SUCCESS was on the timetable for students in Malvern as they found out how they did in their GCSE exams.
Students at Dyson Perrins Church of England Academy celebrated another superb set of exam results this year, with particularly strong results in the sciences, languages, food technology and art.
Top performing students this year include Chloe Norris, Cindy McNally, Xander Baker-Humpage, Victoria Cross and Ryan Raffaelli who achieved a range of grade 8s and 9s between them.
Headteacher, Mike Gunston, said: “We are extremely proud of all our students.
"They have shown their ambition and determination again, and deserve all of their success."
Over a fifth of all passes at Hanley Castle High School were awarded at the top grades 7, 8 or 9.
Marcus Charman led the way with grades, gaining ten grade 9s, while Charlie Clements has eight grade 9s and two grade 8s, and Luc Marchant with seven grade 9s and three grade 8s.
Florence Findlater managed to achieve seven grade 9s, two grade 8s and one grade 7, and Edward White got six grade 9s and four grade 8s.
Headteacher Mark Stow said: "We are absolutely thrilled for our students; they have worked so hard and deserve this chance to celebrate their successes.
"Despite the disruption in their early years at Hanley during the pandemic, they have shown resilience and determination to achieve some excellent qualifications and develop into wonderful young adults."
A school record 80 per cent of all subject entries at The Chase secured a grade 4 or higher with 20 per cent of entries being awarded the highest grade 8 and 9 grades.
The highest performing student was Zoe Haighton who achieved a clean sweep of the top grade 9 across all 10 of her GCSE subjects.
Her twin sister, Anya Haighton, also got a highly successful set of results, achieving five grade 9s.
Other top performers include Anna Helder who achieved eight grade 9s and Imogen Smith who achieved seven grade 9s.
The Chase headteacher Mike Fieldhouse said: "The students have excelled and justly deserve these fantastic grades after working so hard during the past two years."
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here