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Weekly news round up: 26/8/25

By Tim Bradbury posted 26-08-2025 09:43

  

UK Education Round‑up: 20–26 August 2025 (STEM‑first)

For teachers and leaders across the UK who want the key education news in one place — with a STEM lens and practical takeaways.

Dates covered: Wednesday 20 August to Tuesday 26 August 2025 (inclusive).


This week at a glance

  • GCSE results landed with top grades edging up and overall stability — but English and maths pass rates dipped slightly, and subject patterns matter for STEM.

  • Exam security: confirmation of a February cyberattack affecting GCSE papers, with no impact on this summer’s series (Ofqual).

  • Digital results pilot: thousands received GCSE grades via a government‑backed Education Record app.

  • Science entries: data point to a switch from triple science to double award for ~10,000 students.

  • FE knock‑ons: resit cohorts grew; the NEET ‘youth guarantee’ pilots were extended by £45m; nursing apprenticeship target drew debate.

  • Behaviour & edtech: practical tips on making smartphone bans stick; guidance on new AI‑related duties for schools.


1) GCSE results: stable overall, but signals for STEM

Round‑ups & trends

Subject‑level highlights (STEM)

Why it matters

  • Strong single‑science outcomes can support KS5 recruitment; computing momentum reinforces KS3–4 investment. The English/maths dip implies larger resit cohorts for colleges and sixth forms.


2) Receiving results: app‑based delivery pilot

Why it matters

  • Digital verification could streamline UCAS/apprenticeships/employment workflows. Watch digital access and pastoral support for students who prefer in‑person conversations on next steps.


3) Exam security: supplier cyberattack disclosed

Why it matters

  • Review vendor risk management and incident plans for assessment materials; refresh staff cyber‑hygiene around mocks and papers.


4) Science entries: triple → double science shift

Why it matters

  • Check if timetable blocks, staffing or perceptions of difficulty are nudging choices. Keep A‑level routes open from either pathway with clear guidance and bridging content.


5) Post‑16 and FE: resits, NEET pilots and apprenticeships

Why it matters

  • Plan for high resit volumes (especially English) with effective, sustainable models. Explore youth‑guarantee partnerships (employers/ITPs/LSIPs). Health workforce targets may shape local apprenticeship and T Level provision.


6) Behaviour & edtech: smartphones and AI duties

Why it matters

  • Smartphone policy is a behaviour, wellbeing and safeguarding lever; effective approaches emphasise culture and consistency. AI now needs policy, training and literacy alongside safeguarding.


Also noteworthy (Scotland)


Reflections & prompts for STEM leaders and teachers

Results & progression

  1. Entry pathways: Do options/timetable choices nudge double over triple science? Could bridging modules or enrichment support late‑deciding triple candidates?

    Context: Schools Week reported Ofqual chair Ian Bauckham’s concern over an estimated ~10,000 switches from triple to double award this year (while cautioning against over‑interpreting a single year). This raises questions about staffing, lab capacity, timetable blocks and perception of difficulty. See: https://schoolsweek.co.uk/bauckham-concerned-over-switches-from-triple-to-double-science-gcse/

  2. Subject messaging: How do you communicate the value and feasibility of computing and the single sciences to under‑represented groups?

    Context: Subject analyses show chemistry, physics and biology leading for top grades, with computing continuing an upward trend in high grades. These patterns can reassure students and families about progression to KS5 and STEM careers. See: Schools Week’s top‑grades rises by subject https://schoolsweek.co.uk/gcse-results-2025-which-subjects-saw-the-biggest-rises-in-top-grades/ and Tes’ subject‑by‑subject round‑up https://www.tes.com/magazine/news/secondary/gcse-results-grades-in-different-subjects

  3. Targeted interventions: With English/maths dips, what in‑school supports (e.g., fluency routines, diagnostics, tutor‑time practice) can reduce future resit demand?

    Context: Round‑ups highlight small further falls in English and maths pass rates alongside overall stability in GCSE outcomes, which will feed into larger resit cohorts post‑16. See: Schools Week overview https://schoolsweek.co.uk/gcses-2025-top-grades-rise-again-but-ofqual-hails-continued-stability/ and 8 key trends https://schoolsweek.co.uk/gcse-results-2025-8-key-trends-in-englands-data/

Curriculum & assessment 4) KS4→KS5 alignment: Make the A‑level leap explicit (practicals, modelling, data handling, algorithmic thinking).

Context: The subject breakdowns show where pupils excel or stall (e.g., single‑science strength; improving computing). Use this to sequence autumn term consolidation and bridge common threshold concepts before new content. See: Tes subject performance https://www.tes.com/magazine/news/secondary/gcse-results-grades-in-different-subjects

  1. Assessment security: Tighten mock‑paper handling, least‑privilege access, 2FA and incident response.

    Context: Tes revealed a February cyberattack at a supplier affecting GCSE papers for two boards; Ofqual stated there was no impact on summer results. It’s a reminder to harden school‑level processes around assessments. See: https://www.tes.com/magazine/news/secondary/gcse-exams-hit-by-cyberattack

Culture, behaviour & digital 6) Smartphones: Plan the culture work (parent comms, alternatives at social times) instead of relying on confiscation alone.

Context: Practical leadership guidance distils six implementation tips for whole‑school smartphone bans: consistent messaging, staff alignment, parent partnership and positive use of social time. See: Tes advice piece https://www.tes.com/magazine/analysis/general/how-to-make-school-smartphone-ban-stick

  1. AI governance: Maintain an AI tools register, train staff and embed AI literacy with pupils.

    Context: Opinion‑led guidance in Schools Week outlines how to meet new duties on AI usage through proportionate governance (policies, procurement checks, DP impact assessments) and teaching for safe, effective use. See: https://schoolsweek.co.uk/how-to-navigate-new-duties-on-ai-usage-in-schools/

  2. Digital equity: As credentials go digital, ensure device access and pastoral support on results day.

    Context: A government‑backed pilot let thousands access GCSE results via an app in Greater Manchester and the West Midlands—useful, but dependent on device, data and ID verification. Plan alternatives and support. See: Sky News https://news.sky.com/story/its-gcse-results-day-and-some-students-can-get-theirs-via-an-app-this-year-13415447

FE & partnerships 9) Resit strategy: Use timetabling and pedagogy (e.g., short‑cycle retrieval, hubs, coaching) to lift outcomes without overload.

Context: FE Week reports stable pass rates in 17+ English (20.9%) and maths (17.1%) amid a surge in entries—so delivery models matter. Consider intensive bursts, diagnostics and small‑group coaching. See: https://feweek.co.uk/gcse-resits-2025-english-and-maths-pass-rates-stable-amid-entries-surge/

  1. Local skills: Use NEET trailblazers and employer links to unlock mentoring, work‑related learning and T Level placements.

Context: Government extended NEET ‘youth guarantee’ trailblazers by £45m to 2027, while debates continue on apprenticeship ambitions (e.g., nursing). Align partnerships with local skills plans and pathways. See: Trailblazers extension https://feweek.co.uk/neet-trailblazer-schemes-given-45m-extension/ and nursing apprenticeship pledge debate https://feweek.co.uk/less-ambitious-nursing-apprenticeships-pledge-criticised/


One‑page SLT briefing

  • Results stable overall; top grades up; Eng/Maths pass rates slightly down.

  • Single‑science strong; computing up; watch triple→double drift.

  • Cyberattack contained; review security with staff/suppliers.

  • Digital results pilot trialled; plan for equity and comms.

  • FE: big resit volumes + NEET pilots extended; align partnerships and curriculum accordingly.

  • Behaviour/tech: smartphone policy and AI governance need concrete action plans for September.

Note: This blog post is an AI curated summary of news articles from various sources. The aim is to provide educators with a comprehensive overview of recent developments in the education sector. All hyperlinks direct readers to the original news articles for further reading.


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