EB / News / Qualifications / Exam certificates to start going digital from summer
Exam certificates to start going digital from summer
EB News: 07/05/2025 - 09:26
Exam certificates are to be modernised and made digital from this summer onwards, the government has announced.
Exam certificates will now be stored in an Education Record app so that they are all in once place and can be easily accessed when applying for further education, apprenticeships, or employment.
More than 95,000 young people in Greater Manchester and the West Midlands will receive their GCSE certificates in the app this summer, ahead of a national roll out.
The government estimates that this move could save schools and colleges up to £30 million each year once the full roll out is complete.
The Education Record app is part of a wider government initiative to overhaul how the public sector uses technology.
Education minister Stephen Morgan said: “It is high time exam records were brought into the 21st century, and this pilot will allow schools and colleges to focus on what they do best: teaching the next generation rather than being bogged down in bureaucracy.
“This government is slashing red tape through our Plan for Change to drive growth, cut admin for teachers and give tens of thousands of young people more opportunities to get on in skilled careers.”
The government has announced the locations of 19 new Technical Excellence Colleges, backed by £175 million investment in skills training in priority areas.
New research suggests that eight out of 10 people (80%) back banning cars in streets around schools to encourage children to travel by healthier alternatives.
The government is proposing that schools appoint a lead governor with designated responsibility for school food, as part of its reforms to school food standards.
The government has set out plans to reform School Food Standards - the first time in over a decade - and is launching a nine-week consultation on the changes.
The government is launching a new programme to support schools in areas of high knife crime and improve pupils’ safety on their way to and from school.