Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Secondary education

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

Teachers: What grades did you get in your own A Levels/GCSEs?

87 replies

trinketz · 02/12/2023 22:15

As a school governor at a 'Good' secondary comprehensive school (with well above average results) I'm sometimes involved in interview panels. Most applicants seem to have got very average grades in the subjects they teach and/or lower second class degrees. I guess I find that surprising, and wonder how it impacts their ability to stretch the brightest. If you're a secondary school teacher, did you shine in your subject of choice when you were at school/uni? If not, does it matter? Does it perhaps even make you a better teacher?

OP posts:
greglet · 03/12/2023 17:42

6 A*s and 5 As at GCSE

3 As at A level (pre-A * grades), 1 A and 1 B at AS level

Distinction in AEA English

1st from Oxford

But I teach in a very academic private school (went to a worse than bog-standard comprehensive myself and would absolutely not work in one).

Sunflower8848 · 03/12/2023 17:50
cut it out no GIF by Big Brother Canada

@countdowntonap Someone didn’t read the question

countdowntonap · 03/12/2023 20:13

@Sunflower8848 And someone isn’t a teacher…

Sunflower8848 · 03/12/2023 20:14

countdowntonap · 03/12/2023 20:13

@Sunflower8848 And someone isn’t a teacher…

Where did I say I was?? 🤨

TotteringByRosie · 03/12/2023 20:19

I'm often surprised at the low grades teachers achieved in their specialist subject.

MrsKeats · 03/12/2023 21:25

Alll A grades at A level.
2:1 degree from a Russell Group uni.
Master's degree.
PGCE.

verbalreason · 03/12/2023 22:38

Odd question. I’ve got As in all my subjects at GCSE and A level, and a 2:1 from Cambridge.

BertieBob · 03/12/2023 22:43

In the subject I teach:
GCSE= A
A-level= A
Degree= First

BurbageBrook · 03/12/2023 22:49

I used to be a secondary teacher. I got straight A*s/As at school then PGCE and Masters. I was a good teacher but decided my future was in HE so changed career. I think that academic ability doesn't always correlate to being the best teacher though and I have known loads of amazing teachers without the best academic record. Often people learn so much after school/A Levels -- university can really be the making of many people. Other teachers have huge amounts of enthusiasm and thirst for knowledge in their subject which means they're continually learning, consequently having a really powerful impact on the kids. Once a teacher has a degree in a related subject, then stretching the brightest GCSE or even A Level student isn't a problem usually even if their own results were below the level the student is working at. I do think it can occasionally be a problem though when some teachers don't have enough expertise in the subject area due to teacher shortages.

aliceinanwonderland · 03/12/2023 23:11

sorrynotathome · 03/12/2023 07:32

If they have O levels then their grades at O, A and degree level will be significantly different. In my year at Uni (Russell Group) there were over 100 students on my course and only 3 got a 1st.

haha yes I think there was only one first in my subject at university!

sashh · 04/12/2023 04:41

Grades B and C at O Level.

VI form was a disaster, I didn't want to be there and I have dyslexia but both school and VI form didn't believe it existed.

Then I went to work in my local cardiology department and took BTEC National and HNC in medical physics and physiological measurement.

When my health went downhill I went to uni in my 30s, got a 2:1 and I went on to teach health and social care, computer science and some maths.

I love teaching maths to students who are 16+and finally seeing them 'get' it. I even have a happy dance for when that happens.

I think I can probably teach anything I understand

ProfessorPeppy · 04/12/2023 06:13

5A*s and 3As at GCSE, 3 As at A-level, Oxford degree (2.2) and an MSc in an altogether different subject. I’m intelligent but I did the wrong subject at degree level. I’ve been teaching 20 years so I’m also very experienced.

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