
Portugal's exam results in doubt: 0.7% of papers still ungraded, minister admits risk
With less than 1% of over 300,000 national exam papers still ungraded, Education Minister Fernando Alexandre admitted Thursday that Friday's scheduled publication of results may be delayed due to ongoing digital platform failures.
A digital first turns chaotic
For the first time, Portugal's national secondary school exams were graded entirely through a digital platform. The process, intended to streamline evaluation, instead triggered a cascade of technical failures. Teachers reported receiving items with mismatched handwriting, missing continuation sheets, and being asked to grade 100 items in two to three hours. The Ministry of Education extended the grading deadline twice, first to 14 July and then to 15 July, but the platform remained active on 16 July with 0.7% of over 300,000 exam papers still ungraded.
Political firestorm in parliament
During Thursday's state of the nation debate, Prime Minister Luís Montenegro acknowledged that "not everything went well" with the exam grading. Opposition leader José Luís Carneiro of the Socialist Party demanded a guarantee that all results would be published on Friday and questioned their reliability. Chega leader André Ventura called the situation a "national shame" and accused the government of blaming teachers. The liberal IL party warned that if the process fails, the prime minister should evaluate the education minister's political conditions to remain in office.
Not everything went well, but we know that this digital transformation will bring improvements for students, Portuguese families, and the education system.
Teachers and unions push back
The National Federation of Teachers (Fenprof) declared that Minister Fernando Alexandre had "lost control of the situation" and no longer had the conditions to continue. Secretary-general José Feliciano said thousands of items remained ungraded and that teachers had received proofs during the night. He announced that Fenprof would file a complaint with the Prosecutor-General's Office on Friday, along with a request for an inquiry. "The platform failed because a political decision failed before it," Feliciano stated, rejecting any attempt to blame teachers.
This chaos did not fall from the sky, it was created.
Calls for delay and accountability
Filinto Lima, president of the association of public school directors, suggested that if quality could not be guaranteed, the publication of results should be postponed. Cristina Mota of the Missão Escola Pública movement went further, advocating for a delay of the entire calendar, including the second exam phase and university access deadlines. She confirmed that some teachers were refusing to grade under current conditions, citing threats to professional rigour. The IL's Jorge Miguel Teixeira said his party would first seek documentation on the preparation of the digital transformation before deciding on a parliamentary inquiry.
The most prudent would be to postpone the posting of grades, postpone the second phase, and even postpone the higher education access calendar.
What happens next
The education minister has appealed to teachers to complete the remaining grading, but admitted that as long as all exams are not corrected, there is a risk that Friday's deadline will be missed. With a Fenprof complaint imminent and political pressure mounting, the government faces a race to restore confidence in a process that has already seen four days of delays. The outcome will determine whether thousands of students receive their results on time or face a disrupted path to university.
- Ministry extends grading deadline to 14 July, but platform issues persist.
- Deadline extended again to 15 July; teachers still receiving new items.
- Platform remains active; 0.7% of over 300,000 exams ungraded; minister admits risk.
- Scheduled publication of results; Fenprof to file complaint with Prosecutor-General's Office.


