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Girls take study honours for 3 core Junior Cert subjects

September 13, 2013

Girls are still far more likely than boys to study the three core school subjects to higher level for Junior Certificate.

Figures released by the State Examinations Commission also reveal that girls do better in most of the 26 subjects, with more getting As and honours grades A, B or C) in the vast majority.
Significant improvements in uptake of Irish and maths to higher level were evident again in this week’s results, largely attributed to curricular and other reforms.
But far more female students still chose the tougher exam than boys, with one of the biggest variations being at Junior Cert Irish.
In a school with 50 girls and 50 boys who sat the exams in June, for example, 30 girls but only 22 or 23 boys would have done honours Irish.
Boys still trail girls in doing higher level maths, although half of the 30,155 male students doing the subject sat the higher level in June — just below the 53% of females. Almost equal proportions (41% of girls and 42% of boys) did ordinary level maths, and slightly more boys (7.5%) than girls (6%) sat foundation level papers.
In English, almost 79% of girls but only 68% of boys sitting the higher level papers this year. This meant double the proportions of boys compared to girls taking English at ordinary (29% compared to 14%) and foundation levels (3% as against 1.5%).
The trends continue among other popular languages, with four girls doing higher level French for each one sitting ordinary level, compared to a 3:1 ratio among male students.
For Junior Cert German, studied by just over 10,000, the numbers are very similar, although very slightly more balanced, with 79% of girls and 71% of boys doing higher level.
Of 22 subjects in which figures are provided for higher level, maths, Latin and metalwork were the only ones in which more boys got As, while more boys than girls got honours in just Latin and metalwork.

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