“Today students should be celebrating their hard work with their friends, family and teachers as they look forward to the future.” Grade 9’s make up 4.7% of all results in England.

Revising “got really weird at one point,” he said. This year English results have risen to 71% of students achieving a grade 4 and above and 54% achieving a grade 4 and above in maths; the number of students achieving grades 9-5 in maths increased by 8%. The proportion of grade 9’s given to English 16-year-olds has risen to 4.7 per cent this year, up from 4.5 per cent last year. In addition, the number of grades below a 4 halved from that of 2018. Who were the pupils who achieved such remarkable results? Our journalists strive for accuracy but on occasion we make mistakes. Naomi Larsson on our community team has been gathering reaction from our readers. Our reporters were on the scene at several, seeing the reactions to results and hearing some of the inspiring stories behind them. “Although the government’s reforms have seen a significant increase in the number of exams that students must take, perversely the breadth of subjects is getting narrower. They have demonstrated the importance of commitment and application in everything they do. The great support they get from my team of teaching and support staff is brilliant and I am delighted that we have gained another set of outstanding results particularly in GCSE English, Maths and Science.”. Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. There I will be studying maths, French, psychology and biology.”. "I was aware business was the only subject where she had not got a perfect 9, despite consistently achieving 9's in our assessments.

We did it TOGETHER!’ Parents matter!! Rémi de Fleurian on the Guardian’s data team has been looking at the proportion of English students taking up French and Spanish this year. Katharine Birbalsingh, head teacher at Michaela community school in Wembley - a well-known free school, is delighted by its first ever set of GCSE results. She also drew up a timetable of studying, which, according to her parents was completely of her own volition. However, this may be attributable to an increased number of subjects graded as 9-1 this year. Of the 336 pupils who achieved 10 or more straight grade 9s, just 16 were in the independent sector. Severn Vale student Ashley Marsh gained two grade 6’s and six grade 5’s and top grade was a 7 in sociology. Chief medical officer: Teaching isn’t ‘high risk’ profession, Ofsted ‘visits’ to go online during national lockdown. There was a 3% increase in modern foreign language entries, which had been in sharp decline for years. Paul Whiteman, its general secretary, said: “We remain concerned about the impact that the increased content and greater number of exams can and will have on everyone.

The figures show that 25.1 per cent of all grades given to girls were 7/A or above, up from 24.6 per cent last year, while for boys it rose to 18.6 per cent, up from 18.1 per cent last year. All figures in this post relate to England only – though results for Wales and Northern Ireland will also be published on Thursday. “I just couldn’t believe it when I saw the results,” said Chung, who had flown in from Hong Kong to pick up her results. The continued improvement in our GCSE and A Level results show that our students are really up for the challenge. So the combined number of entries for ICT and computing stood at 114,408 last year, falling to 77,407 computing students this year, a 32% drop. Some very proud parents out there on Twitter ... Well . “It is great to see so many staff and parents here at school this morning to share in the success of our students.”. David Morton, headmaster, said: “We are very proud of our hard-working Fifth Form pupils. “The encouraging part of that is that females are thinking ‘this is as much a part of my world as it it my brother’s’, so I think that’s a really good thing.”, Derek Richardson, vice president and responsible officer at the Pearson examinations body, said: “Increases in computing entries and outcomes - for both females and males - show that young people recognise the changing nature of the world and are preparing themselves for needing an increasingly digital toolkit for their future studies or careers. Not to be outdone by all the many reforms undertaken in England in recent years, Northern Ireland decided to shake things up, introducing a new C* grade in 2019, equivalent to the English 5 grade. “It has been interesting this week to hear the many voices raised in opposition to the EBacc, which pushes schools to offer only a narrow core of academic subjects with only a couple of extra options for other subjects covering the arts, technology, creative and vocational subjects. Headteacher Bradley Nash joined by Heather Campbell from the Department for Education, is delighted with the results achieved by his “awesome team”. I say! But this morning I was overcome with nerves - it is so much worse when it is out of your hands!”, Rosie Mason, who got seven 9s and four 8s, said: “I have never felt like this in my life. “The improvement in the uptake of French and Spanish this year is encouraging, but it is nowhere near enough to make up for the decline in entries to modern foreign languages since 2010. Before computing, which was first introduced as a GCSE subject in 2014, there was ICT. Isaac De Bos and Walter Lovell from Marling School in Stroud are both off to Sixth Form. Pass percentage; Table Spanish was taken by almost 97,000 students took this year - an impressive 8% gain on last year - while German decreased by 3% to 41,000. Students at the Dean Academy celebrate their success in their GCSEs (from left to right): Anna-Fleur Geelhoed, Freya Fox, Megan Underwood, Libby Beddis and Holly Davis. Max Marshall, who received fours 9s, three 8s, one 7 and two 6s, said: “I am happy with my results and quite surprised”, Tom Morris, who received five 9s, three 8s, one A, a 7 and a 6, said: “I was thrilled I got back in to Sir Thomas Rich’s sixth form”, Jack Stanley, who received four 8s, two 7s and four 6s, said: “I did the work along side my rugby training.

I am also a little stunned at the results and we have both been very emotional. You may not know exactly what you want to do and you may not want to go to university. “I don’t really fit well in a school environment. Charlotte, who dreams of getting into creative marketing or advertising one day, will begin A Levels in Graphic Design, Psychology and Business in September. GCSE results 2019: The who, what, where and how of grade 9s. My thanks to our brilliant staff for their excellent teaching and support, and of course to parents for their terrific support throughout.”. FFT Education Datalab, part of FFT, produces independent, cutting-edge research on education policy and practice. While the proportion of A grades and above grew to 31.4%, the percentage of students achieving a C grade or above (including the new C* grade) also increased marginally. View our online Press Pack. Could you cope teaching a class full of masked pupils? GCSE courses are also taken by students in Wales and Northern Ireland where there have been separate exam reforms. I couldn’t have done this without them.”. Dean Close is celebrating its GCSE results with pupils, parents and teachers following the publication of this year’s ‘record breaking’ scores. The proportion received by both girls and boys has increased slightly, with grade 9’s accounting for 5.4 per cent of all grades received by girls, up from 5.2 per cent last year, and 3.9 per cent of all grades received by boys, up from 3.8 per cent last year. We are going to take her out for a meal to celebrate.”. I can’t believe it! “English and maths have done well and pupils have done got results high than the national average.”. Dr Philip Wright, director general of JCQ, said: “Students and teachers have done a great job during a period of reform as this year’s results have overall been stable, with small increases in pass rates at 7/A and 4/C. Secondary schools across the Forest of Dean, Gloucester, Cheltenham, Stroud, Tewkesbury and the Cotswolds opened up early on to welcome nervous pupils in to receive those dreaded envelopes. The proportion receiving the top grades - at least a 7 or an A grade - is the highest since 2015 and marks the second year-on-year rise in a row. Amy Walker has been speaking to delighted pupils at a voluntary aided King David High School in Liverpool – a Jewish school that admits children from 11 to 18 of all faiths.

“It is testament to both the students’ hard work and the quality of teaching that we have seen such fantastic progress being made by the entire year group. She achieved above her predicted grades, and got 9 in English language. “The percentage of students achieving 2 Science grades at Grade 4 or above has increased and performance has been maintained in Maths and English. 290 pupils achieved nine; 4.

"An important consideration, of course, is that this year there are more GCSE subjects that are being graded 9-1, and that makes a comparison with last year a little tricky.”, It only takes a moment and you'll get access to more news, plus courses, jobs and teaching resources tailored to you, Exclusive: Move by two teaching unions is aimed at boosting pay for thousands of supply teachers, A one-stop shop for teachers who want to know what impact the ongoing pandemic will have on their working lives, Mother who left school at 13 and autistic student honoured in this year's celebration of lifelong learning, Chief medical officer tells MPs that - 'on balance of risk' – the government's view is that children should be in school, Catch-up funding will 'almost certainly need to be increased' because of 'the scale of the task at hand', provider warns, Parentkind says PTAs have seen their income drop by more than a third during 2020 because of the pandemic, A new series of the TV show starts tonight, but the real drama was happening behind-the-scenes, Maintaining bursary levels was 'not defensible' in light of rise in ITT applications due to Covid, teacher trainers told, Poorer pupils would be harder hit by use of mock exams for next summer's GCSEs and A Levels, experts warn, Education can't be reduced to a simple argument about the right way or wrong way of doing things, says Jude Moir.



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