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GCSEs

(83 Posts)
watermeadow Thu 21-Aug-25 12:41:45

Any other proud grannies utterly confused by the new grades?
Everybody understood ABCetc. Last year they were a strange mix of letters, numbers, stars, Ms. This year they are 1 to 8 and probably mean nothing outside the school staff room.
How will employers decipher this in 10 or 20 year’s time? And why are A levels still letters? And why is every change a change for the worse?

Mamie Thu 21-Aug-25 12:50:17

GCSE grades have been 1-9 since 2017.
www.gov.uk/government/publications/gcse-9-to-1-grade-scale-explained/gcse-9-to-1-grade-scale-explained

escaped Thu 21-Aug-25 12:52:55

And why do you need an A* anyway?

Magenta8 Thu 21-Aug-25 13:00:31

My GS's GCSE results came out this morning and were graded 9 top down to 4 pass. These were applicable to several different boards.

fancythat Thu 21-Aug-25 13:03:42

Oh. I didnt realise they were new grades. No wonder I didnt understand them!

Not a grannie situation, but I know someone whose son came top in the Country for a subject![not English or Maths].

Ladyleftfieldlover Thu 21-Aug-25 13:10:14

There were numbered grades when I did O levels. 1-9. 1 was best, 9 the worst.

Sadgrandma Thu 21-Aug-25 13:15:50

Ladyleftfieldlover
Same here, other way round now though, 9 is equivalent to A* or A depending on the score 1 bottom score.

Poppyred Thu 21-Aug-25 13:22:36

Someone gets paid shed loads to jumble the numbers/letters around……and talking goggoldy gook as white it’s necessary 🤣

merlotgran Thu 21-Aug-25 13:29:24

Ladyleftfieldlover

There were numbered grades when I did O levels. 1-9. 1 was best, 9 the worst.

Same here. I think anything below six was a fail (or was it seven? 🤔)

ginny Thu 21-Aug-25 14:02:44

How will employers decipher this in 10 or 20 year’s time.

I doubt they will give them a second glance by then.

JamesandJon33 Thu 21-Aug-25 14:06:00

When I did O levels in 1955; 9 was the highest, equivalent to an A.
My GD2 got her results this morning. I don’t know the numbers or grades, but there were tears of joy all.

Cronesrule Thu 21-Aug-25 14:22:51

They change them every few years. Gives the illusion that some politicians and/or educationalists have “improved” something. I take no notice now. After 50 years, I still feel traumatised watching the results days on the news though! Thanking goodness it is not me!

Magenta8 Thu 21-Aug-25 14:37:26

When I sat my London Board O'levels over 60 years ago they were graded A downwards, E being the lowest pass mark. Two years earlier my brother sat O/C Combined Board which were graded 1 downwards. My sister did NEA/JMB. The many different boards not only had different grading systems they also did not run the same timetable for the different subjects. So, things were pretty confusing even back then.

Mamie Thu 21-Aug-25 14:38:00

So GCSEs were introduced in 1988 with A grades to G, in 1994 an A* was added and in 2017 1 to 9 started to be used. Two changes in pretty much 30 years.
Is it really that difficult to comprehend?

REKA Thu 21-Aug-25 14:41:26

It was a pointless change

Sarnia Thu 21-Aug-25 14:51:17

REKA

It was a pointless change

The education system in this country loves making pointless changes.
I was aware of the change from a few single letters to lots more numbers. No need for it really.
My grandson who has been in special schools throughout his education due to his autism passed all his 5 GCSE's. He was convinced he would have to resit Maths but passed that too. He will never have to fret over algebra ever again. Super proud of him.

Chardy Thu 21-Aug-25 14:58:26

O level exam boards did their own thing, hence some were letters, others numbers. (All CSE grades were 1-> 7. Grade 1 was O level equivalent, 1->5 a CSE pass)
GCSE was supposed to pull it all together, hence every exam board was A->G.
It changed 9->1 so that in few years they can easily stick another number on the end!
Remember these changes are rarely (never?) made for educational reasons, but political ones

Mamie Thu 21-Aug-25 15:00:01

The numbers were introduced for clearer differentiation in the top grades.

silverlining48 Thu 21-Aug-25 15:05:59

There was a point system when my children were doing A levels. Grammar school.
Pupils needed a certain amount of points from all exams taken to get into university. They were still marked ABC etc.
I got cross because the boys school all did general studies at A level, on top of the rest, so obviously ended up with more points added. The girls school didn’t have that extra opportunity.

Calendargirl Thu 21-Aug-25 15:40:25

I don’t know why the results aren’t just e mailed out to the candidates?

Why do they need to go in and colllect them?

All the hysterical tears and laughter, and dolled up to the nines like a fashion parade, with full make up and hair do’s, or so it seems on the News.

Back in the day, they were just sent out in the post!

Magenta8 Thu 21-Aug-25 15:53:31

Calendargirl A few schools have sent out GCSE results by e-mail this year but, like most people GS had to go in.

I hope that GNs' GCs all got what they wanted/needed for the next stage. Best wishes to you all.

westendgirl Thu 21-Aug-25 15:55:50

I remember my O level results with the Northern bard were the exact mark .They were posted and also in the local paper.I am talking over 70 years ago. I did the Northern board,J.M.B.

Allira Thu 21-Aug-25 15:56:37

Ladyleftfieldlover

There were numbered grades when I did O levels. 1-9. 1 was best, 9 the worst.

Yes, now it's the opposite.

And yes, ours were just sent out in the post. No fuss, although the results were published in the local paper. Why?

I think they're still A to E in Wales but will be changing yet again from this September. Why?
Will the first pupils to take exams under the new system be the guinea pigs?

growstuff Thu 21-Aug-25 15:59:49

silverlining48

There was a point system when my children were doing A levels. Grammar school.
Pupils needed a certain amount of points from all exams taken to get into university. They were still marked ABC etc.
I got cross because the boys school all did general studies at A level, on top of the rest, so obviously ended up with more points added. The girls school didn’t have that extra opportunity.

That had nothing to do with the exam boards. Some offers of university courses are made on the basis of points rather than ABB (or whatever). The system can be more flexible because it allows for different qualifications which have a points equivalence.

AFAIK the A level grades haven't changed since I did them.

Allira Thu 21-Aug-25 16:04:06

JamesandJon33

When I did O levels in 1955; 9 was the highest, equivalent to an A.
My GD2 got her results this morning. I don’t know the numbers or grades, but there were tears of joy all.

It must have changed shortly afterwards because I took mine in 1962 and 1 was the highest grade down to 9.

My SisIL took the Matriculation which needed a pass in 5 or 6 subjects before you got the Certificate, I think.