Where you learn all of the content over 2 years and take all of the exams in the summer of the final year.
Well i am in year 8 and I'm preparing for earlier GCSE's which i will take this year and in my practice exams i got 2 A's and i am certain that it is 72% and A* is 87% for the higher tier but you can not acquire an A in Foundation Gcse
As long as you try your best and get anything from A to C
yes! GCSE exams are designed to test 15 -16 year olds so to get a B at age 11 is very good :-)
Well i am in year 8 and I'm preparing for earlier GCSE's which i will take this year and in my practice exams i got 2 A's and i am certain that it is 72% and A* is 87% for the higher tier but you can not acquire an A in Foundation Gcse
Most children take french GCSE in year 10 but in specialised language collages such as one in Stockport they take it in year 9 because they're clever.
Barring unforeseen circumstances. To within a few days, depending on how the dates fall, they finish at roughly the same time of year.
I was due to sit my exams for a maths resit in June 2020 but this has been cancelled due to the coronavirus. does anyone have any advice on what will happen to resit and gap year students. if exams are in June 2021 I would have to take another gap year out next year. Also, I'm a little confused if I do have to take another year out again next year I would be 18 or 19 when I start college and the government only funds for two years of your education. most colleges in my area only take students 16–18 year olds. I would not fit in this case . any advice?
Most GCSE exams take place during the summer months, such as Junes, however they do vary depending on what subject it is and if you are doing resits or not. For example, module GCSEs take place throughout the year.
no
you take NEWT in 7 year i.e final year there.
Yeah, in a btec you do coursework over the year as opposed to sitting in exams, so for people who may struggle in exam conditions BTECS may be the better option.