
Students will want universities to ‘understand context' over grades
Dr Saxton, who was chief regulator of England's exams regulator Ofqual from 2021 until 2023, has suggested that there could be 'higher' attainment across this year's A-level cohort as a result.
This cohort are the first to sit their Level 3 qualifications where they had the pre-pandemic standard reinstated on their GCSEs Jo Saxton, Ucas
Her comments come as students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their A-level and Level 3 BTec results on Thursday, with many finding out if they have secured a university place.
Last year, more than a quarter (27.8%) of UK A-level entries were awarded an A or A* grade, up from 27.2% in 2023.
It was the highest proportion of entries scoring top grades outside the pandemic-affected years of 2020-22.
In 2019 – the last year that summer exams were taken before the pandemic – 25.4% of entries were awarded A or A* grades.
The Covid-19 pandemic led to an increase in top A-level and GCSE grades in 2020 and 2021, with results based on teacher assessments instead of exams.
Professor Alan Smithers, director of the Centre for Education and Employment Research at the University of Buckingham, has suggested that a higher percentage of UK A-level entries awarded top grades – compared with before the pandemic – could become the 'new normal' this summer.
During a webinar hosted by the Higher Education Policy Institute think tank, Dr Saxton said: 'This cohort are the first to sit their Level 3 qualifications where they had the pre-pandemic standard reinstated on their GCSEs.
'I think that's just such an important backdrop for this whole cycle, just remembering this is that cohort, that there was a significant national programme to deflate their grades.'
I think they will really be looking to those universities to respect and understand the context in which they've come through Jo Saxton, Ucas
Dr Saxton, who was in charge at Ofqual when A-level and GCSE exams were reinstated in England following the pandemic, said she 'lost a lot of sleep' over the action to tackle grade inflation.
But she suggested that teenagers told her that they wanted their exams back and they wanted their results to 'carry value'.
Dr Saxton said: 'I think they will really be looking to those universities to respect and understand the context in which they've come through.'
She said the return to pre-pandemic grading in 2023 meant 'fewer students than in recent years actually met the entry criteria that most schools and colleges would set for progression into A-level subjects'.
Provisional exam entries data for England shows that A-level entries decreased by 0.4% from 825,355 last summer to 821,875 this summer, despite a 3.8% increase in the size of the 18-year-old population.
Speaking just a few days before students receive their exam results, Dr Saxton added: 'It probably means that there's fractionally higher prior attainment across the cohort. This is me speculating as a former chief regulator.'
Dr Saxton said clearing is no longer perceived as a 'bargain basement' for those who are not successful on A-level results day.
Clearing is available to students who do not meet the conditions of their offer on A-level results day, as well as those who did not receive any offers.
Clearing maybe was perceived as a bargain basement - it was for the people who had been unsuccessful. But that is definitely not how current applicants perceive it Jo Saxton, chief executive of Ucas
But prospective students who have changed their mind about what or where they wish to study, and also those who have applied outside the normal application window, can also use clearing.
On Tuesday, the Ucas chief said: 'Clearing maybe was perceived as a bargain basement – it was for the people who had been unsuccessful.
'But that is definitely not how current applicants perceive it.
'For current applicants it's the mechanism by which they change their mind.'
Nearly 22,700 courses with vacancies for undergraduate students living in England were available on the Ucas clearing site as of Wednesday last week – eight days before results day, a PA news agency analysis showed.
A sample of 129 of the UK's largest higher education providers showed 17 of the 24 elite Russell Group universities had more than 3,600 courses with vacancies for English residents on clearing.
Dr Saxton added: 'It is about students trusting their instincts and going back to their curated playlists, the favourites that they researched, that they've probably visited.
'They're not blindfolded throwing a dart at a dartboard.'
More people in all parts of the country should get to benefit from higher education Jo Saxton, chief executive of Ucas
Earlier this week, the Education Secretary said 'far too many young' white working-class British students do not get the exam results that they need to allow them to continue on to university.
Bridget Phillipson told PA that the Post-16 White Paper and the Schools White Paper, which are both due in the autumn, will focus on turning around these 'thorny and generational challenges'.
Dr Saxton said she would like the Government to look at regional disparities in access to and participation in higher education – such as the 'London advantage'.
She said: 'More people in all parts of the country should get to benefit from higher education.'

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The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Record proportion of A-level students get top grades in England
Students in England gained record levels of top grades in this year's A-level exams, driven by young men producing their strongest performances outside the pandemic years. Ofqual, the exam regulator for England, shrugged off any suggestions of grade inflation, pointing to the lower proportion of 18-year-olds taking A-levels and saying that fewer low-achieving students had entered. Despite the overall improvement, regional variations remain, with students in the West Midlands and north-east England recording lower grades overall than in 2024. The north-east remains the only region of England with average grades below pre-pandemic levels. Among the more than 1.1m entries in England, 28.2% gained an A or A* grade, while 9.4% gained the top A* grade, both higher than in 2024 when 27.6% of entries got A and A*s and 9.3% gained A*s. Across all students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, 28.3% of entries were awarded an A or A* grade, up by 0.5 percentage points on last year. Wales was the only country of the three to see a drop in the proportion of top grades awarded compared with last year, falling from 29.9% to 29.5%. Other than in 2020, 2021 and 2022, when awards were affected by changes to assessments caused by Covid-19, the proportion of top grades in England was higher than any year since the A* grade was introduced in 2010, and before that going back to 2001. Ian Bauckham, Ofqual's chief regulator responsible for England's results, said: 'Standards have been maintained for another year, with grades determined by students' performance in exams using exam boards' strict marking and grading processes.' Bauckham noted that the number of entries were down compared with last year, despite the increased numbers of 18-year-olds in the population, and said a 'smaller, smarter cohort' was taking A-levels this year. 'This may be a sign that young people are making different choices about what types of qualification suit them, which then has an impact on A-level outcomes,' Bauckham said. Young men outpaced women in the proportion of entries with the two top grades, with 28.4% compared with 28% for women in England, reversing the positions of previous years. The improved performance – which belies recent complaints of boys being 'left behind' by the school system – was more extreme among sixth-formers, where 9.9% of entries by young men gained A*s compared with 9.1* for women. The gap between the highest- and lowest-performing regions widened further, with 32.1% of entries in London gaining A*-A, compared with 22.9% in north-east England. Jill Duffy, the chief executive of the OCR examination board, said: 'Regional inequalities are getting worse, not better. The gap at top grades [A*-A] has grown again. London is once again the top-performing region and is now 9.2 percentage points ahead of the north-east. 'The north-east is the only region in England where the proportion of A* and A grades is down on both last year and 2019. The picture is slightly brighter at A*-C, with a smaller gap between regions. These regional inequalities need more attention.' The Ucas university admissions administrator said record numbers of 18-year-olds in the UK got a place at university or college for this autumn. The A-level, BTec and T-level results showed 255,130 had been accepted, compared to 243,650 in 2024, a rise of 4.7%.


Telegraph
3 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Crackdown on A-level grade inflation fails as top results hit record high
Top A-level grades have reached a record high this year despite attempts to curb grade inflation. Pupils across the UK surpassed last year's surprise uptick in A*s and As and saw the share of top grades climb to 28.3 per cent – up from 27.8 per cent in 2024. It marks a new record for a non-pandemic year and will prompt concerns that grade inflation has become baked into the system. Ofqual, the exams regulator in England, insisted the bumper results were because of a 'strong' cohort rather than more generous grade boundaries. Boys outperformed girls to take the lion's share of high marks for just the third time in recent decades. The overall proportion of A*s rose slightly to 9.4 per cent this summer – the highest since the starred grade was introduced in 2010, outside of pandemic disruption. The rise comes despite Ofqual previously saying it hoped to squeeze the proportion of top grades back to the 2019 rate of around 25.5 per cent. The overall number of entries receiving top grades rose only slightly by roughly 3,000 this year, although fewer candidates sitting exams meant the proportion of A*s and As was greater. The surprise increase will provide a welcome boost for cash-strapped universities looking to fill seats this year amid financial woes. UCAS, the university admissions service, said on Thursday that a record number of applicants have been accepted onto their first-choice degree this year, with figures up 3.1 per cent compared to 2024. Jo Saxton, the head of UCAS, stressed earlier this week that the cohort would want universities to 'respect and understand the context in which they've come through'. However, the boost in A-level results could soon mean that three in 10 sixth-formers will receive the top two possible grades in years to come if the current trend continues. The Department for Education (DfE) hit back at forecasts reported over the weekend that grade inflation was likely to return this year, stating that the claims were 'completely false'. Sir Ian Bauckham, the chief executive of Ofqual, said on Thursday: 'Standards have been maintained for another year, with grades determined by students' performance in exams using exam boards' strict marking and grading processes.' In a press conference on Thursday, Sir Ian added that tougher GCSE grading in 2023 meant this year's cohort were more selective with their A-level subject choices and likely to have picked subjects they knew they would do well in. He added that 18-year-olds who performed poorly in their GCSEs may not have got onto A-level courses and that this was reflected in a slight decrease in the number of entries this year. Overall A-level entries dipped slightly to 882,509 from last year's 886,514 despite an increase in the number of 18-year-olds in 2025. Sir Ian added: 'The value of the A*, what it stands for… is directly comparable with previous years, 2024 [and] 2023.' However, it will still prompt debate over whether Ofqual is functioning as intended after the organisation was launched in 2010 to stamp out creeping grade inflation. In the 24 years until Ofqual came into force the proportion of A grades nearly trebled and prompted the exams regulator to introduce the A* grade at A-level in 2010 to distinguish the very best students. The rate of A*s handed out had been steadily declining since then until this trend was suddenly reversed during the pandemic. Top grades surged in 2020 and 2021, when formal exams ground to a halt during Covid lockdowns and were temporarily replaced with more generous teacher assessments. Boys overtake girls This year marked a reversal of the stable trend of girls outperforming their male peers in recent years. In total, 28.4 per cent of boys opened their A-level results this morning to find the highest two grades, compared to 28.2 per cent of girls. The only other two years when boys received the greater share of A*s and As in modern record was in 2017 and 2018, with girls then leaping ahead when exams were temporarily switched for teacher assessments during the pandemic. Just under half of all UK candidates received Bs and Cs in this year's A-levels, putting them in good stead for finding a university place despite not achieving top marks. Universities are expected to open their doors to school leavers who narrowly miss out on their offer conditions this summer as many institutions grapple with a worsening financial crisis. This year's sixth-formers, who were 13 when the pandemic hit, had their GCSEs marked more harshly than their predecessors as part of efforts to weed out Covid-related grade inflation. Arts surge while stem dips Maths, psychology and biology remained the most popular A-level subjects this year, although of these only maths saw an increase in entries. Career-oriented subjects such as economics and business studies recorded some of the biggest jumps in popularity. But it was art and design subjects that had the highest increase in top grades, rising 3.5 per cent this year, tailed by media studies, English language and computing. The increase follows some concerns that students may be using AI tools such as ChatGPT for coursework-heavy subjects. By contrast, several major Stem subjects saw slight falls in top grades, with maths down 0.3 percentage points this year, chemistry down 0.1 points, and further maths down 0.2 points.


Daily Mail
3 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Top A-level grades hit record high outside of Covid pandemic with 28.3% of entries receiving A* and As - up from 27.8% last year
Pupils are celebrating a bumper year for A-level results after scoring record top grades outside of the pandemic years. This morning, 28.3 per cent of pupils got A/A* this year, compared with 27.8 per cent last year, and 25.4 per cent in 2019. Outside of the Covid years of 2020-2022, when grades were vastly inflated due to teacher assessment, this is the highest proportion on record. In addition, 9.4 per cent of entries got A* grades this year – almost 1 in 10 – up from 9.3 per cent last year and 7.7 per cent in 2019 – making this also a non-pandemic record. The top results meant a record 439,180 were accepted onto degree courses, up 3.1 per cent on the same point last year. Ofqual said this morning results are 'stable' and suggested any changes could be due to the fact that this year students are cleverer. This is due to them being the first cohort since the pandemic to have GCSE grading returned to normal – so harder – putting less able students off taking A-levels. Students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland received their exam results on this morning. Ark Academy London pupils open their A-level results The figures also show boys have outperformed girls in terms of top grades for the first time in seven years. And the overall pass rate – the proportion of entries graded A* to E – has also risen to 97.5 per cent this year, which is up on last year (97.2 per cent) and the pre-pandemic year of 2019 (97.6 per cent). Sir Ian Bauckham, chief regulator of Ofqual, England's exams regulator, said the standard of work required to achieve grades has 'held constant' since 2023. He said any changes were because a 'smaller, smarter cohort' of students had sat their A-level exams this year compared to previous years. Sir Ian said: 'Students this year have got the grades they deserve, and their grade will hold its value over time because it represents a stable standard of achievement.' The Covid-19 pandemic led to an increase in top grades in 2020 and 2021, with results based on teacher assessments instead of exams. In 2022, grading was brought half way back to normal. This cohort of school and college leavers received their GCSE results in 2023, the first year that grading was returned to pre-pandemic levels in England. In Wales and Northern Ireland, exam regulators returned to pre-pandemic grading in 2024, a year later than in England. The Ofqual chief said this year's cohort in England was smaller because 'fewer students met the bar' to begin A-level courses two years ago, when GCSE grading was returned to normal. Sir Ian added: 'So it is a smaller cohort and, judged in terms of GCSE attainment, it's a higher-achieving cohort than has been the case for the past few years.' In England, 11,909 students received their T-level results in the fourth year that the qualification has been awarded and 91.4 per cent achieved at least a pass. The number of T-level entries has increased by 61.4 per cent on last year, while the number of A-level entries has fallen by 0.5 per cent compared to 2024. Overall, 28.4 per cent of boys' A-level entries scored an A* or A this summer, compared to 28.2 per cent of their female classmates' entries – a gap of 0.2 percentage points. The last time boys had a lead was in 2018. Last year, girls were ahead with 28.0 per cent of entries scoring at least an A, compared to 27.6 per cent of those from boys, the latest figures show. Students who are receiving their A-level, T-level and Level 3 vocational and technical qualification (VTQ) results were in Year 8 when schools closed because of the pandemic. Education leaders have warned of 'stark' divides in results between different regions because of the legacy of Covid-19 and socio-economic factors. The latest Ofqual figures show wide regional differences in outcomes, with the North East the only region in England to see a drop in the proportion of top grades down on last year and 2019. Jill Duffy, chairwoman of JCQ board of directors and chief executive of the OCR exam board, said: 'Regional inequalities are getting worse, not better. 'The gap at top grades (A*-A) has grown again. London is once again the top performing region and is now 9.2 percentage points ahead of the North East.' She added: 'These regional inequalities need more attention.' The statistics show interest in A-level maths has soared in the last decade, with entries for the subject up by more than a fifth – 21.7 per cent – in the last 10 years. But there is a clear gender divide, with boys significantly more likely to choose the subject than girls. There were 70,255 boys' entries for A-level maths this year, compared to 41,883 girls' entries – both up on 2024. Ms Duffy added: 'There are still significantly fewer girls taking A-level maths, and proportionally there are fewer girls taking the subject than in 2019.' Scotland has a different qualification system and students received their results on Tuesday last week. Figures released by the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) showed that 78.4 per cent of those sitting National 5 exams passed with grades A to C – up from 77.2 per cent last year. For Highers, 75.9 per cent passed with the top bands, up from 74.9 per cent last year, and for Advanced Highers 76.7 per cent of students achieved A to C grades, up from 75.3 per cent last year. Figures published by Ucas, the official admissions body, found overall, 82 per cent of UK 18-year-old applicants awaiting a decision on results day secured their first choice – which was the same proportion as last year. For 18-year-olds in the UK, 255,130 applicants have been accepted onto a university or college course – up 4.7 per cent on last year. The number of international students who have been accepted on to undergraduate courses has risen by 2.9 per cent – from 51,170 last year to 52,640. Accepted applicants from China – 12,380 – are up 13 per cent compared with last year. Jo Saxton, chief executive of Ucas, said: 'This year's students were just thirteen when the pandemic hit, and their secondary schooling was turned upside down. 'It's great to see these applicants securing a university place in record numbers, seeking more education and investing in their futures. 'I am equally delighted to see how universities across the country have responded to their ambition. 'For any student who didn't quite get the grades they were hoping for, or even those still yet to apply, there are plenty of options in clearing with around 27,000 available courses. 'Ucas experts are also available on the phones, on social media and on the Ucas website, to help all those deciding on the next step that's right for them.' This morning, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has said there has been a 'steadying of the ship' after the disruption from the Covid-19 pandemic. Speaking to BBC Breakfast, she said: 'What we've seen is a steadying of the ship, both this year and last following some of the disruption that we saw during the pandemic. 'These are young people who have not had disruption in recent times, but have had the full normal assessment process. 'These are also young people who would have been the first to sit GCSEs under normal circumstances. So they've gone through the full regular GCSE cycle that you would have expected before the pandemic. 'So, this is a normal year, the kind of year that we would have seen before the pandemic hit.'