Abstract

BackgroundMore and more medical school applicants in England and Wales are gaining the maximum grade at A level of AAA, and the UK Government has now agreed to pilot the introduction of a new A* grade. This study assessed the likely utility of additional grades of A* or of A**.MethodsStatistical analysis of university selection data collected by the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS), consisting of data from 1,484,650 applicants to UCAS for the years 2003, 2004 and 2005, of whom 23,628 were medical school applicants, and of these 14,510 were medical school entrants from the UK, aged under 21, and with three or four A level results. The main outcome measure was the number of points scored by applicants in their best three A level subjects.ResultsCensored normal distributions showed a good fit to the data using maximum likelihood modelling. If it were the case that A* grades had already been introduced, then at present about 11% of medical school applicants and 18% of entrants would achieve the maximum score of 3 A*s. Projections for the years 2010, 2015 and 2020 suggest that about 26%, 35% and 46% of medical school entrants would have 3 A* grades.ConclusionAlthough A* grades at A level will help in medical student selection, within a decade, a third of medical students will gain maximum grades. While revising the A level system there is a strong argument, as proposed in the Tomlinson Report, for introducing an A** grade.

Highlights

  • More and more medical school applicants in England and Wales are gaining the maximum grade at A level of AAA, and the UK Government has agreed to pilot the introduction of a new A* grade

  • Since submission of the first draft of this paper, BMAT has provided some evidence for predictive validity for BMAT's Section 2 (Scientific Knowledge and Applications) on academic examinations [2]

  • In March 2007, the Education Secretary Alan Johnson agreed the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority's recommendations to award an A* grade to "those students who have achieved a grade A at A level and who have achieved at least 90% of their UMS [uniform mark scale]on the aggregation of their A2 units" [4]

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Summary

Introduction

More and more medical school applicants in England and Wales are gaining the maximum grade at A level of AAA, and the UK Government has agreed to pilot the introduction of a new A* grade. In March 2007, the Education Secretary Alan Johnson agreed the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority's recommendations to award an A* grade to "those students who have achieved a grade A at A level and who have achieved at least 90% of their UMS [uniform mark scale]on the aggregation of their A2 units" [4]. This system will be piloted with students starting their A levels in September 2008. We suggest that a single additional grade of A* will soon be of little help to medical educators, and that a higher grade of A** should be introduced as the system is being revised

Methods
Results
Conclusion

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