board, hastened to appoint an external examiner to Bezeq, a lawyer named Yoram Danziger.
3. The day of the relentless external examiner, which most of us thought had ended by Conservative government decree in the summer of 1'88, is back with a vengeance.
4. Today the external examiner will announce his interim conclusions, and we will learn whether Gelbard will pay with his job for the flawed procedure that, among other things, granted him NIS 40 million worth of options for Bezeq stock.