It is almost that time of year again where we in the UK go into a period of collective angst about rising pass rates in the A level exams being a sign of the dumbing down of our education system.
Since 1982 the A level pass rate has risen every single year, and whereas only 68.2% of candidates passed in 1982 (grades A to E), the pass rate was 96.2% in 2005, and we are moving ever closer to 100% - if you sit the exam, you pass it.
However, that is not the whole story. I obtained figures from the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority web site for 1992 - 2001, and also 2004 and 2005, and produced the following histogram:

You can see the gradual improvement of grades from 1992 onwards, but there is a sharper improvement for 2004 and 2005, even allowing for my two years of missing data. This is explained by the introduction of the A-S level, because now those who should not be entering the exam are being weeded out before they take A2. It is therefore not surprising that there is a sharp improvement for those years, although it seems likely that the same general improving trend is continuing.
Government and those with an interest in the A level system argue that the year on year improving trend demonstrates rising standards. There may be some truth to this - or at least it may be that technology such as the Internet has provided students with much greater access to information than before, and has thus allowed improved educational attainment. However it is noteworthy that other exams such as the International Baccalaureate do not demonstrate this improving trend. It is also not reasonable to suppose that even with an improving ternd, there would not be the occasional year when pass rates would actually fall, or at least rise imperceptibly.
No, it seems much more likely that what we are seeing is grade inflation.
That does not mean that (a) A levels are easy. They most certainly are not. Nor that (b) the harder A level was more desireable. It may be that a 96.2% pass rate is actually more desirable than an exam that failed a third of the people that took it.
The problem lies with attempting to use the results to make judgements about the academic abilities of students. With 23% of all students taking the exam now getting a grade A, how do you discern the top class students? And how do you compare a student now with a student 25 years ago?
Unfortunately neither the QCA nor any other body has accurate figures prior to 1992. Consequently I have made some extrapolations based on the 1982 figures that we do have, and assuming a rather simplistic steady rise between 1982 and 1992 I have estimated grade boundaries for all of these years. The resulting histogram is here:

Now you can look at this chart and make the rather bold (if not entirely sound) assumption that, say, a grade B in 1985 would be a grade A now. If you took your exams in the 1980s, you can convert them to new currency! (If you got straight As in the 1980s, then this will be particularly accurate!)
Now pass rates are rising year on year, but it turns out that A grades are rising even faster. There is something quite interesting going on here. Look at this third histogram I have produced, this time comparing the spread of grades for three different years:

Notice that in 1992 the spread of grades, whilst slightly skewed, is broadly what one might expect: a normal distribution. The mean grade tallies with the mode and median, so that by each type of average we see that grade D is the mean/mode/median average. This is what one might expect from a mixed ability age group going into these exams.
But notice the trend - increasingly the mean and mode averages are being squashed towards the higher grades, with more and more students achieving As, Bs and Cs and fewer and fewer achieving lower grades.
This is problematic, as the division between D and E becomes increasingly irrelevant, and it becomes harder and harderto recognise which students have really achieved the gold standard in this exam.
But it is only fair that I add some caveats. Not all subjects show these trends, and at least part of the uplift in grades can be attributed to students choosing subjects in which they are more likely to do well. Grade inflation makes it hard to tell good candidates from the best candidates, but it does not necessarily indicate a falling in the standards on the exam paper itself.
So tell me what you think. Is this analysis flawed? Should I add in other graphs (e.g. number of candidates, or the uplift in pass rate?) Have I misrepresented the facts here? Please leave comments and I’ll try to take this analysis further.