The National - News

Passes in England, Wales and Northern Ireland slip

- NICOLA GWYER London

After far-reaching changes in the GCSE system, nervous teenagers filed through the school gates yesterday morning amid expectatio­ns that pass rates had slipped.

A new numerical grading system and tougher exams pushed down the overall performanc­e, although the picture was mixed.

The English literature pass rate fell 2.5 per cent in England to 72 per cent, but the maths pass rate rose 7.4 per cent to 68.9 per cent.

Overall in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the percentage of passes dropped 0.6 per cent to 66.3 per cent, while A* to C pass rates in Wales fell to its lowest since 2006.

“The new GCSEs are more challengin­g, and there are more papers, and this is putting severe pressure on young people,” said Geoff Barton, general secretary at the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders.

“We support a robust qualificat­ion system but it has to be balanced against the welfare of young people, and we are not sure the balance in the new system is correct.”

At Pimlico Academy in southwest London, pupils were generally pleased as they collected their results, but there were mixed emotions for some.

Sarah Al Samm, 16, said: “I’m too scared to open my results now. I’ve got to go home and open them there.

“Overall, people at this school are very happy though; there’s lots of good grades.”

Even students who did well expressed confusion over the numerical system.

“I’m really happy with all my results, and my friends have done very well too,” said Benisa Krasniqi, 16.

“I don’t really see the point in the new numbers system for maths and English though, it just makes it quite confusing.

“The numbers make it feel like you’ve done worse than you really have, like you could get a 5 and that doesn’t sound that great but actually it’s like a low B or high C.”

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