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Students can get almost half of the questions wrong and still get an A in some of the new “tougher” A-levels, leaked grade boundaries reveal.

Document detailing pass marks required for two of the country’s biggest exam boards, OCR and EdExcel, surfaced online on Wednesday night sending pupils into a panic on the eve of results day.

Just 55 per cent is enough to achieve an A grade in the new OCR Advanced Biology A-level, the leaked documents shows, while 59 per cent will secure an A in Biology.

Meanwhile, students who answer 66 per cent of questions correctly in the reformed Mathematics A-level will be awarded an A, as will those who achieve 64 per cent in Advanced Physics.

On Thursday students across the country will receive their A-level results, many of which have been re-designed, with coursework and modules axed.

The package of reforms, initiated by former Education Secretary Michael Gove, followed concerns from universities that schools leavers were insufficiently prepared for the rigours of higher education.