Five years ago, and three months into the 2020 global pandemic, the Leaving Cert was cancelled.
The Department of Education announced in May 2020 that students due to sit their final school exams would instead receive predicted or ‘calculated’ grades from their teachers.
These much more generous results led to grade inflation which has seen tens of thousands of students receive bumper Leaving Cert results in recent years. The rise in grades also forced universities to use lotteries for entry to some high points courts, especially highly competitive courses such as medicine, dentistry, pharmacy and others.
The Government is now moving to reduce this grade inflation, meaning Leaving Certificate results will be lower this year.
Emergency brake proposed to guard against EU-Mercosur deal harming Irish farmers
Taoiseach warns against a ‘jump to conclusions’ on missing boy feared dead
Electric Picnic tickets for 2026 sell out in less than two hours
Kathy Sheridan: I find myself in agreement with the architect of Brexit about the flags on Dublin’s streets
What does this mean for the class of 2025 and what price will they pay for the reversing of grade inflation?
Today, on In The News, what will grade deflation mean for the class of 2025?
Irish Times Education editor Carl O’Brien discusses the plans to bring grades back down to pre-pandemic levels.
Presented by Sorcha Pollak. Produced by Declan Conlon.