Cynon Valley

Another record year for GCSEs in Wales

TEACHER-ASSESSED EXAMS SEES 10% LEAP IN TOP MARKS

- ABBIE WIGHTWICK Education Editor abbie.wightwick@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WALES has posted another year of record GCSE results with a 10% leap in top grades awarded and a rise in grades at key subjects.

Nearly three in 10 results achieved A* to A grades.

Qualificat­ions Wales and the WJEC were unable to provide results at A* only. The overall pass rate at all grades fell very slightly this year, after results were assessed by teachers for the second year.

Students were told their expected grades by teachers in June but they were confirmed today along with the all Wales results.

GCSE Results follow record A-level results earlier this week.

Results at a glanceData from regulator Qualificat­ions Wales and exam board WJEC shows:

28.7% of entries achieved an A* or A, that’s 3% up on last year’s 25.5% and a 10% leap on the 18.4% getting the top results in 2019 -the last year traditiona­l exams were sat.

73.6% of grades were marked A* to C compared with compared with 73.8% in 2020 and more than 10% ahead of 2019 when 62.8% achieved this taking exams.

This summer 98.5% passed between grades A* to G, a slight drop on last year’s 99.6% but up on the last year that exams were sat in 2019 when 97.2% achieved this.

There were 328,658 GCSE entries this summer, a rise of 8.6% compared to 2020.

There was a 19% pass rate at the top A* to A grades for learners who sat the National/Foundation Skills Challenge Certificat­e in Wales.

Broadly similar patterns in results have been seen in England and Northern Ireland.

England has a different grading system, running from 9-1, with 9-7 equivalent to A*-A, 9-4 equivalent to A*-C and 9-1 equivalent to A*-G.

Exam board WJEC and exam regulator Qualificat­ions Wales said results will be different to pre-pandemic years owing to the different way they have been assessed by teachers after exams were ditched again thanks to Covid.

“Given that grades have been determined by an alternativ­e approach this year, we anticipate­d the overall distributi­on of grades to differ from those in a standard year,” the WJEC said.

Results at key subjects Mathematic­s

A*-A grades awarded rose by 4.8 percentage points to 21.6%.

A*-C grades awarded rose 3.1 percentage points to 64.6%, Maths numeracy A*-C grades rose 3.4 percentage points to 65.3%.

A*-A grades rose by 4.7 percentage points to 22.6%.

English Language

A* to A grades rose 5.0 percentage points from 17.7% in 2020 to 22.7% this year.

A*-C grades rose to 71.3% compared with 58.9% in 2020. Welsh First Language

Entries for GCSE Welsh First Language have increased by 9 percentage points this year.

A*-A grades rose from 22.4% in 2020 to 25.8% this year.

A*- C are stable, with a slight increase of 0.2 percentage points at 78.9%.

Many learners of vocational qualificat­ions will also be receiving their Level 1 and 2 results today and some will have been determined in a similar way to GCSE.

GCSE results follow record A-level results earlier this week with nearly half being the top A* to A grades, almost twice as many as in 2019 before the Covid pandemic.

Exam Regulator Qualificat­ions Wales said results are not comparable to previous years because of the different circumstan­ces with teacher assessed grades rather than sat exams – but insisted they are of the same value.

“The grades GCSE learners are receiving today have relied on the profession­al judgement of teachers and lecturers. Schools and colleges have been at the heart of the approach,” said Qualificat­ions Wales chief executive Philip Blaker.

“We would like to thank them for their dedication and hard work in adapting swiftly to the flexible arrangemen­ts put in place so that grades are awarded.

“Exams were cancelled due to the pandemic and schools and colleges have been in the best position to make the right decisions for their learners as they understand the local challenges faced.

“Learners can be confident that the qualificat­ions awarded in Wales this year carry the same value as qualificat­ions awarded in any other year.”

Congratula­ting teenagers on their results Education Minister Jeremy Miles said: “Our priority this year has been to put a system in place so that learners receive grades based on evidence of their work and enables them to progress to the next stage of their education, training or work with confidence.

“My message to this year’s GCSE students is a huge ‘well done’. You’ve had everything thrown at you over the last 18 months – periods in lockdown, time away from your friends and families, and times where you’ve missed out on many of the social activities you should be enjoying.

“I also want to congratula­te learners on their vocational qualificat­ion results. Skills in priority sectors are vitally important in meeting the range of needs of the Welsh economy, now more than ever, and your hardearned qualificat­ions will put you in good stead for the future.

“It’s also been a remarkable achievemen­t by all the school and college staff who’ve worked so hard to enable qualificat­ions this year.”

This is how GCSE grades were awarded this year

GCSE, A Level and AS exams for summer 2021 were cancelled by the Welsh Government in November 2020.

It then set up the Design and Delivery Advisory Group, with representa­tive membership from school and college leaders, to develop alternativ­e arrangemen­ts and make recommenda­tions to the Minister.

The group was supported by Qualificat­ions Wales and WJEC from a regulation and operationa­l perspectiv­e.

Following discussion­s, it was decided that schools and colleges would use their profession­al judgement to determine learners’ grades (Centre-Determined Grades) for Qualificat­ions Wales’ approved qualificat­ions, using evidence from the specificat­ion content their students had been taught.

The WJEC said: “Exam boards supported schools and colleges through the provision of extensive assessment materials, guidance and training, and external quality assurance, which ensured grades were determined appropriat­ely.”

“Data for 2021 is provisiona­l, as the planned completion date of the WJEC appealrevi­ew process is after the publicatio­n of this document,” Qualificat­ions Wales said.

 ??  ?? Students celebrated their results after another year of Covid disruption to education
Students celebrated their results after another year of Covid disruption to education

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