Your Child Just Finished IB/IGCSE — Here's How to Read Their Results When They Arrive

Your Child Just Finished IB or IGCSE: Here’s How to Read Their Results When They Arrive

The weeks between exams and results day can feel surprisingly long. After months of revision, coursework, deadlines, and stress, students finally get a break, but parents are often left wondering what comes next.

When IB and IGCSE results are released, many families face a new challenge: understanding what the grades actually mean.

Unlike traditional percentage-based systems, IB and IGCSE grades can seem confusing at first glance. Is a 5 in IB good? What does a Grade 7 mean in IGCSE? Should you be concerned if one subject is lower than expected?

Before jumping to conclusions, it helps to understand what these results are really telling you and what they are not.

IB and IGCSE Grades Are Not Percentage Scores

One of the most common misconceptions among parents is assuming that grades directly correspond to percentages. They don’t.

Understanding IB Grades

The International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IBDP) uses a scale from 1 to 7 for each subject:

  • 7 = Excellent performance
  • 6 = Very good performance
  • 5 = Strong performance
  • 4 = Satisfactory performance
  • 3 and below = Below the expected standard

Students take six subjects, with a maximum of 42 subject points available. They can earn up to 3 additional points through the Extended Essay (EE) and Theory of Knowledge (TOK), creating a maximum diploma score of 45 points.

A score of 45 is exceptionally rare. In fact, even students admitted to highly competitive universities often achieve scores in the high 30s or low 40s.

Understanding IGCSE Grades

Many IGCSE schools now use the 9–1 grading system, where:

  • 9 = Highest grade
  • 8–7 = Equivalent to high A*/A performance
  • 6–5 = Strong pass
  • 4 = Standard pass
  • 3–1 = Below the standard pass threshold

Some schools still report results using the older A–G system*, depending on the examination board and qualification.

The key takeaway is that neither IB nor IGCSE grades should be interpreted as simple percentages. These systems are designed to assess achievement against international standards rather than rank students purely by marks earned.

A Grade Never Tells the Whole Story

Results provide useful information, but they rarely tell the complete story of a student’s academic journey.

Context matters.

For IB students, a final grade often reflects performance across multiple components:

  • Internal Assessments (IAs)
  • Examinations
  • Oral assessments
  • Extended Essay
  • Theory of Knowledge

A student who narrowly missed a higher grade boundary may have demonstrated almost identical understanding to someone who achieved the next grade up.

Similarly, in IGCSE subjects, performance can vary significantly depending on the exam paper, coursework components, and the overall difficulty of the subject.

For example, achieving a Grade 7 in Additional Mathematics or Higher-Level Physics may represent a very different challenge from achieving the same grade in another subject.

When reviewing results, consider:

  • Your child’s previous performance
  • The difficulty of individual subjects
  • School averages and predicted grades
  • Progress made over time

The numbers matter, but the context behind them matters just as much.

If Results Are Better Than Expected

IB and IGCSE Exams Are Over, Now What? Young Scholarz

This is often the easier conversation to have—but it is still worth handling thoughtfully.

When students exceed expectations:

  • Celebrate the achievement.
  • Acknowledge the effort, not just the outcome.
  • Discuss how their results align with future goals.
  • Review university offers, course options, or next academic steps.

Many students focus so intensely on what they “could have done better” that they struggle to appreciate their accomplishments. Taking time to recognise growth, resilience, and hard work can be just as valuable as celebrating the grades themselves.

If Results Are Lower Than Expected

This can be disappointing for both students and parents, but it is important not to treat results day as a final judgement.

Many successful students have experienced unexpected results at some stage of their education.

If your child receives lower grades than anticipated:

Stay calm first

Your reaction often shapes how they process the situation.

Avoid immediately asking:

  • “What happened?”
  • “Why didn’t you get higher?”
  • “Did you revise enough?”

Instead, start by understanding how they feel about the results.

Focus on options

There may be more pathways available than you initially realise.

Depending on the circumstances, students may be able to:

  • Meet university conditions despite lower grades
  • Pursue alternative university choices
  • Request a review or remark
  • Explore foundation programmes
  • Adjust subject selections for future study

A disappointing result may change the route forward, but it rarely closes every door.

Separate performance from identity

Perhaps the most important message a student can hear on results day is this:

A result reflects performance on a specific set of assessments. It does not measure intelligence, character, creativity, potential, or future success.

Students need perspective as much as they need guidance.

How to Have a Productive Conversation About Results

Results discussions can quickly become emotional, particularly when expectations were high.

A productive conversation usually focuses on understanding before problem-solving.

Consider asking:

  • How do you feel about these results?
  • Which results surprised you?
  • What are you most proud of?
  • What concerns you most right now?
  • What support would be helpful moving forward?

These questions encourage reflection rather than defensiveness.

The goal is not simply to analyse grades. The goal is to help your child make sense of them and decide what comes next.

Remember: Results Are One Data Point

Whether your child’s results exceed expectations, meet them, or fall short, it is worth remembering that academic outcomes are only one part of a much bigger picture.

Universities, employers, and future opportunities increasingly value qualities such as adaptability, communication, problem-solving, perseverance, and curiosity.

Exam results can open doors, but they do not determine everything that happens after those doors open.

The most valuable thing parents can offer on results day is not pressure, analysis, or comparison.

It is perspective.

Because while grades matter, they are not the final verdict on who a young person is—or who they can become.

Need Help Interpreting Your Child’s Results?

IB and IGCSE results can be complex, especially when you’re trying to understand grade boundaries, subject performance, university implications, or next academic steps.

Results are landing soon, and not sure what they mean for your child’s next steps? We can help you make sense of them. Reach out to the YS team for guidance and support. Get in touch now.

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