9 Things You Should Know About 9 to 1 GCSE Grades
- GCSEs in England are being reformed and will be graded with a new scale from 9 to 1, with 9 being the highest grade
- New GCSE content will be more challenging
- Fewer grade 9s will be awarded than A*s
- English language, English literature and maths will be the first to be graded from 9 to 1 in 2017
- Another 20 subjects will have 9 to 1 grading in 2018, with most others following in 2019. During this transition, students will receive a mixture of letter and number grades
- The new grades are being brought in to signal that GCSEs have been reformed and to better differentiate between students of different abilities
- In the first year each new GCSE subject is introduced, broadly the same proportion of students will get grades 1, 4 and 7 and above as would have got grades, G, C and A and above respectively in the old system
- Regulators in Wales and Northern Ireland are not introducing the new 9 to 1 grading scale as part of the changes to GCSEs in their jurisdictions
- Click on the image above to see how the 9 to 1 grades compare with the A* to G scale
For further information, the government website serves as a useful resource – Requirements & Guidance