‘Chronic’ under-performance of boys at GCSE should be treated as major issue
Professor Alan Smithers warns boys’ chronic GCSE under-performance risks harming the UK’s economic competitiveness as female top grades exceed male results by 5.7 percentage points.
- On the eve of results day, Professor Alan Smithers warned that the `chronic` under-performance of boys at GCSE demands urgent attention.
- Analysis shows girls outperformed boys with 22.0% of female GCSE entries and 19.0% of male entries last year, revealing a gender gap.
- Last year, 21.8% of UK GCSE entries reached at least a 7, under the 9 grading system, according to official data.
- Calling resits `soul-destroying`, Smithers urged policy reform and scrapping the English Baccalaureate due to low foreign language uptake.
- Education officials plan to publish reforms via the Schools White Paper later this year, following the curriculum and assessment review due in the autumn.
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‘Chronic’ under-performance of boys at GCSE should be treated as major issue
Pupils in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will receive their exam results on Thursday next week.
·London, United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleBoys performance at GCSE level should be 'national concern' performance '
Boys under-performance GCSE The level is labeled as “old” and should be considered as a “major issue”, a major education ... Read more The post Boys performance at GCSE level should be ‘national concern’ performance ‘ appeared first on The Local Report.
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Total News Sources43
Leaning Left3Leaning Right0Center34Last UpdatedBias Distribution92% Center
Bias Distribution
- 92% of the sources are Center
92% Center
C 92%
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