A-level trends: what this year’s results tell us

The future looks bright for science but less rosy for the performing arts.
File photo of pupils sitting an exam (David Jones/PA)
PA Wire
Ian Jones10 August 2021

Here are six trends in this year’s A-level results:

Spanish on the up

Two years ago, Spanish overtook French to become the most popular language at A-level.

The gap widened in 2020 and grew even larger this year, with 9,139 entries for Spanish compared with 8,383 for French.

The number of French A-level entries has now fallen by more than a third (36%) in the past decade, though the total for 2021 was up very slightly on 2020.

Meanwhile German continues to decline, with just 2,708 entries this year, a drop of 5% on last year, and down by nearly a half (48%) since 2011.

(PA Graphics)
PA Graphics

– Drama’s decline comes to a halt

A-level drama spent much of the past decade in decline, with entries tumbling 40% between 2011 and 2020.

But 2021 brought a surprise: a tiny rise in entries, up 1% from 9,590 to 9,645.

This is even more notable given drama students will have had a particularly tough time over the past two years, with the Covid-19 lockdowns likely to have seriously disrupted activities such as rehearsal and performance.

There was no sign of an end to the long-term decline of music, however.

Entries were down again in 2021, though only by 0.2%, and have now fallen 44% since 2011.

(PA Graphics)
PA Graphics

– Computing continues to show biggest gender imbalance

Once again, computing was the A-level subject that recorded the biggest gender imbalance towards males, with boys making up 85% of entries and girls 15%.

Last year the split was 86%/14%.

The biggest imbalance towards females was in the relatively new subject of health & social care.

In the double award for this subject, girls made up 96% of entries and boys just 4%.

(PA Graphics)
PA Graphics

Girls overtake boys in top grade for maths

A-level maths female students have overtaken their male counterparts for the first time in terms of A* grades achieved.

Some 29.1% of girls were awarded A*, compared with 28.5% of boys.

A decade earlier in 2011, the figures stood at 17.1% of girls and 18.2% of boys, with boys holding a small lead all the way up to and including 2020.

(PA Graphics)
PA Graphics

– Nearly half of all London entries received the highest grades

Every region of England recorded a year-on-year rise in the proportion of entries awarded A or A*, but London saw the biggest jump of all, up from 40.7% in 2020 to 47.9% in 2021.

This means nearly half of all A-level entries in the capital were given the highest grades.

North-east England saw the lowest percentage awarded A or A*: 39.2%, up from 35.6% last year.

In Northern Ireland more than half (50.8%) of entries received A or A*, up from 43.3% in 2020, while the percentage for Wales rose from 41.8% to 48.3%.

(PA Graphics)
PA Graphics

– The decade’s winners and losers

Ten years ago around one in six A-level entries, or 16.5%, were in the three main sciences: biology, chemistry and physics.

By 2021 that figure had risen to around one in five, or 20.7%.

Over the same period the proportion of entries in English language and literature has shrunk from around one in 10 (10.4%) to one in 13 (7.5%).

The decade has been favourable for business and economics.

These two subjects accounted for 6.2% of entries in 2011 and 8.7% in 2021.

But the future seems less rosy for the performing arts and media.

Subjects in these areas made up 7.3% of entries a decade ago.

In 2021 the figure stood at 4.6%.

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