A-level results 2024: A* grades rise by 8%

Top grades up slightly on last year - but huge rise in students getting three A*s

Top grades up slightly on last year - but huge rise in students getting three A*s

The proportion of A*s achieved by England’s students has risen by eight per cent as the post-Covid grading standard emerges.

This year, 27.6 per cent of grades were A or above, up from 26.5 per cent in 2023 – a rise of 4 per cent. It’s also nearly 10 per cent higher than the 25.2 per cent in pre-pandemic 2019.

But the proportion of A* grades has increased 8 per cent on last year – equating to a 20 per cent rise since pre-pandemic 2019.

Meanwhile, there’s been a huge 50 per cent rise in students getting three A*s since the pandemic.

Last year was the first that grades were pulled back to pre-pandemic standards after a rise when exams were cancelled during Covid.

This year’s A-level students were in year 9 when the pandemic hit. They were the first cohort to take GCSEs after they were brought back.

Ofqual explained the rise by saying they asked exam boards to “maintain standards” from 2023, essentially meaning that is now the new grading benchmark.

It means the “standard of work required to get any particular grade” is the same as last year, chief regulator Sir Ian Bauckham said. Any changes in grade are down to “how strong the cohort is as a whole”, he added.

Huge leap in kids getting three A*s

Looking at A* grades only, these have risen from 8.6 per cent in 2023, to 9.3 per cent this year, an 8 per cent rise. It’s also 20 per cent more than the 7.7 per cent of A*s achieved in pre-pandemic 2019.

The number of students getting 3 A*s has soared by nearly 50 per cent since the pandemic, up from 2,785 in 2019, to 4,135 this year. The number of entries has increased since 2019, but only by 11 per cent.

Of those getting three A*s this year, 57 per cent were girls and 43 per cent boys.

In 2019, top grades slumped to their lowest since 2007

Bauckham added: “Congratulations to all students receiving their results today. This is the culmination of a lot of hard work for them and everyone who supported them on the way.

“A-levels are highly trusted qualifications. Students can be confident their results will be valued and understood by employers and universities for years to come.”

Overall, the proportion of C grades and above this year was 76 per cent, slightly up on 75.4 per cent last year and 75.5 per cent in 2019.

Regional attainment gap widens

The regional attainment gap has increased slightly this year. London had the highest proportion of A* and A grades (31.8 per cent), compared to 22.5 per cent in the East Midlands, the lowest. 

This is a gap of 8.8 percentage points, slightly wider than the gap between the highest and lowest attaining regions in 2023. In 2019, the gap was 7.3 percentage points.

Thirty per cent of grades in London were A or above this year, a 3.1 percentage point rise on 2019. Meanwhile, the north east had just 22 per cent of top grades, a 1 percentage point fall since 2019.

Pepe Di’Iasio, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: “While the dark days of the pandemic are in the past, its legacy continues to haunt us, as many of these students experienced severe disruption to their education. 

“In particular, this impacted upon young people from disadvantaged backgrounds whose families were also adversely affected by the subsequent cost-of-living crisis”.

The “wide gaps” in attainment between English regions are a “sign of the deep inequalities in our society, and we welcome the new government’s focus on tackling child poverty and disadvantage. This work will need to produce tangible results sooner rather than later.”

More poorer pupils land uni spot

Despite this, UCAS data shows the proportion of students from the poorest backgrounds securing a university place has risen to 19.6 per cent, up from 18.7 per cent last year but slightly down from 19.9 per cent in 2022.

Margaret Farragher, chief executive of JCQ, which represents exam boards, said: “While the pandemic is now behind us, we must acknowledge that this group of students faced disruption during their education and pay tribute to their resilience.

“I would also like to recognise and thank exams officers and teachers for supporting students with their assessments. They have once again helped to deliver a smooth and successful exam series, evident from today’s results.”

There were a total of 816,948 A-level entries this year, up from 797,352 last year (a 2.5 per cent rise) and 736,746 in 2019.

Latest education roles from

Head of Faculty

Head of Faculty

FEA

Business Development Manager 

Business Development Manager 

EducationScape

Chief Executive Officer – Blessed Chiara Badano Catholic Education Trust

Chief Executive Officer – Blessed Chiara Badano Catholic Education Trust

Diocese of Leeds

Director of Education

Director of Education

Excelsior Multi Academy Trust

Sponsored posts

Sponsored post

From Classroom to Catalyst: How Apprentices Are Driving Innovation in the Workplace

The economy is increasingly shaped by productivity challenges, skills reform and the urgent need for innovation led growth.

Advertorial
Sponsored post

What you missed in the post-16 consultation response

With the publication of the government’s response to the post-16 skills pathway consultation, there’s been lots of media outlets...

Advertorial
Sponsored post

Apprenticeship reform: An opportunity to future‑proof skills and unlock career pathways

The apprenticeship landscape is undergoing one of its most significant transformations in decades, and that’s good news for learners,...

Advertorial
Sponsored post

Stronger learners start with supported educators

Further Education (FE) and skills professionals show up every day to change lives. They problem-solve, multi-task and can carry...

Advertorial

More from this theme

Assessment, Young people

Functional skills to remain as DfE unveils ‘stepping-stone’ GCSE resit courses

New level 1 quals could have modular assessment to 'bank progress' and improve student confidence

FE Week Reporter
Assessment

Ofqual scrutinising Edexcel’s A-level maths replacement paper

Over 2,000 students sign petition after substitute paper ‘lacked key topics’ 

Freddie Whittaker
Apprenticeships, Assessment

Ofqual publishes ‘flexible’ apprenticeship assessment rules

Watchdog sets out how it will do away with end point assessment and monitor training providers marking their own...

Shane Chowen
Assessment

Ofqual demands ‘honesty’ in new rules for awarding organisations

Proposals include 'principles' that could see sanctions on organisations that undermine public confidence in qualifications

Shane Chowen

Your thoughts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *