The analysis of annual UK figures shows how the most popular GCSE subjects have changed between 20. Last year, there were more than a quarter of a million entries for the subject, up around 42% on 10 years ago, according to analysis of exam figures. The number of entries for GCSE religious studies has soared in the last decade, driven by young people's increasing interest in 'exploring world views', it has been suggested. Here we look at just some of the memes and images flooding the internet after the results were released. Head teachers have warned parents not to make their children feel like 'failures' if they miss out on all grade 9s – with less than 0.2 per cent expected to achieve this.Īnd teaching unions said low-ability pupils were so 'demoralised' by the new exams this year that some refused to sit them. It means it is harder to score a clean sweep of the highest possible grades. The new 9-1 grading system replaces A* to E and allows greater differentiation between grades. The content has been made more challenging, with less coursework, and exams at the end of the two-year courses, rather than throughout. Half a million 16-year-olds will find out at around 10am today how they got on after becoming the first year-group whose exams were almost all in the tougher new format. One tweeted out their results paper with the caption: '5 years of b****** and I passed everything!'īut there were students who took to Twitter to bravely share their disappointment, including, one simply wrote: 'RIP Me', while another said: 'My life is f***** over'. Many took to social media to boast about their excitement and pride in their grades with hilarious memes and tweets, while other revealed they were surprised to pass classes they thought they would fail. Pupils around the country are either jumping for joy or in the depths of despair after the GCSE results were released on Thursday morning.
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