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Home UK N. Ireland

Fall in top GCSE grades in Northern Ireland

August 22, 2024
in N. Ireland
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Getty Images Four teenage girls holding white sheets of paper, discussing exam resultsGetty Images

It is thought the number of top grades may fall compared to last year

There has been a fall in the percentage of people receiving top GCSE grades in Northern Ireland in 2024 compared to last year.

About 31% of students achieved grade A and above, compared to the pre-pandemic levels of 30.5% in 2019.

Grades A* and A were awarded to about 34.5% of GCSE entries in 2023.

Entries for GCSE qualifications have also increased by 4.4% from 168,118 in 2023 to 175,555.

The Joint Council for Qualifications said that 82.7% of students received grades of C and above, “similar to the 82.2% awarded in 2019”.

Some 86% of GCSE entries in Northern Ireland were awarded grade C or above in 2023 and 90% in 2022.

Wide shot of Calla smiling in front of the camera. She has long brown hair and blue eyes. There are school chairs behind her in an assembly hall with a screen with the school logo which is a yellow cross in a white armour.

Calla achieved 10A*s in her GCSEs

It’s been a good start to the day for Calla from St Patrick’s Academy in Dungannon.

She achieved 10A*s in her GCSEs.

“I was a bit nervous driving in but I definitely feel better now”, she told BBC News NI.

Calla said she would like to do Biology, Chemistry, Maths and Irish at A-level.

“I haven’t decided which Uni I’d go to but I’m thinking of doing medicine.”

Caoimhin is smiling into the camera outside his school building which was red brick. He is wearing a blue hoody and has short brown curly hair.

Caoimhin achieved 9 A*s and 1 A in his GCSEs

Caoimhin plans to stay at St Patrick’s Academy in Dungannon for A-levels after finding out that he got 9A*s and 1 A in his GCSEs.

“I was nervous going into the exams but not as nervous coming here today”, he told BBC News NI.

“You can’t do anything about it at this stage. No point in stressing too much.”

Helena smiling in front of the camera. She has long curly brown hair. There are school chairs behind her in an assembly hall with teachers in the background.

Helena achieved 6A*s and 4A grades at A-level.

St Patrick’s Academy pupil Helena said she was “very nervous” and “very happy” after finding out her GCSE results.

She got 6A*s and 4As and hopes to study Chemistry, Physics and Software Development at A-level.

Analysis by Chris Page, BBC News Ireland Correspondent

31% of GCSE entries in Northern Ireland have received an A or A* grade – roughly in line with the proportion before the pandemic.

Last year, the figure was 34.5%.

The drop in the proportion of top grades was expected – given that results have been returning to the levels prior to the covid outbreak in 2020.

In 2019, 30.5% of entries in this part of the UK were A or higher.

82.7% of entries in 2024 received grade C or above

Using 2019 as a comparator, Maths and English Language results have been better, with a 2% increase in the number receiving A/A* – 27.8% in Maths, and 24.7% in English language.

Around 32,000 students in Northern Ireland are getting their exam grades today.

Senan Boy with black hair smiling Senan

Senan said he was hoping for good results on Thursday

GCSE, AS and A-level exams were cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to Covid-19 pandemic restrictions and pupils were awarded grades calculated by their schools instead.

In subsequent years, pupils have been given assistance including having advance information released about exam topics.

That had led to an increase in the number of top grades awarded, but GCSE results this year are likely to be similar to those in 2019.

BBC News NI spoke with some students in Northern Ireland ahead of receiving their results earlier this week.

Sixteen-year-old Senan from St Malachy’s College in Belfast is a keen musician and has already achieved an A* in GCSE Music which he took two years early.

“I had to do a performance, a composition and finally a written exam, listening to music and critiquing and evaluating,” he told BBC News NI.

“The music teachers were always brilliant and really supportive and have helped me a lot to get to where I am now.”

Apart from music, he also enjoys languages and maths, and is quietly confident about his results.

“I think they went alright; I tried my hardest and I can only hope for good results. I’m hoping for maybe As and Bs.”

He said the hardest thing about his GCSEs was time management.

“GSCEs really set you up and teach you a lot about time management and commitment; those real-life skills,” he said.

‘I am not going to compare myself’

Ariana A woman with large square glasses posing in front of a painted self-portrait. She is not smiling in either image and it looks like she is in a studioAriana

Ariana took Art as one of her GCSEs and painted this self-portrait

Ariana, from Parkhall Integrated College in Antrim, said she was “feeling a wee bit nervous” about her results.

“I know I possibly didn’t do the best I could’ve done at the time,” she said.

“I found the exam process difficult and especially having to settle into an exam routine.

“I found that I was quite burnt out by the end.

“My school were able to put in accommodations for me so I have hope, but I am not sure I’ve done the best I could have.”

Ariana wants to study politics, history and English literature at A-level and someday hopes to be a politician or a teacher.

“I am not going to put myself down if I have not done well,” she says.

“There is no point.”

“I am happy for those with top marks but people need to consider whatever circumstances they were in at the time.

“I am not going to compare myself to other people because I know my brain works differently and I excel in things other people do not.”

‘No point being nervous’

Daisy Daisy looking into the camera, she is wearing a white jumper and a gold chain and has long brown hairDaisy

Daisy says there are “other options” for people who did not get the grades they hoped for

Daisy, from Royal School Armagh, would like to study either law or physiotherapy in the future.

She said: “I have been keeping myself busy throughout summer but sometimes you just randomly remember you have to get these results right before you go to school.

“It’s nerve-racking not knowing for a whole summer and having to wait until the very end.”

Her message for other pupils was: “There is no point being nervous because you can’t change what is in that paper.

“Hopefully all your hard work has paid off and you got enough to do what you want to do, and if you don’t get back into sixth form, there are other options.”

The vast majority of GCSEs in Northern Ireland are taken by pupils through CCEA.

The remainder are taken through English and Welsh exam boards, so some pupils in Northern Ireland will receive results in the form of numbers as well as letters.

That is because GCSEs in England are graded numerically from 9 to 1.

Pupils use their GCSE and results of other qualifications like BTECs to progress to A-levels, courses in Further Education, training or employment.

Snobbery around apprenticeships ‘diminishing’

Richard Kirk, the CEO of Workplus told Good Morning Ulster that the “snobbery around apprenticeships is definitely diminishing but we need more employers to get involved.”

Workplus is an organisation that links employers with would-be apprentices.

Ella Dolan Ella has brown hair in a pony tail. She's standing by a grey Erne Campus entrance sign and she is wearing a red polo shirt with yellow writing on it. Ella Dolan

Ella is doing a traineeship with South West College Enniskillen in Light Vehicle Apprentice

After her GCSE’S, Ella decided to do a traineeship with South West College Enniskillen in Light Vehicle Apprentice.

“I absolutely love it”, she told BBC programme Good Morning Ulster.

“I choose to do it because school was very book based and that didn’t really suit me. I’m more of a hands on person and find it easier to learn something if I’m actually doing it.”

Jack Neill White wall background, shoulders up, Jack is smiling looking directly at the camera. He is wearing a blue fleece under a black waterproof looking coat. He has short brown hair. Jack Neill

Jack chose to do an apprenticeship at the Northern Region College, Coleraine

Jack was an Construction Engineering apprentice at the Northern Region College, Coleraine.

With a BTEC Level 3 Diploma and foundation degree under his belt, he is now doing an honour’s degree in Construction Engineering and Management.

“There was a stigma. I was never a fan of exams so I never really had the desire to do A-levels. I always had an interest in the construction industry.”



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