A-level results by the numbers

The gap between the very top-performing girls and boys at A-level has narrowed for the first time in five years, as the proportion of A* being awarded to students in 2016 also dropped, official figures show.
Students check their results at Allerton Grange School in LeedsStudents check their results at Allerton Grange School in Leeds
Students check their results at Allerton Grange School in Leeds

The proportion of students offered the coveted A* and A grades in the UK dropped slightly, from 25.9% in 2015 to 25.8% this year.

Here are the main figures in this year’s A-level results:

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• The number of candidates receiving top grades has fallen for the fifth year in a row. A total of 25.8% of entrants scored either an A or A*, down from 25.9% in 2015.

• 8.1% of entrants received an A*, down from 8.2% last year.

• The gap between girls and boys receiving the top grades has narrowed to its smallest for at least 10 years. The number of girls who got A or higher was 0.3 percentage points more than the number of boys. In 2006 the gap was 2.6 percentage points.

• The gap between the best-performing girls and boys has narrowed for the first time in five years. The number of boys who got A* was 0.8 percentage points higher than girls - down 0.1 points on 2015.

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• The overall pass rate (grades A*-E) was 98.1%, unchanged on last year.

• There were 836,705 entrants for the exams, down 1.7% on last year’s total.

• The most popular subject this year was maths. It was taken by 92,163 students, a slight fall of 0.6% on 2015.

• English was the second most popular subject. It was taken by 84,710 students, a fall of 5.4% on 2015. The third most popular subject was biology, taken by 62,650 students, a drop of 1.0%.

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• General studies saw the biggest drop in candidates of any subject with more than 1,000 entrants. The number fell by just over a third (35.0%).

• Computing saw the biggest jump in entrants, rising by 16.0% on 2015.

• Almost three in 10 candidates in Northern Ireland achieved grades A or above (29.5%). The equivalent rate for England was 25.8% and for Wales it was 22.7%.

• Northern Ireland also saw the highest overall pass rate (grades A*-E): a total of 98.2% of entrants. The figure for England was 98.1% and for Wales it was 97.3%.