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Students sitting A-Level exams have complained after they were set an Edexcel Maths C1 non-calculator paper which contained questions they say required a calculator.
Exam board Edexcel has launched an investigation into how part of an A-level maths paper was leaked online. Blacked-out images of two questions were shared on social media on Thursday afternoon.
Leaked documents show that A level maths candidates had to get just 55 per cent of answers correct to score an A grade this year.
Grade boundaries for Edexcel ‘s maths A-level show students who gained 165 out of a possible maximum of 300 marks (55 per cent) will be awarded an A.
An image of the leaked Edexcel A level maths paper was posted online. Credit: Twitter Exam board Edexcel is at the centre of a leak relating to an A-level maths exam sat by pupils on Friday ...
STUDENTS who got nearly half the answers wrong on their A Level maths exam will still get an A in today’s results. Pupils only had to get a meagre 55 per cent in the exam to bag the mark ...
Here's your chance to have a go at some of the toughest A-level maths questions in papers from the past six years from exam boards AQA, Edexcel and OCR.
GRADE boundaries for one exam board’s Maths A Level are so low this year that students who got nearly half of their answers wrong could still be given an A grade.
The grade boundaries for pupils who sat the Edexcel A Level maths paper were leaked yesterday, a day early, and showed a mark of 165 out of 300 was needed to get an A grade overall.
Roughly 60,000 students took EdExcel’s Maths A-level, which consisted of three exam papers spread over two weeks earlier this month.
Dozens of students’ Maths A-level grades are being withheld amid an inquiry into an online leak. Edexcel, which is owned by Pearson, said that 78 pupils are suspected of having advance knowledge ...
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