Here’s the truth most students don’t hear early enough: your final grades don’t matter as much as your predicted grades — because those decide your university offers.
And predicted grades are often set 6–9 months before your final exams.
So if you’re in IB Year 1 or A-Level Year 12 and just “waiting to improve,” you’re playing a losing game.
1. Most Predicted Grades Are Based on First-Year Mock Scores
Teachers don’t have time to reassess every student from scratch. If you underperform in your first term or mock, that number often sticks — and impacts your UCAS, Common App, and more.
Solution: At Curricore, we help students build an early roadmap that aligns performance with university timelines — not just exam schedules.
2. Predicted Grades Can Be Negotiated — With Evidence
Some schools allow grade upgrades — but only if students can prove consistent upward progress through assessments and tutor reports.
Solution: We generate monthly performance reports and compile curated work samples so you can make a strong case for higher predictions.
📍Your Predicted Grades Are Your Real Application — Let’s Make Them Count
