education

When do A-level results come out, how will they be graded and can you collect them at school?

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A-level results day is nearly upon us (Picture: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

In a historical first, pupils across the UK will soon receive their national school exam results without having actually sat an exam.

School exams were pulled for the first time in history this year after the country was plunged into lockdown in March to curb the spread of coronavirus.

And now the ‘results’ have started rolling in – starting with Scotland – where students today received their Scottish Qualification Authority (SQA) results.

The new grading system has not been without hitches, however, with many slamming the SQA’s decision to ‘moderate’ results based on the historical performance of the school rather than the pupil.

When will A-level results be released down South – and what methodology will be used to score them?

When is A-level results day?

Students in England will get their A-level results on the originally planned date of Thursday 13 August.

England’s exam regulator Ofqual has said results are likely to be higher than in previous years, and that it is expecting an increase of 2% for A-level grades.

Students in Scotland recieved their results via text today (Picture: Andy Buchanan/PA)

How can you pick up your A-level results?

As things currently stand, students will be able to pick up their results from their school or college any time after 6am on results day, which is when they are released by the exam board.

However, this will vary from place to place, so you’ll need to find out the exact opening times and restrictions of your place of study.

How are A-level results graded this year?

A-level results will be graded based on the anticipated grade of a student as well as their classwork, homework, mock assignments, and exams.

Schools and colleges were asked to send the exam board two pieces of information for each subject: the grade they believe each student would get if teaching had taken place, and an ordered list of students within each subject, based on their anticipated grade.

The latter piece of information aims to standardise judgments.

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In a letter to students, Sally Collier Chief Regulator, Ofqual said: ‘Your school or college will consider a range of things like your classwork and homework, your results in assignments and any mock exams, any non-exam assessment or coursework you might have done, and your general progress during your course.

‘This information will allow us, with exam boards, to standardise grades across schools and colleges, to make sure that, as far as possible, results are fair and that students are not advantaged or disadvantaged because their schools or colleges are more generous or harsh than others when making those judgements.

‘That means the final grade you get could be different from the one your school or college sends to the exam board.’

MORE: Why pupils from disadvantaged backgrounds will suffer most after cancelled GCSE and a-level exams

MORE: A-Levels and the end of school is a rite of passage that my generation has lost

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