How long do exam boards keep records?
We recommend you contact the exams officer at your school or college to see if they have the original certificate. Schools and colleges are required to retain certificates for a period of 12 months after they are issued.
How long are GCSE results kept on record?
How Long Do Secondary Schools Keep GCSE Certificates? Secondary schools are obliged to keep your GCSE certificates for 12 months after they have received them from the exam boards. The certificates are sent from each exam board to the school directly before they are distributed to students.
How long are GCSE results valid for?
In short, GCSEs are valid and held on record for life. Schools are required to keep GCSE certificates for at least 12 months after having received them from the exam boards – they may or may not decide to keep the results after this period is over.
Will my school have a copy of my GCSE results?
Secondary schools will keep your GCSE certificates for 1 year after they have been issued. If they are not collected within a year, schools will either send them back to the exam board or destroy them.
Can I check my GCSE results online?
Finding your results online is one potential solution. Depending on your school and the exam board responsible for the GCSE exams you took, there is a chance that you could find your GCSE results online. Whatever the case, reach out to your school to see if you can get your GCSE results this way.
What are “normal” results of an eye exam?
have 20/20 (normal) vision
What do test results mean?
A typical routine blood test is the complete blood count, also called CBC, to count your red and white blood cells as well as measure your hemoglobin levels and other blood components. This test can uncover anemia, infection, and even cancer of the blood.
What is a test result?
A positive test is one in which the result of the test is abnormal; a negative test is one in which the test’s result is normal. A problem with this way of teaching about the value of test results is that often physicians and patients think there are only two possible test results, normal or not.