ChatterBank4 mins ago
Aren't kids brilliant...!!!
48 Answers
Halifax son brought home his Year 10 report today - his For Funks Sake (Government) predicted GCSE grades gave him As, Bs and Cs (due to, according to him, the fact that I'm a single mum on minimum wage, living in a not-great neighbourhood)
His school's teacher-predicted grades are 11 A and A*s at GCSE. He has already achieved a B in Maths and an A in Science.
All this and he has had 6 weeks off this term with glandular fever. He is the shining light in my life. I really don't want to show off, but I'm so proud of him, he's not had it easy, he really is a star! Aren't kids just brilliant!
His school's teacher-predicted grades are 11 A and A*s at GCSE. He has already achieved a B in Maths and an A in Science.
All this and he has had 6 weeks off this term with glandular fever. He is the shining light in my life. I really don't want to show off, but I'm so proud of him, he's not had it easy, he really is a star! Aren't kids just brilliant!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If I remember correctly the predicted grades on based on such questions as your is your parents job and what was the highest education your parents did - NVQ 2/3/4 GCSE, A level, Degree, Doctorate etc etc. At the time I felt quite cross about this as I was a single parent and a childminder, but my son's best friend had two parents, one a deputy head and the other a physiotherapist. Which presumably predicted his grades higher than my son.
Anyway when my own son went off to Uni it didn't really matter. (It might be the predicted grades for A levels tho - not GCSE - cant remember
Anyway when my own son went off to Uni it didn't really matter. (It might be the predicted grades for A levels tho - not GCSE - cant remember