Pupils in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will get GCSE, BTEC Tech Awards and other levels 2 results on Thursday.
After years of flow during the Kovid epidemic, the GCSE pass rate is expected to be the same as 2024.
Last year, it left for the third year.
Students have also been warned that they can face more competition for places in sixth form colleges this year.
The sixth form colleges association’s head Bill Watkin said that there were 16 years of children in the population and the sixth form colleges had increased in popularity.
He said that some people have managed to increase capacity and would have additional places, but they said that other people were “almost going to overcome some youths because they are oversbuds”.
Lee Elliot Major, professor of social mobility at the University of Exeter, said that the competition to get into the top sixth forms will be “more terrible than ever”, adding that fear. VAT is being added to private school fees More families can drive to search for places in the state sector.
But NAHT School Leaders Union General Secretary Paul Whitman said there was a “wide range of” for adolescents, such as the sixth form of the school and further education college.
Around 170,000 students are due to BTEC Tech Awards, BTEC First and BTEC Level 2 technical courses, while around 110,000 will get results for Cambridge National.
Pass rate increased to the entire board for National 5, High and Advanced High Exams in Scotland This month.
Top A-level results increased again Last week – England, Wales and Northern Ireland marked in a* or A with 28.3% of all grades across Ireland
Most of the students who got the results of this week were done in the year 6 when the first Kovid lockdown was declared in March 2020, and began learning secondary school in “bubbles”.
Jiya, a disciple at the St. Augstein Catholic Academy in Scarborough, wants to become a dentist – and hopefully she will need to start a -level at Scarborough College next month.
But he said that it was a bitwatch to release friends he met during the Kovid epidemic.
“I think I was probably really nervous when I first came in the year 7,” she said.
“I have found my people, my friends, and they have helped me become more confident.”
Last year, 67.6% of all GCSE entries were classified 4/C or more.
Regional partitions increased in EnglandWidening with differences between pass rates in the highest and lowest performing areas.
This is the second year that grading has returned to pre-political standards in all three countries.
The ratio of GCSE grows in 2020 and 2021 when the examination was canceled and the results were based on the assessment of teachers.
After this, a phased effort was made to bring him back to the level of 2019.
The return of grading on the standards of 2019 for the second year means that there will be less emphasis than the grade before the standards before Kovid, and more and more how they compare last year.
Education Secretary Bridget Philipson criticized the country’s education system before GCSE Results Day, in writing Wire: “While this country is a good place to go to school, not good.
“Images and headline figures on television we will see this week that the mask of the reality of the working system for some children – even most children – but continue to reduce tens of thousands.”
Philipson said that “only 19 percent of white British, working class children in 2024 gained a strong pass in mathematics and English GCSE” and said that figure is the same as 2017.
“It’s frightening,” Philipson wrote, “It is not only the possibility of the lives of children who are getting damaged – this is also the health of our society.”
In England, students who do not get at least grade 4 in GCSE English and Maths need to continue studying for this with their next course, whether A-Level, T-Level, or something else.
The Education Department (DFE) says that students should take the exam again when they – and their school or college – think they are ready.
GCSE English and Maths Resits occur in November and May or June.
Most students go to their school or college to collect their results, but this year there will be thousands of people Send your results in an app.
DFE is testing the education record app with 95,000 students in Manchester and West Midlands ahead of a national rollout.
The ministers said they hope that this college would save money for admission teams, while school leaders said that students and schools would require “comfortable support” to work properly.
Students involved in the pilot will still be able to go to school to get their paper results.
Additional Reporting by Hail Clarke and Emily Douti