logo
A-level results in England expected to return to near pre-pandemic levels

A-level results in England expected to return to near pre-pandemic levels

The Guardian14 hours ago
Students in England are expected to receive A-level grades that are closer to normal for the first time since the Covid pandemic triggered school closures and exam cancellations.
The grades will more closely resemble those given out in 2019, before the pandemic, with the proportion of A* to E grades linked to national results from the GCSE exams taken by the same pupils two years ago.
While most of the students who sat A-levels this spring were affected by pandemic disruption during their early years at secondary school, they will be the first group to have gone through their exam years without major turbulence.
It comes as the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, pledged to make a priority of tackling British white working-class young people falling behind their peers in the year ahead. The government will set out its plans for the challenge in a schools white paper in the autumn, she added.
Prof Alan Smithers, of Buckingham University's centre for education and employment research, said that 2024's A-level grades were unexpectedly high in England, which could have echoes in this year's outcomes.
'A-level grades have a chance to settle down this year after the volatility of Covid and its aftermath. They are likely to be close to last year's, where top grades were a percentage point or two above pre-Covid levels. This may not sound very much but, in fact, was an extra 14,200 A*s and 21,300 A*-As,' Smithers said.
'But there is huge variation in grades between subjects, a changing pattern in entries, and movement in the subject distribution of the sexes, which could also influence the outcome.'
The proportion of top A* and As awarded soared after grades were set by school assessment in 2020 and 2021, and remained at higher levels when exams returned in 2022. But last year 9.3% of A-level entries in England gained A* grades, above pre-pandemic levels, leaving experts struggling to explain why.
Analysts at FFT Datalab research unit said there were fewer students taking A-levels this year after record numbers in 2024, as entry patterns stabilised after the bumper post-pandemic crop of students who received better GCSE grades, enabling more of them to enrol on A-level courses.
This year, career-related subjects such as business studies and economics will overtake traditional academic subjects such as history, while the sciences and maths continue to rise in popularity despite the fall in the numbers taking A-levels overall.
Just 40,900 students entered to take history, compared with 41,900 taking economics and 43,000 for physics. Maths remains the most popular A-level with 105,000 entries this year, up by more than 4% compared with 2024. English literature entries fell by 5% to below 35,000, while the numbers taking French and German continued to decline.
About 250,000 sixth-formers in England will receive their A-level results on Thursday, with others choosing to take BTecs or other standalone or vocational qualifications such as T-levels.
Students in Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their A-level results on the same day but their grades are administered separately from those in England.
Scotland published the results for its Higher and Advanced Higher qualifications last week, showing a record number receiving grades A to C in Highers.
School leavers in England hoping to go to university have received higher numbers of offers as institutions have aggressively sought to fill places after a downturn in international applications.
Sign up to First Edition
Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters
after newsletter promotion
Universities usually offer places on undergraduate courses that are conditional on reaching certain A-level grades. But Mike Nicholson, director of recruitment, admissions and participation at the University of Cambridge, said many universities would probably be 'looking very carefully' at accepting applicants who narrowly failed to achieve the required grades.
Nicholson said: 'If the student, for instance, needed three As [and] gets AAB, as long as the B is not in something that's absolutely crucial for the course, I think there's a very strong possibility the student would find they'd be getting a place.
'If universities have the capacity to take near-miss students I think they'll be very keen to take them this year because those students are already in the system, they've already committed, they've possibly already even applied for accommodation.
Phillipson said it was a 'national disgrace' that so many young people were 'written off' and did not get what they needed in the education system to achieve and thrive after leaving school.
She added her focus would be turning around the 'stark' attainment gap and outcomes between white working-class children and their peers.
Fewer than a fifth (18.6%) of white British pupils eligible for free school meals achieved at least a grade 5 – which is considered a 'strong pass' – in their English and maths GCSEs in 2023-24, compared with 45.9% of all state school pupils in England, according to Department for Education (DfE) data.
Phillipson said: 'They're not well-positioned to carry on with studies, to get an apprenticeship, to go on to university. That is why the schools white paper we will be publishing in the autumn will set out an ambitious vision for how we can tackle this generational challenge of what many young people experience.
'(It) is a national disgrace that so many young people are written off and don't get what they need to achieve and thrive.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dozens of firefighters battle ‘significant' blaze ripping through Meriden rubbish plant as locals told ‘avoid the area'
Dozens of firefighters battle ‘significant' blaze ripping through Meriden rubbish plant as locals told ‘avoid the area'

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Dozens of firefighters battle ‘significant' blaze ripping through Meriden rubbish plant as locals told ‘avoid the area'

DOZENS of firefighters are battling a huge blaze tearing through a rubbish plant in Meriden – with locals warned to stay away. The fire broke out just after 4pm today at a waste management facility on Cornets End Lane, Meriden Depot, Coventry. 1 Emergency crews rushed to the scene as thick smoke rose from the site. Around 60 firefighters, nine fire engines, two brigade response vehicles and a hydraulic aerial platform were deployed to tackle the flames, which were tearing through three quarters of the 80-metre by 40-metre building. A specialist high-volume water pumping unit was also sent to the scene. A spokesperson said: 'We were called to a significant fire involving a large building at a waste management facility in Meriden. "Crews are working hard to protect the rest of the building, and liaising closely with on-site staff to bring the incident to a safe conclusion.' As of 6pm, the incident was still ongoing. No injuries have been reported. Locals have been urged to avoid the area while crews continue to work. is your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures and must-see video.

First white-tailed eagle chick fledges in Dorset for 240 years
First white-tailed eagle chick fledges in Dorset for 240 years

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

First white-tailed eagle chick fledges in Dorset for 240 years

A record three white-tailed eagle chicks have successfully fledged from two wild nests in England, including the first in Dorset for over two centuries. The chicks were reared by white-tailed eagles released into the wild by a pioneering conservation project by Forestry England and the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation to return the lost species to England. Two different pairs of white-tailed eagles successfully bred this year, including the first chick in Dorset for more than 240 years, and two chicks raised in a nest in Sussex. • Frisa, Scotland's oldest white-tailed eagle, dies aged 32 A single male chick fledged from a nest in Dorset. The parent birds were released from the Isle of Wight in 2020, settled in Dorset and paired up in 2023. This is their first successful breeding attempt and made more surprising by the fact that the father has only one leg after losing the other four years ago. Two chicks, both females, fledged this year from a nest in Sussex. Both are the offspring of two white-tailed eagles released by the project in 2020. This year's successful breeding brings the number of these birds born in the wild through the project to six. In 2023 a single chick was born, the first in England since the 18th century when the species was lost due to persecution. A further two chicks were born in the summer of 2024. All of the chicks are fitted with satellite tags so that the project team can track their progress. Over the last year they have used satellite data to follow the fledglings as they have explored widely across the UK. White-tailed eagles typically reach breeding maturity at about four or five years old. From the birds released by the project, three pairs have formed and established territories in southern England. Several of the younger birds are also present in potential future breeding areas typically close to freshwater wetlands or the coast, where the birds can catch fish, which is their preferred food. In time, it is hoped that a population of six to ten breeding pairs will become established within 60km of the release site on the Isle of Wight. Roy Dennis, founder of the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation, said: 'This is a long-term project and it will take some years before the population is fully restored, but the progress made over the last year has been incredibly encouraging. We have some well-established pairs and two that are actively breeding. We hope to build on this progress and I'm really pleased that we have been able to release an additional eight birds this year to further boost the population. 'I always find it particularly rewarding to see so much support for these magnificent birds and the positive impact they are having on so many people's relationship with the natural world.' Steve Egerton-Read, project officer for Forestry England, said that it was 'such an exciting time but also incredibly nerve wracking'. He added: 'We hope that in years to come these iconic birds will become a much more common sight, inspiring future generations and deepening their connection with nature.' • White-tailed eagles are set to return — and farmers aren't happy White-tailed eagles are Britain's largest birds of prey with a wingspan of up to 2.5 metres and were once widespread across England, but human persecution caused their extinction. The last breeding pair were recorded in 1780 in southern England. In 2019 Forestry England and the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation began reintroducing the birds to the English landscape. To date, 45 young white-tailed eagles have been released. This includes eight released this summer from the team's base on the Isle of Wight. The reintroduction of white-tailed eagles is conducted under licence from Natural England, the government's wildlife licensing authority. Birds for release are collected from wild nests in Scotland under licence from NatureScot before being transported to England with valuable support from Civil Air Support. The birds are subsequently reared and released on the Isle of Wight, all birds released by the project are fitted with satellite tags. White-tailed eagles are a protected species under the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981). Disturbing, destroying or interfering with them and their nests are criminal offences. The specific locations of this year's nests are not being disclosed in order to ensure the welfare of the birds and to prevent any disturbance to them or the landowner this year or if the birds return to breed at the same location.

'Significant' Meriden waste depot blaze fought by 50 firefighters
'Significant' Meriden waste depot blaze fought by 50 firefighters

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

'Significant' Meriden waste depot blaze fought by 50 firefighters

About 50 firefighters have been dealing with a fire at a waste were called to a "significant fire" that had spread across three-quarters of the large building in Meriden, West Midlands Fire Service fire engines, two 4x4 vehicles and a hydraulic aerial platform were still at the fire off Cornets End Lane at 18:00 BST on Monday, with a specialist high volume water pumping fire service said the blaze broke out just after 16:00 BST and there were no reports of anyone being hurt. Fire teams were working hard to protect the rest of the building, which was about 80m (260ft) by 40m (130ft), and liaising closely with on-site staff, a fire service spokesman said. Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store