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Boys catching up with girls in GCSE exam performance, new results show | Boys catching up with girls in GCSE exam performance, new results show |
(34 minutes later) | |
Boys are closing the gap with girls in GCSE performance, after the Government scrapped coursework. | |
Girls have dominated results day for most of the past two decades - almost since the GCSE with its reliance on coursework was first introduced. | |
But this year’s results showed that girls only did 8.4 per cent better than boys - down from 8.8 percentage points last year. In total 64.7 per cent of boys obtained A* to C grade passes compared to just 64.3 per cent in 2014. | |
Overall, the results - received by 600,000 teenagers - showed a rise in the number of top grade A* to C grade passes with almost seven out of 10 entries (69 per cent) awarded at least a C grade pass. (Getty Images) Headteachers’ leaders said the narrowing of the gap was likely to be down to former Education Secretary Michael Gove’s exam reforms. He ushered in a switch away from marked coursework, towards a reliance on the end-of-course exam. | |
Research has shown that boys perform better in a “sudden death” end of term exam while girls prefer the methodological approach of doing coursework that counts towards the final exam grade. | Research has shown that boys perform better in a “sudden death” end of term exam while girls prefer the methodological approach of doing coursework that counts towards the final exam grade. |
This year’s shrinking of the gender gap has been achieved through boys improving their results whilst the performance of girls remains static. | |
Brian Lightman, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: “Boys’ underachievement has tended to be because they do things at the last minute.” | |
In maths, the number of candidates getting at least a C grade pass rose by 3.7 per cent to 65.4 per cent. (PA) He added: “We need now to make sure girls don’t under-achieve in the next phase of GCSEs.” | |
Overall, the results - received by 600,000 teenagers - showed a rise in the number of top grade A* to C grade passes with almost seven out of 10 entries awarded at least a C grade. However, there was a slight drop in the number of A* grades awarded - down 0.1 per cent to 6.6 per cent. the fourth year in a row that they have fallen. | |
The number of students taking science subjects increased by 3.8 per cent - going some way to reversing a 9.7 per cent drop in 2014. | |
In English, there was a 0.5 per cent drop in the number of A* grades awarded to 3.1 per cent but the number of A* to C grades rose by 3.7 to 65.4 per cent. | |
Figures showed a 22.9 per cent rise in the number of 17-year-olds and over taking English and a 30.2 per cent increase in taking maths. (Getty Images) In maths, the number of candidates getting at least a C grade pass rose by 3.7 per cent to 65.4 per cent. | |
The English and maths results also saw a rise in the number of older teenagers taking the exams - as a result of the Government’s insistence that pupils who failed to obtain at least a C grade in either subject at 16 should be forced to take them again. | The English and maths results also saw a rise in the number of older teenagers taking the exams - as a result of the Government’s insistence that pupils who failed to obtain at least a C grade in either subject at 16 should be forced to take them again. |
Figures showed a 22.9 per cent rise in the number of 17-year-olds and over taking English and a 30.2 per cent increase in taking maths. The percentage gaining a C grade pass was much lower - 37.9 per cent and 38.9 per cent respectively compared with an average of 61.7 per cent and 62.4 per cent. | |
However, Mark Dawe, chief executive of the OCR [Oxford, Cambridge and Royal Society of Art] exam board, said: “English and maths are really important subjects - 40,000 students have now got A* to C grades in maths and 35,000 in English who didn’t have it – that’s 75,000 students achieving it who weren’t there beforehand.” | |
Andrew Hall, chief executive of the AQA exam board, added: “I think that’s really encouraging for the nation.” He added that one should expect a lower pass rate from the 17-year-olds because of the calibre of student who was taking the exam. | Andrew Hall, chief executive of the AQA exam board, added: “I think that’s really encouraging for the nation.” He added that one should expect a lower pass rate from the 17-year-olds because of the calibre of student who was taking the exam. |
Mary Bousted, general secretary of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers, said: “We agree all students need to be literate and numerate. However, making them resit their GCSEs until they get a C grade is completely demotivating.” | |
The biggest rise in take up was in computing, which saw a 111.1 per cent increase in candidates to 16, 773. | The biggest rise in take up was in computing, which saw a 111.1 per cent increase in candidates to 16, 773. |