GCSE stands for General Certificate of Secondary Education, and is a basic qualification. The exam will be at a time set by the exam board, and you will sit in a room with an invigilator (someone who watches you to make sure you aren't cheating) and do the test independantly. Don't worry about it, all schools do mocks, where you will basically do a runthrough of the exams so by the time you get to the real thing you will be more than ready
International General certificate of Secondary Education
This education is taken mostly by 14 - 16 year olds and is equivalent to GCSE and GCE although a little harder than them . This is being taken in most parts of the world
IGCSE's are internationally recognised whilst gcse's are not. schools today in the UK are changing their syllabuses's to suit the igcse curriculum as they believe it is a truer measure of one's capabilities. you see, IGCSE's are much harder than gcse's with regards to content of syllabus and examinations.
Igcse is internationally recognized and being taken in most parts of the world
so in theory if you can ace an igcse exam then the gcse should be a walk in the park.
A GCSE means General Certificate of Secondary Education, which is the qualification studied by those aged 15-16 in the United Kingdom.
GCSE is the normal GCSE that people do all over the UK regardless of what board it is. iGCSE is the GCSE that is done internationally (all over the country).
25th June 2010
Wednesday 27th June 2012
they are added together
As long as you try your best and get anything from A to C
In America they don't have GCSE's. They have other exams.
Where you learn all of the content over 2 years and take all of the exams in the summer of the final year.
AS exams, also known as advanced subsidiary exams, were put into place as a testing method between the GCSE and Êthe A Level exam. It matches many of the elements seen on both tests.
two
Depends on when your school decide to start them. Usually around May-July.
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
http://www.freeexampapers.com/Dndex.php?d=SUdDU0U=
AS exams, also known as advanced subsidiary exams, were put into place as a testing method between the GCSE and Êthe A Level exam. It matches many of the elements seen on both tests.