Education
GCSE results: pupils in England bounce back from pandemic as top grades rise | GCSEs

Pupils in England who were thought to have been among the worst affected by Covid have bounced back in their GCSE results, with more achieving top grades despite the disruption of the pandemic.
Fears had been raised that this cohort would be severely affected by having key stage 2 tests cancelled in the final year of primary school, when the pandemic hit in 2020, disrupting their transition to secondary school.
However, the results published on Thursday showed 23% of entries for English 16-year-olds were awarded grades 7 or above, up from 22.6% last year, with boys improving their performance, though a higher proportion of girls continue to achieve top grades overall.
In the key compulsory subjects of maths and English there were less encouraging signs, with the percentage of 16-year-old pupils achieving at least a grade 4 in English falling from 71.2% last year to 70.6%. In maths there was a slight decline, from 72% last year to 71.9% achieving grade 4 or better.
Government policy in England means that teenagers who fail to gain at last a grade 4 “standard pass” must undertake resits while they remain in formal education. But this year’s results revealed that fewer of those resitting were reaching grade 4 after multiple attempts, leading critics of the policy to label it a “crisis” that is damaging young people.
For pupils in Northern Ireland, the proportion getting A and A* – equivalent to grades 7 and above in England – rose by a full percentage point to 31.4%, while the proportion getting grades C or above went up to 63.8%.
In Wales, where letter grades are also still used, pupils getting the top grades rose to 20.1%, up from 19.8% in 2024, and those getting a C or better edged up by 0.3 percentage points to 63.8% this year.
Jill Duffy, the chair of the Joint Council for Qualifications board of directors and chief executive of the OCR exam board, paid tribute to pupils’ resilience: “Looking at these results, it is hard not to be impressed by students’ breadth of skills and knowledge.”
The narrative of boys closing the attainment gap with girls, seen in A-level results last week, was also apparent in the GCSE results. Boys showed improved performances in some of the major subjects, while girls slipped backwards in their traditionally strong subjects such as English.
The results mean that the gender gap in favour of girls is now the smallest since separate data for 16-year-olds in England was first published in 2016.
In maths, 23.1% of entries from year 11 boys got grades 7 and above, a rise of 0.6 percentage points on last year, while girls slipped to 19.9%, widening the gap in top grades. In English the proportion of top grades awarded to girls slipped to 23.5% but boys improved by more than a full percentage point compared with 2024, from 14.5% to 15.6%.
But the biggest sign that girls may have been most affected by Covid-era disruption was in the overall grade 4 and above awarded for English, which dropped from 77.1% to 75.9%, while the 9-4 grades for boys ticked up to 65.5%. The proportion of girls who got a standard pass of 4 or better in maths also dropped, from 71.8% in 2024 to 71% this year.
On the gender gap, Duffy said: “Since 2019, the gap between boys and girls in England achieving the top grade has shrunk by 1.5 percentage points, and at grade 4 by almost three percentage points. At grade 7 and above, boys are still five percentage points behind girls.”
Regional inequalities in England, highlighted in the A-level results last week, are also evident in this year’s GCSE results, with the gap between the highest- and lowest-performing regions at grade 7 now at more than 10 percentage points.
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London is four percentage points above any other region, but the capital saw the biggest drop in performance at grade 4. There was good news in the north-east, which had the biggest improvement at this grade compared with 2019 pre-pandemic figures.
Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary for England, said she was “absolutely determined” to reduce the attainment gaps between regions.
Phillipson said: “Behind every grade lies hours of dedication, resilience and determination, and both students and teachers should feel an immense sense of pride in what they’ve achieved today.
“But while results today are stable, once again we are seeing unacceptable gaps for young people in different parts of the country. Where a young person grows up should not determine what they go on to achieve.”
Pepe Di’Iasio, the general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: “Disadvantaged students were often those most severely affected by the disruption of Covid and that has made it even more difficult to close gaps in educational attainment caused by socioeconomic factors.
“Those gaps are reflected in regional disparities evident once again in this year’s results. We simply must do more to invest – educationally, economically, and socially – in communities suffering from generational disadvantage.”
Sir Ian Bauckham, the chief regulator at Ofqual, England’s qualifications watchdog, said: “Schools, colleges and employers can trust these results when making decisions that will shape these young people’s futures, while students can be confident that their achievements will open doors to educational and career opportunities.”
More than 360,500 level 1 and 2 vocational and technical qualification (VTQ) results have also been awarded to pupils.
Education
David Bong, CEO & co-founder of Avant Assessment

Introduce yourself in three words or phrases.
Innovative, empathetic, determined
What do you like most about your job?
Every day brings a new experience with a language or language community in the US or somewhere else in the world for the 150 languages we assess. It never gets old exploring creative ways to expand opportunities for learners, teachers, and test-takers through innovative assessment, learning technologies, and pedagogies.
Best work trip/Worst work trip?
Best: This June, I attended EdTech Week in London – a full week of thought-provoking sessions on how entrepreneurs are reshaping learning and teaching. Conversations with fellow innovators from all over the world, including The PIE’s own CEO Amy Baker, sparked countless ideas for growing our services. The weather was glorious, and staying on London’s vibrant East Side showed me a whole new incredibly rich and diverse face of the city.
Worst: I’ve had a few challenging trips, but I genuinely love travel. Even the tough ones offer valuable lessons.
If you could learn a language instantly, which would you pick and why?
Brazilian Portuguese – it feels like the voice is dancing with every word. It’s such a contrast to my second language, Japanese, which I deeply love. It would be wonderful to have the ability to speak two such different and beautiful languages. Brazil’s fast-growing economy and strong demand for both English and Spanish learning and assessment make Portuguese not only beautiful, but strategically valuable for business.
What makes you get up in the morning?
Our remarkable global team. They amaze and inspire me every day.
Champion/cheerleader which we should all follow and why?
In a world without many inspiring political leaders, I admire the courage, determination, and leadership of Volodymyr Zelensky. As far as a leader in reporting on technology and how it impacts global society, business, and education: Azeem Azhar consistently provides the most insightful analysis I have found.
Worst conference food/beverage experience
I won’t comment on the worst, but if I could humbly say, the best was the spread of Polish food our company put on for our party at the Polish Museum of America in Chicago during the US national language conference in 2023.
Book or podcast recommendation for others in the sector?
AI is the biggest topic out there everywhere, including EdTech. Although it was written before ChatGPT exploded on the scene, I found this book incredibly helpful in understanding both the fundamental principles of AI, and the history of how it has evolved since it was first discussed in 1954 at Dartmouth College. ‘Artificial Intelligence: A Guide for Thinking Humans’ by Melanie Mitchell. As a history major in college learning the context of where it started to where it is today gave me a good feel for the trajectory of this powerful technology.
A classic book on EdTech I would recommend is Clayton Christensen’s 2008 book ‘Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns’. A personal lesson for me from the book: even proven technologies take years to gain traction in education, and that the change will only come from around the margins. As the developer of ELPA in 2004, the first online test of English for English Language Learners for the Oregon Department of Education, we assumed that departments across the US would quickly adopt online testing given the many advantages that it provided. Instead, it took the Covid crisis to finally push online testing to be used throughout the US education system.
Describe a project or initiative you’re currently working on that excites you.
In 2022 we created Mira, our AI-powered language learning and assessment platform. This summer we launched Mira Stride, a formative assessment that uses AI to instantly analyae English Language learners’ use of language, provide individualised reports on the strengths and challenges for the learners, and identify concrete measures that teachers can use to address each learner’s challenges. I am constantly amazed by the power of properly harnessed AI technologies to personalise and accelerate language learning.
Education
AI tutor, for schools and education, without human intelligence targets?

The [September 1, 2025] Labor Day was a question of what should become of education, if AI can operate intelligently, to do aspects of productive work? What is the missing piece to learn for the future, in the era of AI? How much potential do AI tutors hold, specifically, against what excellent human instructors already provide?
The biggest problem in education is the unknown — how human intelligence works. The promise of revolutionizing learning is less about another trend than what is understood as human intelligence and how it should guide learning.
Learning has subsumed a ton of [guess] interventions over decades, with explorations for improved outcomes. Yet, the quality of knowledge as a transcendent property has eluded many. The barriers to the transformational capacity of education are closely aligned with human intelligence, much more than facilities or instructors’ questions.
It is not even progress, at this point, to assume that artificial intelligence can augment learning without knowing how human intelligence works. The human intelligence that AI would train is the same human intelligence that would compete with AI for work? What should humans be learning for now [that the subtraction of whatever AI can do or answer, from what humans can do, in several important tasks, leaves the thing a lot less valuable — as an impact on labor]?
Learning Questions
How does learning adapt to significant problem-solving? What are the techniques to persist in learning complex stuff that may hold important solutions? How can learning be designed to match patterns to answer the unsolved? If an individual is learning what AI already knows, how should that learning be structured to out-compete AI?
Will it ever be possible to personalize learning for everyone?
AI Tutor
For now, AI tutors, AI schools, AI education, or AI learning are not offering anything beyond what is still possible with human instructors. What education is seeking in this era, that AI tutors can optimize for, is pathway displays for memory and intelligence in the brain, to track, almost in parallel, the processes of understanding, recall, creativity, innovation, and expertise, to increase the chances for those.
Simply, what an AI tutor should solve is what a human instructor cannot yet solve: which is the likelihood to target learning, for navigation in the brain, towards advancing humanity. Already, all AI chatbots can answer questions, with several examples — plus simplicity. Still, it is not like grasping, for all, is now straightforward. This is saying that the problem that exists continues to linger, even if mitigated by consumer AI.
Human Intelligence
Any AI tutor program that can develop or show a model of how human intelligence works, to prospect learning [for relays] in the brain would transform education — this century. Simply, show a concept of how human intelligence works, and use that to tailor lessons for higher-order results. Already, human instructors can provide regular training, but what would make a difference, for AI, is to shape human intelligence to withstand the uncertainties that AI holds for the future.
AI tutor in schools can explore theoretical neuroscience, developing models for many aspects of learning. Memory, conceptually, is obtained in destinations in the brain, but intelligence [which is the use of memory] are navigations [of information] summaries across memory areas. Rote memorization, for example, is the making of new paths between memory locations, so that the paths are available for direct relays subsequently, resulting in recall. Problem-solving could be the overlay of two memory locations, so that their differences, rather than contrast, are made similar, opening up possibilities for answers.
The opportunity for AI tutor in education is not to do what human instructors can do or to assume it will simply make things easier when the [human intelligence] question remains unanswered, and AI would be able to do aspects of several jobs, if that is the learning objective. How does human intelligence work is how to restart the education project — now that AI is ascendant.
ChatGPT Edu
There is a recent [August 28, 2025] announcement by Indiana University, IU strengthens national leadership in AI innovation with ChatGPT Edu rollout, stating that, “Indiana University is expanding its robust artificial intelligence offerings with OpenAI by providing access to ChatGPT Edu, a version built specifically for higher education. ChatGPT Edu offers the world’s most advanced AI tools for learning, teaching, and research.”
“In providing access to all 120,000 students, faculty, and staff, IU will be the second-largest ChatGPT Edu rollout of all time for OpenAI, demonstrating IU’s national leadership in higher education innovation and underscoring its commitment to responsibly integrating AI across its campuses while preparing a future-ready workforce.”
“IU faculty and staff can request institutional access beginning Sept. 2, with student access launching Jan. 1 [2026]. The deployment of ChatGPT Edu is one of many ways IU is integrating AI across the academic experience.”
“In August, IU launched a new, free GenAI 101 course that serves as a foundational program introducing the IU community to generative AI concepts, applications, and responsible-use practices.”
“Together, GenAI 101, ChatGPT Edu, and IU’s expanding suite of AI services ensure that faculty, staff, and students are not only equipped with powerful AI tools but also prepared to use them effectively and ethically.”
This article was written for WHN by David Stephen, who currently does research in conceptual brain science with a focus on the electrical and chemical signals for how they mechanize the human mind, with implications for mental health, disorders, neurotechnology, consciousness, learning, artificial intelligence, and nurture. He was a visiting scholar in medical entomology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, IL. He did computer vision research at Rovira i Virgili University, Tarragona.
As with anything you read on the internet, this article should not be construed as medical advice; please talk to your doctor or primary care provider before changing your wellness routine. WHN neither agrees nor disagrees with any of the materials posted. This article is not intended to provide a medical diagnosis, recommendation, treatment, or endorsement.
Opinion Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of WHN/A4M. Any content provided by guest authors is of their own opinion and is not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual, or anyone or anything else. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
Education
SDOC talks AI in schools – upstatetoday.com

SDOC talks AI in schools upstatetoday.com
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