You'd probably be more interested in raw mark boundaries... that's the ACTUAL mark you get in an examination paper – why convert to UMS which is only a bother when you take different units in different sessions?
When I said it is not useful, I was talking specifically for the OP because, if 90% UMS is always an A*, I don't know how that could help a GCSE student. It's certainly not helpful for me to know that anyway.
When I said it is not useful, I was talking specifically for the OP because, if 90% UMS is always an A*, I don't know how that could help a GCSE student. It's certainly not helpful for me to know that anyway.
It's useful for working out what kind of marks you need, especially for modular specifications. If you know your UMS from cashed in modules/coursework, you can work out more or less exactly what kind of mark you need in the final exams to get a certain grade.
It's useful for working out what kind of marks you need, especially for modular specifications. If you know your UMS from cashed in modules/coursework, you can work out more or less exactly what kind of mark you need in the final exams to get a certain grade.
weeelll, I stand corrected.
but I still think the OP's question was probably pointless.