The Daily Telegraph

GCSES may need grade 10 after so many students gain top marks

- By Camilla Turner EDUCATION EDITOR

GCSE results may need a grade 10, a private school chief has suggested, as he revealed that the “most common” mark this year was 9 at some of the country’s top fee-paying institutio­ns.

Barnaby Lenon, the chairman of the Independen­t Schools Council (ISC), disclosed that there are now a growing number of private schools where the majority of GCSES students are given 9s, the highest possible grade.

Mr Lenon, who is a former headmaster at the £41,775-a-year Harrow School, said: “Nobody envisaged this three years ago. It does leave room for a grade 10.”

This year, almost a quarter (23.1 per cent) of private school GCSES were awarded a grade 9.

Across the whole of England, 837 students were awarded a clean sweep of seven grade 9s, Ofqual said, compared with 732 last year.

Of those awarded seven grade 9s, two thirds (66.4 per cent) were girls.

London’s Westminste­r School came top in the private school GCSE league tables, with 98.61 per cent of students achieving grades 7, 8 or 9, equivalent to As and A*s.

The school, which charges up to £41,600 a year, counts Helena Bonham-carter, the actress, and Sir Nick Clegg, the former deputy prime minister, among its alumni.

Mr Lenon said that, for now, the grade 9 serves its purpose in differenti­ating ability at the top end of the grading system.

“The number of grade 9s is rationed to avoid the possibilit­y of grade inflation anyway,” he told the Times Education Supplement magazine. But he added that a grade 10 could be introduced in the future “if over time the general standard of pupils at the top end continues to rise”.

“Given we were told grade 9s would be very rare, it’s astonishin­g there are schools where it’s the most common grade,” he said.

This summer was the first group to take the reformed courses in virtually all subjects.

The new GCSES were created by Michael Gove, the former education secretary, as part of an attempt to inject

‘Given that we were told grade 9s would be rare, it’s astonishin­g there are schools where it’s the most common’

rigour into the qualificat­ions and bring the UK in line with top performing countries in the Far East.

The exams, which are marked in numerical grades of nine to one rather than A* to G, are designed to separate the very highest achievers with the A* now split between grades 8 and 9.

More than half of students were awarded a grade 9 in certain subjects, GCSE data shows.

Of those taking Chinese GCSE, 59 per cent were awarded the highest grade, according to figures compiled by the Joint Council for Qualificat­ions.

A spokesman from the exams regulator Ofqual said: “Our role is to ensure that standards are maintained in GCSES in England and we have no intention to introduce any additional grades above grade 9.”

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