A-level results confirmed as top grades drop by 10% â but stay above pre-pandemic levels
If you're joining us this lunchtime we are now winding down our live coverage of Results Day 2023.
A huge congratulations to everyone across the country opening those envelopes this morning.
For those of you have been out and about today, here's the headlines:
The fraction of A-level entries awarded top grades is down on last year but still remains above pre-pandemic levels, it was confirmed this morning.
Hundreds of thousands of students across the country have received their A-level results in a year when ministers and the exams regulator in England aimed to return to pre-pandemic grading.
More than a quarter (27.2%) of UK entries were awarded an A or A* grade, down by 9.2 percentage points on last year when 36.4% achieved the top grades.
However, this was still higher than in 2019 – the last year that summer exams were taken before the pandemic – when 25.4% of entries were awarded A or A* grades.
The overall pass rate – the proportion of entries graded A* to E – has fallen to 97.3% this year, which is lower than 2022 (98.4%) and the pre-pandemic year of 2019 (97.6%).
The A*-E pass rate is at its lowest level since 2008 when it stood at 97.2%
The figures, published by the Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ), cover A-level entries from students in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
UK's first non-binary priest says God guided them to come out after an epiphanyIn England, exams regulator Ofqual had said this year’s A-level results would be lower than last year and they would be similar to those in 2019 as part of efforts to return to pre-pandemic grading.
It comes after Covid-19 led to an increase in top grades in 2020 and 2021, with results based on teacher assessments instead of exams.
Overall, the proportion of UK entries awarded the top A* grade this year has fallen by 5.7 percentage points to 8.9% compared with 14.6% in 2022, but it is higher than when it stood at 7.7% in 2019.
Boys have pulled ahead of girls at the top grade this year after female entries were in front for the last three years, with A* grades at 9.1% for the former compared with 8.8% for the latter.
Girls continued to outperform boys at A* and A but the gender gap has narrowed again this year.