Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Secondary education

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Maths GCSE taking both Higher and Foundation papers

3 replies

FozzieMK · 14/02/2014 12:16

My youngest DD is in Year 9 and I have been told that it is possible for her to take either Higher or Foundation maths GCSE papers for each module. My eldest DD just took Foundation Maths a few years ago so I am confused how this works regarding the marks. Does this mean that it is possible for someone studying the Foundation course to take a Higher paper and gain more marks than needed for the C giving them the possibility of a B?

OP posts:
TeenAndTween · 14/02/2014 13:05

Sort of, I think.

There isn't a 'Foundation Course' as such though. Though I guess there are maybe some topics which only occur on the Higher paper.

But yes, you could take a Foundation paper and score 95%, and then for paper 2 take the Higher paper and score 60%, and this could average out overall to be a B.

This is the same as other subjects such a Core science wher eyou could take Foundation for chemistry but Higher for Physics and Biology.

(Obviously though you can't take both levels for the same paper).

I think they don't need to decide until quite late which paper to enter for.

K8Middleton · 14/02/2014 13:13

It used to be the case that you had to pick a tier - higher or foundation. The higher papers were scored A*-C and if the student didn't achieve a C grade they got ungraded. The foundation was D-G and the student had to score well to get the D grade. There was also an intermediate with a maximum B grade but that was years ago so I am surely wildly out of date!

I understand this has now changed and students can sit papers at different levels but the grade boundaries are different because the level is different. If you look here: www.edexcel.com/iwantto/Documents/GCSE%20composite%201306%20v2.pdf you can see the grade boundaries for each individual paper on EdExcel.

FozzieMK · 14/02/2014 14:01

Thank you both, that explains it.

OP posts:
New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread