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AI Roundtable Debate · 5 models

a student has 99887776 in his GCSE and A*A*AA predicted in a level, he wants to be a investment banker therefore get a economics degree, as his GCSE isnt exceptional will he likely get rejected from Imperial EFDS Bsc

Result: Unanimous — No (5/5 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

Imperial College London's official sources explicitly state there are **no specific GCSE requirements** for the BSc Economics, Finance and Data Science (EFDS). From [2] and [4]: 'There are no specific GCSE requirements for this course. However, we do consider your GCSE grades when assessing your application and will review these alongside other areas. You should not be put off if you do not have strong GCSE grades; excelling in your A Levels / equivalents is the more important area in terms of achievement.' The student's predicted A*A*AA grades **exceed the minimum entry standard** of A*AA (with A* in Mathematics) per [4] and [6]. A-levels hold 'significantly more weight than GCSEs' ([3]), making the GCSE profile of 99887776 (roughly 8-9s and 7s, above average) unlikely to be a rejection factor. EFDS admissions prioritize mathematics ability (TMUA test required), A-level predictions, personal statement, and interview over GCSEs, as confirmed across official pages. Third-party sites like [3] note 'mostly Grades 7-9' as general guidance, not a hard threshold, and Imperial does not retain GCSE data for entry decisions ([1]). For an investment banking path, EFDS is highly suitable, and with strong A-levels, rejection solely due to 'non-exceptional' GCSEs is improbable.

Claude Opus 4.7

Vote: No

Imperial's Economics, Finance and Data Science BSc is highly competitive, but admissions weight A-level predictions and the personal statement/maths performance heavily. GCSEs of 9,9,8,8,7,7,7,6 are solid (four 7+ including two 9s) — not exceptional but well within the range of admitted students. With A*A*AA predictions (meeting/exceeding the typical A*A*AA offer) and a strong maths profile, the student is a credible applicant and unlikely to be rejected solely on GCSEs. Imperial doesn't publish a strict GCSE cutoff for EFDS, and many admitted students have similar profiles. Rejection is possible due to overall competitiveness, but 'likely rejected' specifically because of GCSEs is overstating it.

GPT-5.5

Vote: No

No — his GCSEs are not weak. 99887776 includes strong top grades, and Imperial is unlikely to reject him simply because they are not “exceptional”. For Imperial EFDS BSc, the bigger factors will likely be A-level predictions, subject choices, personal statement, admissions assessment/interview if applicable, and overall competitiveness. A*A*AA predicted is strong, assuming he has the required subjects such as Maths and ideally Further Maths. That said, Imperial EFDS is extremely competitive, so rejection is possible. But it would not be likely purely because of those GCSEs.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

Imperial College London's admissions process for the Economics, Finance and Data Science (EFDS) BSc focuses heavily on A-level predictions, personal statements, and particularly performance in the TMUA (Test of Mathematics for University Admission) and interviews. While the student's GCSEs (99887776) might not be straight 9s, they are still very strong and comfortably meet any minimum baseline requirements for Imperial. More importantly, Imperial does not use GCSEs as a primary differentiator the way some other universities (like Oxford or LSE) might. The student's predicted A-level grades of A*A*AA are exceptional and exceed the standard entry requirements for the course. Assuming they have a strong personal statement and perform well in the TMUA, their GCSE profile will not be the deciding factor that gets them rejected. Therefore, it is highly unlikely they will be rejected simply because their GCSEs are not 'exceptional'.

Grok 4.20

Vote: No

The student's GCSE grades (99887776) are strong overall, featuring multiple top scores even if not all 9s. Imperial's EFDS BSc typically requires A*A*A at A-level with emphasis on maths; the predicted A*A*AA meets or exceeds this. Admissions evaluate the full profile including personal statement and predicted grades, not GCSEs in isolation. Many offers go to candidates with similar profiles when A-level predictions are exceptional. The GCSEs are not so low as to make rejection likely for this course.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a unanimous verdict, concluding that while Imperial’s EFDS program is elite, a GCSE profile of 99887776 is far from a dealbreaker when paired with A*A*AA predictions. Sonar Pro and Gemini 3.1 Pro spearheaded the argument by noting that Imperial explicitly prioritizes A-level performance and the TMUA over GCSEs, distinguishing its admissions process from more GCSE-heavy institutions like Oxford or LSE.

All 5 models agreed on "No" after discussion

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Sonar Pro pointed to official Imperial College London documentation stating there are no specific GCSE requirements for the course and that excelling in A-levels is the primary achievement factor.