Two sets of twins from the same school were celebrating after all receiving straight As in their A-levels this morning.

Putney High School pupils Emily and Fiona Walport, of Montserrat Road, Putney, and Hannah and Olivia Singh, of Standen Road Road, Southfields - all 18 - went to their school in Putney Hill to open their long awaited exam results.

Emily said: "We are both very relieved and very happy.

"We were both walking up the hill to school this morning very nervous. I got onto to UCAS to get my results before but she didn't, so it was quite stressful.

"But it is nice for both of us to get the results we wanted."

Emily got three A*s and one A and will be going to Oxford to study material science. Fiona got one A* and three As and will be going to Imperial College to study civil engineering in 2012, after spending a year in industry.

The Singh twins both scored three A grades, and Hannah is heading off to Imperial College to study chemistry while Olivia is going to Exeter to study maths with economics.

Hannah said: "We are both very happy and really excited to be going to university. We have been here since nursery and this is the first time we will be apart from each other.

"Our mum is a bit emotional at the moment and is a bit teary."

Another of the school's students Jessica Reeves, 18, received a scare this morning after she was told on the UCAS website that she had not got the grades to go to Oxford.

But fortunately for her it proved to be a mix-up after it emerged the website had provided the wrong information.

She said: "I was the first person here, and I just said I was more than happy to go to Bristol. But then they gave me my results.

"I am very happy but I have been in worried mode all morning. It's all quite odd."

Best friends Cathy Hearn and Sadhbh O'Sullivan were both accepted to study English at Cambridge after getting their results.

Ms O'Sullivan said: "It is nice as I know she is going to be there but we are both aware we are going to branch out.

"I've been looking forward to going to university for the last year-and-a-half."

Ms Hearn added: "I was in so much shock. I haven't been a straight A student all the way through A levels. I am scared but it is going to be a new experience."

In all a third of the school's examinees received A* grades, with 73 per cent getting A or A* and 91 per cent getting A* to B grades.