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GCSE results 2025: Students face nervous wait for grades
GCSE results 2025: Students face nervous wait for grades

BBC News

time19 hours ago

  • General
  • BBC News

GCSE results 2025: Students face nervous wait for grades

Pupils in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive GCSE, BTec Tech Awards and other Level 2 results on GCSE pass rate is expected to be broadly similar to 2024, after years of flux during the Covid year, it fell for a third year bosses have warned there could be more competition for students getting their GCSE results to find places at sixth forms this year, because of their growing popularity and an increase in the population size at that age group. Bill Watkin, head of the Sixth Form Colleges Association, said some had managed to increase capacity and would have spare places, but added that others are "almost certainly going to have to turn some young people away because they are oversubscribed". Your full guide to GCSE results day, including how to appeal gradesThe 9-1 GCSE grade boundaries explainedWhat is a BTec and how are they marked?What is a T-level and what are the grades worth? Lee Elliot Major, professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, said competition to get into top sixth forms "will be fiercer than ever", adding that fears over VAT being added to private school fees may drive more families to seek out places in the state Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the NAHT school leaders' union, said there was a "wide range" of other options for teenagers, such as school sixth forms and further education 170,000 students are due to get results for BTec Tech Awards, BTec Firsts and BTec Level 2 Technical courses, while about 110,000 will receive results for Cambridge pass rate for National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher exams in Scotland rose across the board this A-level results rose again last week – with 28.3% of all grades across England, Wales and Northern Ireland marked at A* or A. One pupil waiting for her results, Jaya, says she wants to become a dentist and hopes she'll get the grades she needs to start A-levels at Scarborough College next pupils getting results this week were in Year 6 when the first Covid lockdown was announced in March 2020, and started secondary school learning in "bubbles".Jaya, a pupil at St Augustine's Catholic School in Scarborough, said it was bittersweet to be leaving the friends that she met during the Covid pandemic."I think when I first came in Year 7 I was probably really nervous," she said. "I have found my people, my friends, and they have helped me become more confident." Last year, 67.6% of all GCSE entries were graded 4/C or divides grew in England, with the difference between pass rates in the highest- and lowest-performing regions is the second year that grading has returned to pre-pandemic standards across all three proportion of GCSE passes rose in 2020 and 2021 when exams were cancelled and results were based on teachers' was followed by a phased effort to bring them back down to 2019 return of grading to 2019 standards for a second year running means there will be less emphasis on how grades compare to standards before Covid, and more on how they compare to last year. In England, pupils who don't get at least a grade 4 in GCSE English and maths are required to continue studying for it alongside their next course, whether it's A-levels, a T-level, or something Department for Education (DfE) says pupils should retake the exam when they - and their school or college - think they are English and maths resits take place in November and May or June. How to handle results day stress when you're neurodivergentDo gifts and cash rewards help to boost exam grades?What is an apprenticeship and how well are they paid? Most pupils go into their school or college to collect their results, but this year tens of thousands will be sent their results in an DfE is trialling the Education Record app with 95,000 students in Manchester and the West Midlands, ahead of a national said they hoped it would save money for college admissions teams, while school leaders said students and schools would need "seamless support" to ensure the app works involved in the pilot will still be able to go to school to get their paper reporting by Hayley Clarke and Emily Doughty

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