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West Midlands A-level students celebrate rise in overall passes

More than 75,000 A-levels were taken at schools and sixth form colleges with 98.1 per cent of pupils achieving A* to E

Rosie Mann, Niamh Robinson and Samantha Galbraith with their top A Level results, at Saint Martin's School in Solihull(Image: John James)

A-level students were today celebrating after beating last year's results with a rise in the number of overall pass grades in the West Midlands.

A staggering 75,509 A-levels were taken at schools and sixth form colleges across the region - and 98.1 per cent of those achieved A* to E.

The figure is a 0.3 per cent increase on the 97.8 per cent of A-level grades that were E or above in 2013/14 when 74,583 A-levels were taken.

However, there was a 0.3 per cent drop in the number of A* or A grades, with 23.3 per cent of those taken this year achieving the top results compared to 23.6 per cent in 2013/14.

A breakdown of the region's figures reveal that 7.2 per cent of the A-levels taken resulted in A*s, 16.1 per cent were As, 26.7 per cent were Bs, 25.7 per cent were Cs, 15.8 per cent were Ds and 6.6 per cent were Es. Just 1.9 per cent of entries failed.

Schools and colleges across the West Midlands were celebrating record results but head teachers insisted it was not down to A-levels getting easier.

The results come as tough new reformed A-levels, which will be purely exam-driven

It follows earlier reforms that have "done away" with the opportunity previously enjoyed by students to re-sit exams in January.