How to find grade boundaries
Grade boundaries are the minimum number of marks you need to reach each grade in a particular exam. They exist so that students who sit the exam in different years get the same grade for the same standard of work.
Raw-mark boundaries are set after each exam series, once examiners have seen how the cohort performed. If a paper was harder than usual, the boundaries are lowered; if it was easier, they go up. That's why you can't rely on last year's raw boundaries to predict this year's — treat older boundaries as a rough guide only.
For unitised (modular) specifications — most AS/A levels and some GCSEs — boundaries are also given on the Uniform Mark Scale (UMS). Unlike raw marks, UMS boundaries stay the same every year (for example, the percentage of UMS needed for an A doesn't change), which makes it possible to fairly combine units sat in different series.
Tip: when you mark a past paper, compare your score against the boundaries for that exact paper and series to see roughly which grade it would have landed. Just remember the boundaries shift each year.
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