More than a third of students have achieved top grades in the first ever set of T-level results – but digital has proved to be the most difficult subject.
Overall, 34.6 per cent of the 1,029 T-level students receiving results today were awarded a Distinction or Distinction*. The overall pass rate was 92.2 per cent.
The 482 students on the education and childcare pathway performed the best as 40.2 per cent achieved top grades and a 93.4 per cent pass rate.
The proportion of the 207 students on the design, surveying and planning for construction T-level scoring top grades was 35.8 per cent as 93.7 per cent passed.
But only 25.9 per cent of the 340 students on the digital production, design and development T-level got top grades as 89.7 per cent passed.
Today’s data shows that 10 per cent of digital students did not complete the full T-level and only partially achieved.
A “partial achievement” means they completed at least one component of the course – core, occupational specialism or industry placement – but didn’t achieve all three.
In construction, 5.3 per cent of students only partially achieved and in education and childcare, that figure was 6.4 per cent.
‘Challenge’ in finding employers
Sector leaders suspected that digital would prove to be the toughest subject to achieve in especially for students in rural areas, largely because of the challenge of finding employers to take them on for the mandatory 45-day work placement.
This cohort of T-level students were allowed to spend up to 40 per cent of their placement hours remotely after the Department for Education temporarily watered down the policy to reflect the impact of Covid-19.
T-levels are the government’s flagship new post-16 qualifications, designed to be the technical equivalent to A-levels.
The two-year courses launched for the first time in September 2020 in three subjects: education and childcare; design, surveying and planning for construction; and digital production, design and development.
They have been delivered by 44 colleges and schools.
The first T-level students received a one-off grading adjustment to reflect the impact of Covid, the government said yesterday.
Awarding organisations were asked to be “generous” in their awards in line with the approach being taken for A-levels in the first year that exams have been sat since the pandemic.
The DfE previously said that around 1,300 students began the qualifications two years ago, but today’s shows that only 1,029 have received results.
Schools Week’s sister paper FE Week has asked the DfE to confirm whether this means that a fifth dropped out.
Your thoughts