West Midlands youngsters notch up record exam results
Friday 22nd October 2010, 10:00PM BST.
Pupils in the West Midlands scored record GCSE and A-levels results.
The number of students who gained five or more good GCSE grades in Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall, Wolverhampton and Birmingham rose this year to its record high.
Pass rates at A-level throughout the region also improved overall — although pupils in Birmingham did worse this year compared with last year. About 77 per cent of students in Wolverhampton got five or more A*-C grades in 2009-10 — up by 6.6 per cent on 2008-09.
The number of A-level students in the city who gained two or more passes has risen slightly to 83.2 per cent from 83.1 per cent.
In Dudley the figure of GCSE pupils achieving the top grades was 74.4 per cent, up from 65.3 per cent on last year. While 95.7 per cent of students pass two A-levels or more — up from 95 per cent in 2008-09.
Meanwhile in Birmingham, 81 per cent of students got good GCSE results, compared to 72 per cent during 2008-09.
But at A-level, the number of pupils gaining two or more passes fell from 94.3 per cent to 93.9 per cent across the second city.
Sandwell saw a nine per cent increase, with 74.4 per cent gaining good GCSE grades. While pupils gaining two or more passes at A-level was 87 per cent — up from 83.4 per cent.
In Walsall, 74.6 per cent received five or more A*-C grades, up from 64.1 per cent last year.
Students aged 16-18 gaining two or more passes at A-level was up from 86.1 per cent to 87.3 per cent.
Schools minister Nick Gibb said: “GCSEs are an important step in a young person’s education, whether to further academic study, vocational education or into the workplace and training.
“A-levels are an important milestone in life and open up great opportunities for academic study in higher education and for future careers.
“They are a crucial measure of academic achievement and so we will work with universities and employers to ensure that these qualifications continue to meet their needs in the future.”
Nationally, around 53 per cent of pupils achieved five or more GCSEs at grade A*-C including English and Maths, an increase of 3.3 per cent compared from 2008-09.
Meanwhile a total of 93.6 per cent of candidates achieved two A-level passes, compared with 95.1 per cent in 2008-09.
The provisional figures were released by the Department for Children, Schools and Families.
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Having read the open letter from Michael Gove to Sue Campbell I just felt I had to say that I find it difficult to put into words the contempt that I feel for our Secretary of State for Education. Although I understand the need for sweeping financial cuts to reduce the national debt, to dismiss the School Sport Partnership programme considering the progress that has been made over the last 10 years and the subsequent benefits that our young people have received has made it all the more bemusing.
Physical Education has been the vehicle for the delivery, not just of sporting activity, but of opportunities for our children to improve their own self esteem, to develop social skills, improve their behaviour and to improve their attendance. All of these attributes have helped our young people to perform to a significantly higher standard across all areas of the curriculum.
Leadership through Physical Education has given young people the opportunity to experience a variety of different roles through which they have grown in confidence and they now understand that people with a range of skills are necessary for success in any walk of life. ‘The whole being greater than the sum of it’s parts’. To see ‘Leadership’ being rolled out across other curriculum areas is rewarding to all those of us who see Physical Education as a key mover for change.
Although I have benefited from a life of competitive sport, making a host of friends along the way, I feel that the current administration’s obsession with competition is not based upon a deep understanding of the present competition landscape. Do they not understand the logistics behind yet more competition. PE staff are already extremely busy running regular OSHL opportunities, school mini buses are limited, mini bus drivers are in even shorter supply.
If the Secretary of State for Education surrounded himself with people who understood Physical Education, it’s richness and it’s power, surely he would have supported and not destroyed the School Sport Partnership movement.
Am I upset ? Am I angry ? Am I disillusioned ? You bet I am !
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