One fifth of private school pupils to achieve top grades

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one in five of the exam papers was given the top mark.

Bootham School, in York, has seen more than half its year group achieving one A* or more while 30 per cent of students achieved four or more A* or A grades.

Greenhead College, in Huddersfield, beat the ISC predictions of just five per cent of state school exam papers getting top marks.

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The sixth-form college, which had more than 800 students taking A-levels this year, saw 11 per cent of entries achieve an A*.

Nationally across all schools around one in 14 entries have been predicted to pick up the top grades.

In a speech on social mobility yesterday Mr Clegg said that new university funding rules would cut the share of university places in higher education taken by middle class children in future.

The Deputy Prime Minister said: “Increased levels of attendance at university have not translated into higher levels of social mobility.

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“This is for two important reasons, one, a disproportionate number of university students come from the middle and upper classes. Two: higher education remains the primary entry route to high-quality jobs.

“This is why I feel so passionately that we need to attack the educational apartheid that currently exists between vocational and academic learning in general, and between further education and higher education in particular.”

Students collecting A-level results today have been warned that they face the most competitive battle to get into higher education in 20 years after a surge in applications this year.

Universities across the region have warned that they will have fewer places on offer through the clearing system which matches students to available courses.

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Higher Education Minister David Willetts has admitted that tens of thousands of young people, many of whom will have scored top grades, will be disappointed today as they miss out on their first choice university or a place altogether.

Nationally 160,000 people who applied to university did not get a place in 2009 but this year there are fears it could rise to up to 200,000.

The level of school leavers missing out on university is expected to add to the numbers of young people classed as NEET (not in employment, education or training) in the region.