Following a public outcry, Jamb says that students in some areas will be able to retake their exams.
Gardeners and volunteers have been planting 100,000 of the flowers at Wallington, near Morpeth in Northumberland, every year since 2016.The final snowdrop was planted on Sunday.
Visitor experience officer Natalie Warren said that although the annual tradition had now ended, the snowdrops would continue to delight visitors for many years."It's been 10 years, but the snowdrops themselves will carry on," she said."It's lovely to see families coming back to see the ones that they've planted previously and we know that over the next five, 10, 20 years, they're just going to keep growing and naturalising into the woodlands."
The National Trust said Wallington had now become a destination for snowdrop spotting, with displays including a few special varieties of the flower.These include the Northumbrian Sandersii group, which has sulphur-yellow markings instead of green, and the Flore Pleno with double the usual number of petals.
Head gardener Simon Thompson said planting the snowdrops had helped other wildlife.
"It's become quite a tradition to people but we can't keep going forever, because we do have a million snowdrops," Mr Thompson said.Prime Minister Luxon said: "We should have done better, and I am determined we will do so.
"To every person who took part, I say thank you for your exceptional strength, your incredible courage and your confronting honesty. Because of you, we know the truth about the abuse and trauma you have endured," he said, describing many of the stories as horrific and harrowing."I cannot take away your pain, but I can tell you this: you are heard and you are believed."
He added that it was too soon to reveal how much the government expected to pay victims in compensation. He said he would offer a formal apology on 12 November.Speaking to the BBC, Grant Robertson, a former deputy prime minister who was involved in commissioning the report, said it had been a "long time coming".