Over 700 kids absolutely crushed Zimbabwe's exam season, and the receipts are spicy. The Zimbabwe School Examinations Council dropped results showing 716 students hit 15 points or better on their A-Level tests, and four science nerds from St Augustine's High School maxed out at a perfect 35 points. First Class Academy in Mutare flexed the hardest, racking up 51 top scorers, while the national pass rate climbed to 95.75 percent.
St Augustine's snagged second place with 50 students hitting the 15-point mark or higher, and their science department went absolutely feral with those perfect scores. St David's Bonda Girls High pulled 47 students into the top tier, and Kriste Mambo in Makoni District scored 40 qualifiers.
Here's where things get messy. St Faith's High School in Makoni completely fell off, dropping from 65 top performers last cycle to just 27 this time around. The school got wrecked by internal beef between administrators and the School Development Committee, and they let unqualified students into science classes. Physics results were straight-up brutal.
Mt Selinda High School grabbed fifth spot with 32 top scorers, while Gaza High School and Sakubva 1 High School landed in sixth and seventh with 31 and 29, respectively. Provincial Education Director Richard Gabaza praised the results, especially from rural schools that don't usually get attention. First Class Academy Director-General Stephen Mutsongodza credited mentorship programs and going beyond textbook teaching for their success.
St Augustine's snagged second place with 50 students hitting the 15-point mark or higher, and their science department went absolutely feral with those perfect scores. St David's Bonda Girls High pulled 47 students into the top tier, and Kriste Mambo in Makoni District scored 40 qualifiers.
Here's where things get messy. St Faith's High School in Makoni completely fell off, dropping from 65 top performers last cycle to just 27 this time around. The school got wrecked by internal beef between administrators and the School Development Committee, and they let unqualified students into science classes. Physics results were straight-up brutal.
Mt Selinda High School grabbed fifth spot with 32 top scorers, while Gaza High School and Sakubva 1 High School landed in sixth and seventh with 31 and 29, respectively. Provincial Education Director Richard Gabaza praised the results, especially from rural schools that don't usually get attention. First Class Academy Director-General Stephen Mutsongodza credited mentorship programs and going beyond textbook teaching for their success.