Great Britain
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A-level students hit town to celebrate or drown out their grief after results day

A-LEVEL students went out for a night out to celebrate the day of the announcement of the results or to ease their grief.

Secondary school graduates who gathered at a nightclub on Broad Street in Birmingham last night wereandafter checking grades yesterday morning.

For some,A-level grades mean the difference between attending college . increase.

For some it meant a long wait finally over and a few drinks to detangle your hair.

The Rosies Club, which holds about 2000 people, was by far the busiest, with the beer garden at the front of the building filled with students.

Some partygoers asked friends to help them or slept on benches at night.

One group of girls was spotted using her friends as makeshift tables andher fast food on her back .

Many seemed in good spirits as the graduates walked down the street.

Young women were seen wearing bright dresses, shorts and cropped tops in warm weather.

A keen student yesterday said: After taking my first exam since Covid, I found out about my A level results. Overall performance is lower than last year.

A* decreased by 4.5 percentage points and A* decreased by 11%. Compared to his 2021, where exams were graded by teachers.

But this year, a staggering 82% of students got an A*-C, and her highest A* grade has doubled since her 2019, and she's a whopping 7. In person she became a student.

On the other hand, 36.4% of students achieved an A or A*s. It is part of a plan to return to regular after two years of failed trials in .

This year's cohort of children, however, will be more flexible in bringing materials into the testing room, doing additional coursework, reducing the number of subjects tested, and allowing them to become familiar with the exam again. became.

Women still outperform men across the board, but the gap has narrowed as they battle to catch up.

Meanwhile, English dropped out of the top 10 A levels for the first time since records began, as more students learned math, psychology and science.