
Some 26.7 per cent of papers was awarded the top mark - an increase of 0.8
percentage points compared with 2008. It represented the 12th straight rise in A grades. Figures published by the Joint Council for Qualifications also showed the overall pass rate soared to 97.5 per cent – the 27th year-on-year increase – triggering claims the A-level was now almost “impossible to fail”.
For the first time, more than three-quarters of all A-levels were graded at
least a C, results showed. Girls continued to outperform boys but the gap in the
number of A grades narrowed to its lowest since 2003. Results for more than
310,000 students across England, Wales and Northern Ireland were hailed by
ministers as the “sign of a thriving education system”. It is expected to trigger an unprecedented scramble for degree places following a record rise in the number of sixth-formers applying to university this year.
Wow it's a miracle now watch as muck up day is introduced and eggs and grades die for the rest o year in other words you are doomed you are doomed because now they are are going to get all well full of themselves and, "In England crime has gone up after muck up day has gone terribly wrong."
No comments:
Post a Comment