Roughly 1 in 3 UK undergraduates now graduate with a First Class degree — but the gap between “good 2:1” and “low First” is the gap that matters most. This guide explains what 70+ UK university work actually looks like in 2026 and how to consistently produce it.
UK degree classifications in 2026
| Class | Mark | What it signals |
|---|---|---|
| First (1st) | 70%+ | Excellent, original, sustained critical thinking |
| Upper Second (2:1) | 60–69% | Strong, well-evidenced, some critical engagement |
| Lower Second (2:2) | 50–59% | Competent, mostly descriptive |
| Third (3rd) | 40–49% | Pass — basic understanding |
What separates a 2:1 from a First
UK examiner band descriptors typically reward Firsts for:
- Original argument — not just summarising what’s known
- Sustained critical engagement — challenging assumptions throughout
- Sophisticated use of theory — applying multiple frameworks, not just one
- Engagement with counter-arguments — taking opposing views seriously
- Evidence beyond the reading list — your own research
- Confident academic voice — first-person framing where appropriate
- Clear “so what” — implications beyond the immediate question
Concrete techniques First Class students use
1. The “but” paragraph
Every essay has at least one paragraph that starts with “However” or “Critics argue, however, that…”. Then you address that critique. Examiners reward this disproportionately.
2. Multiple theoretical lenses
Don’t just apply one framework. A First Class essay might say: “Through a Foucauldian lens, X. Through a Bourdieusian lens, Y. The two together suggest Z.”
3. Recent UK-specific evidence
Cite a 2025 or 2026 UK source. Examiners notice when you’re up to date. ONS data, gov.uk consultations, NICE guidance, FCA reports, House of Commons briefings.
4. Acknowledge limitations of your own argument
Saying “this argument has limitations — for instance, …” is a hallmark of First Class confidence.
5. Strategic use of the introduction and conclusion
Make your thesis sharp in the introduction. Don’t waffle. Conclude with implications, not just a summary.
What 70+ work avoids
- “Many people believe…” — unsupported generalisations
- Wikipedia or non-academic sources
- Long block quotes
- American spelling in UK modules
- Repeating the question instead of arguing
- Listing without evaluating
The honest truth: First Class work isn’t about being smarter. It’s about being more deliberate. Every paragraph has a job. Every claim has evidence. Every section links back to the thesis.
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