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The UCAS Tariff (formerly called UCAS Points System) is used to allocate points to post-16 qualifications (Level 3 qualifications on the Regulated Qualifications Framework). Universities and colleges may use it when making offers to applicants.
For university entrance, the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) produces its own tariff for level 3 qualifications and international equivalents, based on grades achieved and the size of the qualification (in four size bands). Universities, colleges and employers are also free to make their own decisions on how they treat ...
Higher Apprenticeship (Level 4/5; equivalent to a Foundation Degree): to start this programme, learners should have a Level 3 qualification (A-Levels, Advanced Diploma or International Baccalaureate) or have completed an Advanced Apprenticeship. Higher apprenticeships are designed for students who are aged 18 or over.
A distinction* is worth 168 Ucas points - the same as three A*s at A-level - and a merit is equivalent to three Bs at A-level. How T-level grades compare with A-levels. . .
The AAT Intermediate NQF Level 3 qualification (SCQF Level 6 in Scotland) is approved for the University entrance system with a value of up to 56 UCAS tariff points. [15] This is also included in the KS5 performance tables. The final AAT qualification, the AAT Advanced Level is equivalent to QCF Level 4 and SCQF Level 8. [16]
The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service has said that the highest T Level qualification, a starred distinction, will be worth the equivalent of three A*s at A Level when a student is being considered for a place in higher education, [10] giving them 168 UCAS points; the highest A Level result is worth 56 points. [11]
In the UK's Qualifications and Credit Framework a Tech Level 2 qualification is equivalent to a GCSE, and a Level 3 is equivalent to an A Level. [3] The qualifications are designed with the workplace in mind and provide a high quality alternative to A Levels, supporting progression to higher education.
National figures show the proportion of A-level entries awarded top grades is down by 9.2 percentage points on 2022. Just over a quarter (27.2%) of UK entries achieved an A or A* grade this year ...