Nope.......i don't think so. Its pretty much the same thing.
Here is your confirmation
http://www.cie.org.uk/news/features/detail?feature_id=31480
Hey! But take a look at this:
From the June 2010 examination, Grade A* will be awarded at A Level to candidates who obtain the required total mark across all the A Level papers in that subject (including the AS Level papers).
The threshold for Grade A* will be set as many marks above the Grade A threshold as the Grade B threshold is below it.
For example, in June 2009 a candidate taking A Level Economics via the 'linear' route needed a total of 142 marks out of 200 to obtain a Grade A. The requirement for a Grade B was 128 marks. If we had issued Grade A* in that session, the threshold would have been set at 156 out of 200. (If statistical evidence suggested we should reduce the threshold from this level we would do so, but we would not raise it.)
Whatever raw mark becomes the A* threshold - 156 in this example - will be mapped onto a percentage uniform mark of 90%, just as 142 marks would be mapped onto 80% and 128 marks onto 70%.
Obviously the thresholds that we use will not be determined until July 2010.
Yours sincerely
Customer Services Advisor
University of Cambridge International Examinations
Pasted from <http://www.thestudentroom.co.uk/showthread.php?p=21812918&highlight=cie+a+level+a%2A#post21812918>
:S