Thick Brits?

Ciaran

Going for 56
Jun 20, 2011
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Northern Ireland students are top of the class when it comes to A-Levels.

More A* and A grades were awarded to Northern Ireland candidates than in England and Wales, according to the Joint Council for Qualifications (JCQ).

The percentage of top grades in Northern Ireland was 31.9% — 5.4 percentage points higher than England and 7.3 percentage points higher than Wales.

And just 1.9% of entries here failed to get an A-Level pass.


Read more: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/n...ip-in-best-grades-16199231.html#ixzz24NdeyAMX

Northern Ireland students have bucked the national trend of falling GCSE grades and instead have seen a slight improvement in their results.

Almost 32,000 pupils in Northern Ireland received their GCSE results on Thursday morning.

A* to C grades have gone up by a small margin to 75.6% compared to the national UK average which has fallen to 68.4%.

In Northern Ireland only 1% did not get any pass grade.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-19348742


Considering those from NI most likely to consider themselves Irish far outdo those that consider themselves British it seems that we have long ago lost our thick mantle :emoticon-0101-sadsm
 
ciaran are you saying, and i hink i agree with you here, that irishmen who admit they are from ireland are clever?

medro - your thoughts.....<whistle>
 
There's millions of second generation irish kids in mainland Britain so they're probably just bringing the grades down <whistle>

Or bringing them up if you use common sense. Probably to do with the high percentage of Catholic schools here compared to Britain.
 
When did this shift occur? Or are you simply guessing?

Catholc school leavers have a 33% chance of earning the grades required to enter University compared with 17% of state school leavers. Nothing made up, it's been talkked about on our news and papers several times lately. It wasn't a shift anyway.
 
medro this is good news for you - why are you upset??

the school that you went to, that is your "local", and that your kids will go to is clearly a high performer

at last you being irish is paying off <party>
 
Of course, you're all thick as pigshit compared to Scots. What's this taking 2 years to do your Uni entrance exams nonsense? Slackers, the lot of you.