| Academic grading | |
| Africa | |
|---|---|
| Egypt • Kenya • South Africa • Tunisia | |
| North America | |
| Canada • Costa Rica • Mexico • United States | |
| South America | |
| Chile | |
| Asia | |
| China • Hong Kong • India • Indonesia • Iran • Israel • Japan • Nepal • Pakistan • Philippines • Singapore • United Arab Emirates • Vietnam | |
| Europe | |
| ECTS • European Baccalaureate • GPA in Central and Eastern Europe Albania • Austria • Bosnia and Herzegovina • Bulgaria • Croatia • Czech Republic • Denmark • Finland • France • Germany • Greece • Hungary • Ireland • Italy • Latvia • Liechtenstein • Lithuania • Luxembourg • Moldova • Netherlands • Norway • Poland • Portugal • Romania • Russia • Serbia • Slovakia • Slovenia • Spain • Sweden • Switzerland • Ukraine • United Kingdom |
|
| Oceania | |
| Academic grading in Australia • GPA in Australia • New Zealand | |
In education, a grade (or mark) is a teacher's standardized evaluation of a student's work. Education encompasses both the Teaching and Learning of Knowledge, proper conduct, and technical competency Evaluation is systematic determination of merit worth and significance of something or someone using criteria against a set of standards The word student is etymologically derived through Middle English from the Latin second-type conjugation Verb "studēre" In some countries, evaluations can be expressed quantifiably, and calculated into a numeric grade point average (GPA), which is used as a metric by employers and others to assess and compare students. A cumulative grade point average (CGPA) is the mean GPA from all terms, whereas GPA may only refer to a single term. In Statistics, mean has two related meanings the Arithmetic mean (and is distinguished from the Geometric mean or Harmonic mean
The concept of grading students' work quantitatively was developed by a tutor named William Farish, and first implemented by the University of Cambridge in 1792. In British Australian New Zealand Italian and some Canadian universities, a tutor is often but not always a Postgraduate Student or a Lecturer William Farish was a Tutor at the University of Cambridge who developed the Concept of grading Students work quantitatively in 1792 The University of Cambridge (often Cambridge University) located in Cambridge, England, is the second-oldest university in the [1]
Most nations have individual grading systems unique to their own schools. However, several international standards for grading have arisen recently.
The European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System (ECTS) is a standard for comparing the study attainment and performance of students of higher education across the European Union. European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System ( ECTS) is a standard for comparing the study attainment and performance of students of Higher education across the Higher education is Education that is provided by universities, vocational universities, Community colleges Liberal arts colleges The European Union ( EU) is a political and economic union of twenty-seven member states, located primarily in For successfully completed studies, ECTS credits are awarded. One academic year corresponds to 60 ECTS-credits in all countries, irrespective of standard or qualification type, and is used to facilitate transfer and progression throughout the Union. [2]
ECTS also includes a standard grading scale:
| Grade | Percentile of passed students |
|---|---|
| A | 90–100 |
| B | 65–90 |
| C | 35-65 |
| D | 10–35 |
| E | 0–10 |
| FX | — |
| F | — |
The grade FX indicates that "some more work required before the credit can be awarded. The ECTS grading scale (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System is a grading system defined in the ECTS framework by the European Commission. " The grade F indicates "considerable further work required. "[3]
This degree that is awarded by the European Schools. The European Baccalaureate (" Bac " is awarded to students who successfully managed to complete a European School. Pupils are graded on an analog scale of 0 to 10. Half marks may be awarded, and in computing the total average two decimals are shown:
| Grade | Qualification |
|---|---|
| 10 | Highest mark achievable |
| 8. 5 | Very Good |
| 7. 5 | Good |
| 6 | Sufficient |
| <5 | poor |
| 0 | Worst grade (cheating, etc. ) |
In Canada, grade point averages vary by province, by level of education (e. In Egypt the academic grading system functions with a worded grade and increases in increments from 30-10 points In Kenya the grading system varies according to overall performance of candidates in the national exam called KCSE In South Africa, the grading system used in schools until 2008 is shown as follows A 80 - 100% (achieved by 2-10% of students B 70 - 79% (achieved by 8-15% The Tunisian grading system is mostly a 20-point grading scale it is used in secondary schools and universities The following is a summary of the academic grading systems in North America. Country to "Dominion of Canada" or "Canadian Federation" or anything else please read the Talk Page A province is a territorial unit almost always an Administrative division. g. , high school or university), by institutions (e. g. , Queen's or Toronto), and even by different faculties in the same institution (e. Queen's University, generally referred to simply as Queen's, is a coeducational non-sectarian Public university located in Kingston, Ontario This article is about the University of Toronto's St George Campus g. , Ryerson or Université du Québec à Montréal). Ryerson University, commonly referred to simply as Ryerson, is a public University in Toronto, Canada. The Université du Québec à Montréal ( UQAM) is one of four universities in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The following are commonly used conversions from percentile grades to letter grades:
In White Plains Senior High Schools:
| Letter | Percentage | Provincial Standing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| A* | 80–100 | Standard of Excellence | * Final course grades in this range are annotated with Honors Standing in the Alberta Senior High School Transcript. |
| B | 65–79 | ||
| C | 50–64 | Acceptable Standard | |
| D** | 40–49 | ** As of September 1986, final grades in this range are not awarded any credits toward
Alberta Senior High School Diploma. |
|
| F*** | 0–40 | *** Failing grade with no credits awarded toward Alberta Senior High School Diploma. |
In Alberta Post-Secondary Colleges, Technical Institutes, or Universities:
| Letter Grade | Grade Points | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| A+ | 4. Alberta (ælˈbɝtə is one of Canada's prairie provinces. It became a province on September 1 1905 0 | |
| A | 4. 0 | |
| A- | 3. 7* | * Student may be awarded an Honors designation on a parchment if semester and cumulative grade point average of 3. 7 is achieved on the first attempt of courses required towards graduation of major. In addition, students will need to complete graduation requirements within specific time restrictions. |
| B+ | 3. 3 | |
| B | 3. 0 | |
| B- | 2. 7 | |
| C+ | 2. 3 | |
| C | 2. 0** | ** Minimum general semester and cumulative grade point average to progress without Academic Probation or Withdrawal status. Certain faculties may require higher grade point averages to remain in faculty. |
| C- | 1. 7 | |
| D+ | 1. 3 | |
| D*** | 1. 0 | *** Minimum general passing letter grade to receive credit for a course. Certain faculties may require higher grades to receive course credit. |
| F | 0. 0 |
There is no universal percentage grade associated with any letter grade in the Province of Alberta and such associations are made by professors or a bell curve.
The University of Saskatchewan and University of Regina both use a percentage grade system, universal across faculties and departments. The University of Saskatchewan ( U of S) is a Coeducational public Research university located on the east side of the South Saskatchewan The University of Regina is a public university located in Regina Saskatchewan, Canada.
| Percent | Letter Grade equivalent | Descriptors |
|---|---|---|
| 90-100% | A+ | A superior / outstanding performance. |
| 80-89% | A | A very good / excellent performance. |
| 70-79% | B | A good / above average performance. |
| 60-69% | C | A generally satisfactory, intellectually adequate performance. |
| 50-59% | D | A barely satisfactory performance. |
| 0-49% | F | Failure. An unacceptable performance. |
Taken from http://www.usask.ca/calendar/exams&grades/gradingsystem/ and http://www.uregina.ca/gencal/ugcal/attendanceEvaluation/ugcal_64.shtml
In British Columbia universities: F is a failing grade. British Columbia (ˌbrɪtɨʃ kəˈlʌmbiə ( BC) ( (la Colombie-Britannique C The following table is only an approximation; faculties within universities sometimes follow a different system between percentiles and corresponding letter grades.
| Letter | Percent |
|---|---|
| A+ | 90–100 |
| A | 83–89 |
| A− | 80–82 |
| B+ | 76–79 |
| B | 72–75 |
| B− | 68–71 |
| C+ | 64–67 |
| C | 60–63 |
| C− | 55–59 |
| D | 50–54 |
| I | 0–49 (temporary) |
| F | 0–49 (permanent) |
In Newfoundland and Labrador universities:
| Letter | Percent |
|---|---|
| A+ | 90–100 |
| A | 83−89 |
| A− | 80−82 |
| B+ | 75−79 |
| B | 70−74 |
| B− | 65−69 |
| C | 60−64 |
| C− | 55−59 |
| D | 50−54 |
| F | 0−49 |
Grade F is the sole failing mark. Newfoundland and Labrador (ˈnuːfɨn(dlənd ən(d ˈlæbrəˌdɔr (Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador is a province of Canada, the tenth and latest to join the Confederation
In Ontario schools:
| Letter | Percent | Level | Qualification |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 80−100 | Level 4 | Above government standards |
| B | 70−79. Ontario (ɒnˈtɛrioʊ is a province located in the central part of Canada, the largest by population and second largest after Quebec 9 | Level 3 | At government standards |
| C | 60−69. 9 | Level 2 | Below, but approaching government standards |
| D | 50−59. 9 | Level 1 | Well below government standards |
| F | 0−49. 9 | — | Failing standards (used in high schools) |
| R | Remedial standards (used in elementary schools) |
There are also + and − modifiers. A+ is close to 100% and better than A, A is better than A−, A− is better than B+, etc. There are no modifiers for R or F. E sometimes appears in place of R or F to match the order of the four grades above it.
Ontario universities and colleges also use a similar grading system as the above and the system used in the United States. Some colleges use a 4. 0 scale, while others a 4. 3 or 12. 0 scale.
| Letter Grade | 12. 0 Grading Scale | 4. 0 Grading Scale |
|---|---|---|
| A+ | 12. 0 | 4. 33 |
| A | 11. 0 | 4. 00 |
| A- | 10. 0 | 3. 67 |
| B+ | 9. 0 | 3. 33 |
| B | 8. 0 | 3. 0 |
| B- | 7. 0 | 2. 67 |
| C+ | 6. 0 | 2. 33 |
| C | 5. 0 | 2. 00 |
| C- | 4. 0 | 1. 67 |
| D+ | 3. 0 | 1. 33 |
| D | 2. 00 | 1. 00 |
| D- | 1. 00 | . 67 |
GRADE POINT CHART:
| Number of grade points for 1. 0 credit course | Number of grade points for 0. 5 credit course | Percentage Equivalency |
|---|---|---|
| A+ = 12. 0 | A+ = 6. 0 | 90-100 |
| A = 11. 0 | A = 5. 5 | 85-89 |
| A- = 10. 0 | A- = 5. 0 | 80-84 |
| B+ = 9. 0 | B+ = 4. 5 | 77-79 |
| B = 8. 0 | B = 4. 0 | 73-76 |
| B- = 7. 0 | B- = 3. 5 | 70-72 |
| C+ = 6. 0 | C+ = 3. 0 | 67-69 |
| C = 5. 0 | C = 2. 5 | 63-66 |
| C- = 4. 0 | C- = 2. 0 | 60-62 |
| D+ = 3. 0 | D+ = 1. 5 | 57-59 |
| D = 2. 0 | D = 1. 0 | 53-56 |
| D- = 1. 0 | D- = 0. 5 | 50-52 |
| F = 0. 0 | F = 0. 0 | 0-49 |
Taken from: http://www.carleton.ca/sasc/sasc_home/audit/cgpa.html
In Quebec universities:
| Letter | Percent | Qualification |
|---|---|---|
| A | 80−100 | Greatly above standards |
| B | 70−79 | Above standards |
| C | 60−69 | At government standards |
| D | 50−59 | Lower standards |
| F | 0−49 | Failure |
Quebec's passing mark in Universities is 50% and the passing mark in High School and CEGEP is 60%. Quebec (kwɨˈbɛk
Mexican schools use a scale from 0 to 10 to measure students' scores. In Costa Rica, the academic grading systems work on a 100 point scale (and sometime in an analog 10 point scale The United Mexican States ( or commonly Mexico (ˈmɛksɪkoʊ () is a federal constitutional Republic in North America. Since decimal scores are common, a scale from 0 to 100 is often used to remove the decimal point:
Students who fail a subject have the option of taking an extraordinary test (examen extraordinario, often shortened to extra) that evaluates the contents of the entire period. Once the test is finished and the score is assessed, this score becomes the entire subject's score, thus giving failing students a chance to pass their subjects. Those who fail the extraordinary test have 2 more chances to take it; if the last test is failed, the subject is marked as failed and pending, and depending on the school, the student may fail the entire year.
Some private schools (particularly in higher levels of education) require a 70 to pass instead of the regular 60.
Grades are often absolute and not class-specific. It may be the case that the top of the class gets a final grade of 79. Curve-adjustment is rare. Grad-level students are usually expected to have grades of 80 or above to graduate. Students in the honor roll are usually those with an overall GPA of 90 or higher upon graduation, and some private universities will award them a "With Honors" diploma.
Classical five-point discrete evaluation with grades is the system most commonly used in the United States, but there are many variations. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the There are also a few schools that eschew discrete evaluation (letter grading) in favor of pure discursive evaluation. There is no standardized system of grading in the United States, as these issues are left up to individual universities, schools, and states.
Grades in the United States are generally assigned by a letter: A (highest grade, excellent), B (above average), C (average), D (usually the minimum passing grade), and F (fail). Additionally, most schools will calculate a student's grade point average by assigning each letter grade a number and using a mathematical formula to come up with a numerical representation of a student's work. In Education, a grade (or mark is a teacher's standardized Evaluation of a Student 's work Generally, American schools equate an A with a numerical value of 4. 0.
The percentage needed in any given coursework needed to achieve a certain grade and the assignment of GPA point values varies from one school to another. The most general and common grading scale is as follows:
| Grade | Percentage | GPA value |
|---|---|---|
| A | 100 - 90 | 4. 0 |
| B | 89 - 80 | 3. 0 |
| C | 79 - 70 | 2. 0 |
| D | 69 -60 | 1. 0 |
| F | Below 60 | 0. 0 |
Whether the failing grade is F or E typically depends on time and geography. Some states, but not many, have tended to favor E since World War II while the majority of the country tends to use F. Ultimately, the grade F traces to the days of two-point grading as Pass (P) and Fail (F). In recent years some schools have begun using an N for failing grades. Presumably to represent NO CREDIT.
Chromatic variants (+ and −) are often used. In hypomodal grading on a 100-point scale, the prime letter grade is assigned a value centered around the one's digit 5: the + grade is assigned the top values of near the one's digit 9, and the − grade is assigned the bottom values near 0; thus, 80 to 83 is B−, 84 to 86 is B, and 87 to 89 is B+. In straight modal grading on a 4. 0 decimal scale, the prime number is the prime letter grade: the + range of the grade begins at X. 333 (repeating), rounded to X. 30, above the prime number, and the − range of the grade begins at X. 666 (repeating), rounded up to X. 70, below the prime number: thus, B = 3. 0, B+ = 3. 3, and B− = 2. 7.
The A range is often treated as a special case. In most American schools, a 4. 00 is regarded as perfect and the highest GPA one can achieve. Thus, an A, being the prime grade, achieves the mark of a 4. 00; for the A+ mark, most schools still assign a value of 4. 00, equivalent to the A mark, to prevent deviation from the standard 4. 00 GPA system. However, the A+ mark, then, becomes a mark of distinction that has no impact on the student's GPA. A few schools do assign grade values of 4. 33, however.
In many American high schools, students may also score above 4. High school is the name used in some parts of the world (in particular Scotland, North America and Australia) to describe an institution 0 if taking advanced, honors, Advanced Placement, or International Baccalaureate classes. The Advanced Placement Program is a program that offers college level courses at High schools across the United States and Canada. The International Baccalaureate (IB Diploma Programme (DP is an Educational programme examined in one of three languages ( English, French or Spanish
There has been dispute over how colleges should look at grades from previous schools and high schools because one grade in one part of the country might not be the equivalent of a grade in another part of the country. In other words, an "A" might be 90-100 somewhere, and a 94-100 somewhere else. In middle and high schools that do not use a system based on academic credit, the grade point average is computed by taking the mean of all grades. A credit is a unit that gives weighting to the value level or time requirements of an academic course. In colleges and universities that use discrete evaluation, the grade point average is calculated by multiplying the quantitative values by the credit value of the correlative course, and then dividing the total by the sum of all credits.
For example:
| Class | Credits | Grade | Grade Points |
| Speech 101 | 3 | A | 3 × 4. 0 = 12. 0 |
| Biology 102 | 4 | B+ | 4 × 3. 3 = 13. 2 |
| History 103 | 3 | B− | 3 × 2. 7 = 8. 1 |
| Physical Education 104 | 1 | C | 1 × 2. 0 = 2. 0 |
In a standards-based grading system, a performance standard is set by a committee based on ranking anchor papers and grading rubrics, which demonstrate performance which is below, meeting, or exceeding the "standard. " This standard is intended to be a high, world-class level of performance, which must be met by every student regardless of ability or class, although they are actually set by a committee with no reference to any other national standard. Levels are generally assigned numbers between zero and four. Writing papers may be graded separately on content (discussion) and conventions (spelling and grammar). Spelling is the Writing of a Word or words with the necessary letters and Diacritics present in an accepted standard order Grammar is the field of Linguistics that covers the Rules governing the use of any given natural language. Since grading is not based on a curve distribution, it is entirely possible to achieve a grading distribution in which all students pass and meet the standard. While such grading is generally used only for assessments, they have been proposed for alignment with classroom grading. However, in practice, grading can be much more severe rather than more generous than traditional letter grades. Even after ten years, some states, such as Washington, continue to evaluate over half of their students as "below standard" on the state mathematics assessment. Washington ( is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States.
In Hong Kong, the system of grade point average (GPA)[4] is used in universities:
| Grade | GPA |
|---|---|
| A+ | 4. In China,Universities and Colleges are sorted into four levels grading system for different levels are different Hong Kong ( officially the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, is a territory located on China 's south coast on the Pearl River Delta, and borders 30 |
| A | 4. 00 |
| A− | 3. 70 |
| B+ | 3. 30 |
| B | 3. 00 |
| B− | 2. 70 |
| C+ | 2. 30 |
| C | 2. 00 |
| C− | 1. 70 |
| D+ | 1. 30 |
| D | 1. 00 |
| F | 0. 00 |
Some universities don't include A+ in the grades[5], or set the grade point of A+ to be 4. 00[6], so that the maximum GPA attainable is 4. 00 instead of 4. 30. Some universities use a 12-point system called "CGA" instead[7]. Some universities do not include minus grades (i. e. , no A-, B-, C-) and the grade point of A+, B+, C+, D+ is 4. 5, 3. 5, 2. 5, 1. 5 respectively. [8]
In Israel, there are two scales, 0-10 (usually small quizzes, surprise quizzes, etc. The grading system in India varies somewhat as a result of being a large country In Indonesia, a grade point average ranging from 1 to 10 is used 10 Exceptional (highest grade rarely given 9-6 Passing (passing grades in all subjects For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Israel topics. A pop quiz is a Quiz or test given to the class without prior warning or announcement ) and 0-100 (usually exams):
In secondary school (grades 7-12), any grade below 55 is considered a failing grade.
It may be worth mentioning that the Israeli education system does not employ curved grading at any stage (incl. at the academic level). To compensate for this, most academic institutions require that candidates undergo a psychometric exam, which in Israel provides examinees with an overall score of 200-800, the average being 535 (according to the results of the National Institute of Scoring and Evaluation's [1] report of 2005). As previously mentioned, though, the vast majority of Israeli academic institutions also refrain from grading on a curve. Only certain law faculties use curved grading, and one management faculty recently announced its intention to gradually introduce curved grading at the undergraduate level as well.
In Russia, Ukraine, Hungary and likely many of the former Soviet Union (with the notable exception of Moldova, that switched to the Romanian system) and some countries formerly associated with the Eastern Bloc, close variations of a five-point grading scale is used:
Qualifiers + and - are often used to add some degree of differentiation between the grades: e. The Iranian grading system is similar to that of France 's in secondary schools and universities the passing grade is 10 In Japan, the grading system depends on the school Many universities use the following categories yū (優 A (90-100% ryō (良 B (70- In Nepal the grade system is divided into 3 divisions Division I with Dist- 80% or higher Division I- 60% or higher Division II- 48% or higher In Pakistan two grading scales are commonly used in higher education The Philippines has varied university grading systems Most universities particularly public institutions follow the grade point system scale of 5 Russia (Россия Rossiya) or the Russian Federation ( Rossiyskaya Federatsiya) is a transcontinental Country extending The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR was a constitutionally Socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991 Moldova, officially the Republic of Moldova ( Republica Moldova) is a Landlocked country in Eastern Europe, located between Romania Belarus ( Belarusian Беларусь / Biełaruś is a Landlocked country in Eastern Europe, bordered by Russia to the north and east Ukraine (Україна Ukrayina, /ukrɑˈjinɑ/ is a country in Eastern Europe. Hungary (Magyarország 'mɔɟɔrorsaːg) officially in English the Republic of Hungary ( Magyar Köztársaság, literally Magyar (Hungarian Republic The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR was a constitutionally Socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991 Romania ( dated: Rumania, Roumania During the Cold War, the term Communist Bloc (or Soviet Bloc) was used to refer to the Soviet Union and countries it either controlled or that were g. , 4+ is better than 4, but a little worse than 5-. Grading varies greatly from school to school, university to university, and even teacher to teacher, and tends to be entirely subjective, even for courses that lend themselves to objective marking, such as mathematics and applied sciences. Even though the grades technically range from 1 to 5, 1 is not common and is rarely given for academic reasons—in many cases, a 1 is given as a result of failure to show up for or to complete an exam. A 2 grade usually means that the student showed no or little knowledge in a subject (in Russia/Ukraine, but not in Hungary).
It may be worth mentioning that 1 is somewhat an exotic grade in Russian schools, but it does exist officially. The mostly used grades are 5 to 2. + and - modifiers follow the same tendency; they are used rarely in middle school, and almost never in colleges or universities. Some institutions and teachers (excluding Russia), unsatisfied with the five-point scale, work with various larger ones, but these grading systems are not recognized by the state and require conversion for official use.
It is necessary to understand that, in Russian universities, all of the courses are compulsory subjects. There are no electives in the sense of the Western system available in Russia. However, very rarely in some universities are there certain subjects that are not graded at all. Such subjects could be interpreted as additional electives, because they are not compulsory, do not contribute towards the degree, and will not be mentioned in the final degree paper (diploma). However, the grade ‘Attended’ is issued if the attendance requirements are met by a student.
The majority of subjects are graded on a ‘Pass/No pass’ (Credit/No Credit) basis (зачёт/незачёт, pronounced as "zach`ot/nezach`ot"), and the rest is graded in terms of numbers. The 'Pass/No Pass" grades do not have any official numeric representation. When "zachot"- (credit- or pass-) type subjects are graded as ‘Pass/Not pass,’ this simply represents a student's good or poor knowledge of a subject, and, in numeric terms, can be interpreted as "more than "3"/less than "3. " Each university implements its own understanding of the appropriate level of knowledge a student should have in order to pass studied subjects. Students in Russia must pass all of the offered subjects in order to graduate.
Due to several ways to translate the word "zachet" from Russian into English (it can be translated as "credit" or "pass"), this type of grading is the source of problems for Russian students applying to Western universities. Such grades may confuse Western universities and make it difficult to correctly calculate students' GPA in terms of Western systems.
In the past recent years, some of these countries (excluding Russia) have started to implement the following grading system:
| New System | Old System |
|---|---|
| 12 | 5+ |
| 11 | 5 |
| 10 | 5- |
| 9 | 4+ |
| 8 | 4 |
| 7 | 4- |
| 6 | 3+ |
| 5 | 3 |
| 4 | 3- |
| 3 | 2 |
| 2 | 1 |
| 1 | complete failing |
At most universities and colleges, the United Arab Emirates' grading system is very similar to the United States' system. Singapore's grading system in schools is differentiated by the existence of many types of institutions with different education foci and systems Schools and universities in Vietnam use a 10-point grading scale with 10 being the highest and 0 being the lowest See Education in the United Arab Emirates for more information. Basic education The UAE currently devotes approximately 25 percent of total federal Government spending to Education.
In Albania, grades from 1 (sometimes 0) to 10 are used, with some schools allowing decimals (up to the hundredth digit) and some others only allowing whole numbers. This article is about the country in southern Europe For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Albania topics.
| Grade | Qualification |
|---|---|
| 10. 00 | Excellent |
| 8. 00–9. 99 | Very Good |
| 6. 00–7. 99 | Good |
| 4. 00–5. 99 | Sufficient |
| 0. 00–3. 99 | Insufficient |
Most universities evaluate classes with two mid exams and a final. The final exam encompasses the whole course syllabus, whereas the mid exams usually review half. This article is about a type of examination for other uses see Final examination (disambiguation A final examination (or final In some schools, if the average grade of the two mid exams is equal to or higher than 7. 00, the student is able to pass the class without the need to take a final exam (since there are only two exams, some teachers also pass students who average 6. 50; others weigh in the decision based on the student's performance in class). An average of less than 4. 00 is failing; students who score such an average are not allowed to take the final exam.
In high schools, the year is divided into three trimesters and classes are usually yearlong. Students need an average of 6. 00 or higher in the three trimestral exams to avoid having to take a final to pass the class. In the event of a student scoring less than 6. 00 in the 3rd trimester, he or she would have to take a final exam, regardless of average. This is considered controversial, since the last trimestral exam is not more important than the first two, but the rule stands to prevent students who have already reached the minimum average (e. g. , two 10. 00 in the first two give a student the lowest possible average of 6. 33) from not making an effort during the last three months of the year.
In Austria, scholastic grades use a 5-point grading scale:
usually earned after 50% or less of maximum achievable credit)
In Bulgaria, the following grade scale is used in schools:
For exact grading, two positions after the decimal point are used; thus, grades as, e. Austria (Österreich ( officially the Republic of Austria (Republik Österreich In Bosnia, the following grade scale applies to elementary and high school students The state of Bulgaria (България transliterated bg-Latn ''Balgaria'' The country preserves the traditions (in ethnic name language and alphabet of the First Bulgarian g. , Poor (2. 50), or Excellent (5. 75), are common. Every passing grade at or above the . 50 mark is prefixed with the term of the higher grade. The minimum is 2. 00; grades below 3. 00 are failing grades, and the maximum is 6. 00.
Roughly, the Bulgarian grade system can be equated to the American one as the following: 6=A, 5=B, 4=C, 3=D, and 2=F.
The current scale, syv-trins-skalaen ("7-step-scale"), was introduced in 2007, replacing the old 13-skalaen ("13-scale"). Croatia (Hrvatska ˈxȓvatska officially the Republic of Croatia ( Republika Hrvatska) is a southern Central European country at the crossroads between In Croatia the following grade scale applies to elementary school high school and university students In the Czech Republic, primary and secondary schools use a 5-point grade system with 1 as the best and 5 as the worst The new scale is designed to be compatible with the ECTS-scale. The ECTS grading scale (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System is a grading system defined in the ECTS framework by the European Commission.
Syv-trins-skalaen consists of seven different grades, ranging from 12 to -3, with 12 being the highest:
| Grade | Description | 13-scale-equivalent | ECTS-equivalent | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| −3 | entirely inadequate | 00, 03 | F | |||
| 00 | inadequate | 5 | Fx | |||
| 02 | adequate | the minimum acceptable (minimum passing grade) | 6 | E | ||
| 4 | fair | numerous significant flaws, slightly below average | 7 | D | ||
| 7 | good | numerous flaws (8 = average performance) | 8 & 9 | C | ||
| 10 | excellent | few significant flaws | 10 | B | ||
| 12 | outstanding | none or few insignificant flaws | 11 & 13 | A | ||
This new scale remains a absolute scale, meaning that, proportions are not taken into consideration.
Several systems are in use in different educational institutions in Finland. The Finnish education system is an egalitarian Nordic system with no Tuition fees for full-time students
The "school grade" system has historically been a scale of 0 to 10, but all grades lower than 4 were discarded; thus, it is divided between 4, the failing grade, and 5-10, the succeeding grades. This is similar to the grading scale used in Romania. In Education, a grade (or mark is a teacher's standardized Evaluation of a Student 's work
In the individual exams, but not in the final results, it is also possible to divide the scale further with '½', which represents a half grade, and '+' and '−', which represent one-fourth a grade better or inferior. For example, the order is 9<9+<9½<10−<10. The grade '10+' can also be awarded to represent perfect performance added with extra effort by the student.
The matriculation examination grades are similar to the above, but in Latin. Abitur (from Latin abire = go away go off is a designation used in Germany and Finland for final exams that young adults take at the end of
| Grade | Abbrv. | Gloss | Translation | Percentage of grades |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| laudatur | L | excellent | praised | Top 5% |
| eximia cum laude approbatur | E | excellent | accepted, with extraordinary commendations | 15% |
| magna cum laude approbatur | M | good | accepted, with many commendations | 20% |
| cum laude approbatur | C | satisfactory | accepted, with commendations | 24% |
| lubenter approbatur | B | satisfactory | readily accepted | 20% |
| approbatur | A | mediocre | accepted | 11% |
| improbatur | I | fail | disapproved | bottom 5% |
Universities and vocational institutions use a scale of 0 (fail) and 1-5 (pass), or fail/pass. The professor selects which grading scheme is used; short, compulsory courses typically have pass/fail grades.
Germany uses a 6-point grading scale (GPA) to evaluate the performance of school children:
5 and 6 are both considered to be failing grades, though in earlier years students who earned 5 grades were not required to repeat classes if they performed well in other classes. The French grading system is based mostly on a 20-point grading scale it is used above all in secondary schools and universities Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany ( ˈbʊndəsʁepuˌbliːk ˈdɔʏtʃlant is a Country in Central Europe. Grades 1 to 5 can be suffixed with + and −. To calculate averages of suffixed grades, they are assigned fractioned values, where 1 is 1. 0, 1− is 1. 3, 2+ is 1. 7, 2 is 2. 0, 2− is 2. 3, and so on. There is even the grade of 1+ or 0. 7, which roughly means 'with distinction'. (But there is neither 6+ nor 6−, since 6 means null. )
As schools are governed by the states, not by the federal government, there are slight differences. Sometimes there is 1− equal to 1. 25, 1-2 = 1. 5, 2+ = 1. 75 and so on. And sometimes the grades are in tenth of a number, 1. 0, 1. 1, 1. 2 and so on.
Some states replace this system in higher grades (usually 12th and 13th) by "points," whereas 15 points represents the highest possible score: "1+. " 14 points equal a "1" (sehr gut), 13 points equal a "1−," and so on; 1 point equals a "5−," and 0 points represent a "6" (ungenügend). This system is used for easier calculation of averages and to ease the admission process for the "Abitur," the final exam. The written marks below are replaced by numbers, too, instead of using fraction values, such as 1. 2.
In school reports, only unmodified integer grades may be used; they are written in text form in some parts of Germany:
"In-between" grades such as 1-2, 2-3, 3-4 etc. , which originally counted as 1. 5, 2. 5, etc. , have largely been discontinued, due to ambiguities when converting averages back to integer values.
In the final classes of Gymnasiums, the grades are converted to numbers ("points") in order to calculate the average for Abitur. A gymnasium (pronounced with ɡ- in several languages is a type of school providing Secondary education in some parts of Europe, comparable to English grammar Abitur (from Latin abire = go away go off is a designation used in Germany and Finland for final exams that young adults take at the end of In this case, a 1+ exists (and counts as 15), 1 is 14, 1− is 13, 2+ is 12, and so on; 5− is 1, and, finally 6 is 0. Although 1+ exists in this system, so even Abitur averages below 1. 0 can be achieved. When the point system is used, 4 (5 points) is the lowest passing grade, and 4− (4 points) is the highest failing grade.
In converting German grades to the A-F scale, a 1 = A, . . . 4 = D scale is often used (with 5 and 6 both converted to F's). The accuracy of this conversion is often debated, since expected performance averages vary among schools. For example, a 2 in the German is often given for a performance of 90%; a 90% will almost always be equivalent to an A among the U. S. grading scale. Both situations will vary depending on the school's, faculty's and/or instructor's guidelines.
For the conversion of Gymnasium grades, the following must be taken into account: Only 23% of the German population obtain the Abitur - Allgemeine Hochschulreife (General Maturity for University), implying that a 4. 0 (passed) is applied to students within the best 23% of the population. Another 17-21% obtain a Fachabitur or Fachhochschulreife limiting their university choices either to more application oriented studies at a Fachhochschule ("University of Applied Sciences") or to only that subject at University that they specialized in while at the Gymnasium. A Fachhochschule (plural Fachhochschulen) or University of Applied Sciences is a German type of University, sometimes specialized in certain topical areas Consequently, even a 4 (pass) in a university exam is awarded to students within the top 23% (or top 40% for Fachhochschule) group of the German population.
In former East Germany, a 5-point grading scale was used until July 1991:
This scale is identical to the current Austrian grading scale. The German Democratic Republic ( GDR; Deutsche Demokratische Republik DDR; commonly known in English as East Germany) was a Socialist state In Education, a grade (or mark is a teacher's standardized Evaluation of a Student 's work
At training institutions approved by the German Chamber of Commerce (IHK), the following grades are awarded:
For example, 91% counts as grade 2, but, when specified as a decimal, is actually a 1. A chamber of commerce (also referred to in some circles as a board of trade) is a form of Business network. 5 grade. A student who attains 91% would naturally rather state that he or she has a grade of 1. 5 instead of declaring a 2 grade.
In German universities (excluding law schools), the 1 to 5 scale for the grade (Note / Zensur) is also used:
Sometimes, esp. Responsibility for German education system lies primarily with the states while the federal government only has a minor role with a Dr. Phil. (D. Phil. / Ph. D. ), the Latin versions are also used for the grading (here the grade (Note / Zensur) is called Prädikat):
There is no grade for failing, because at the lowest, the dissertation is just formally rejected, without any kind of grading.
For law students at German universities, a similar system to the 1-5 scale is used that comprises one more grade that is inserted between 2 (gut) and 3 (befriedigend), named "vollbefriedigend. " This is due to the fact that the grades "gut" and "sehr gut" are extremely rare, so an additional grade was created below "gut" to increase differentiation. Every grade is converted into points very much like the Gymnasium system described above, starting at 18 points (excellent) down to 0 points (poor). 4 points is the lowest passing grade.
Often, the German grades are treated like an interval scale to calculate means and deviations for comparisons. The level of Measurement of a Variable in Mathematics and Statistics is a classification that is used to describe the nature of information Despite it lacking any psychometric standardization, the grading system is also used like a normally distributed statistical scale for norm-referenced assessments (with an expected value of 3 and a standard deviation of 1). So, transformations into other statistical measures like Percentiles, T, Stanine, etc. , or (like in the PISA studies) IQ, are then possible; e. g. , here a transformation into Percentiles and IQ:
(Note: this is the statistical norm IQ (expected value of 100, standard deviation of 15) which is nowadays widely used outside of intelligence tests, since it is not a measure of intelligence. )
This transformation is—as mentioned above—highly questionable at the least. E. g. , substantially far more than 14% (>4. 0) of German students at universities fail in an exam (usually about 20-40%—often even more; in very rare cases, at technical universities, up to 98% fail an individual exam, as they first try and know they are entitled to a second try). Grades awarded vary widely between fields of study and between universities/schools. In reality, nevertheless, independent from field and school, students normally have to successfully complete more than half of the tasks given within an examination to pass it (to get a 4. 0). So, also the reality contradicts the treatment of grades as statistical norms.
Also, it must be taken into account that in Germany education (at school as well as at university) is still not only about learning, but also particularly about permanent selection (whereas the criteria of selection are widely criticized, especially the underlying principles of grading used in Germany). The selection might be the (comparatively) low succession rates at university, as well as the small number of people who obtain an "Abitur" in the first place. However, several empirical psychological studies show that the grades awarded in Germany at school and university have low reliability (and therefore extremely weak validity). [9] Only a GPA from school is a mild (weak) predictor for success in school, university, and, to a slightly better degree, vocational trainings, and GPAs from school or university have nearly no predictive value for job performance. [10] In Germany, due to the lack of German psychometric tests (such as the Scholastic Aptitude Test(SAT), or the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) in the United States), the GPA is mainly used as the only criterion within an application process. The SAT Reasoning Test (formerly Scholastic Aptitude Test and Scholastic Assessment Test) is a standardized test for College admissions in the Graduate Record Examination or GRE is a commercially-run Standardized test that is an admissions requirement for many Graduate schools principally in the In the work field, the grades have a high impact on career opportunities and science-based recruitment, and assessment is still used only by less than 8% of German employers (in other European countries, the percentage is 50-70%). [11]
| Percentage Range | Grade | Points for Higher |
Points for Ordinary |
Points for Foundation[12] |
| 90 – 100 | A1 | 100 | 60 | 20 |
| 85 – 89. There are four Grading systems (or scales in Greece - four different GPA - one for higher education one for secondary education and two for primary education (grades 1 to 3 and 4 to 6 In Hungary, a 5-point grade system is used There are only whole numbers in report cards but for grading exams there are also fractions (such as 3/4 which is between 3 and 4 9 | A2 | 90 | 50 | 15 |
| 80 – 84. 9 | B1 | 85 | 45 | 10 |
| 75 – 79. 9 | B2 | 80 | 40 | 5 |
| 70 – 74. 9 | B3 | 75 | 35 | 0 |
| 65 – 69. 9 | C1 | 70 | 30 | 0 |
| 60 – 64. 9 | C2 | 65 | 25 | 0 |
| 55 – 59. 9 | C3 | 60 | 20 | 0 |
| 50 – 54. 9 | D1 | 55 | 15 | 0 |
| 45 – 49. 9 | D2 | 50 | 10 | 0 |
| 40 – 44. 9 | D3 | 45 | 5 | 0 |
| 25 – 39. 9 | E | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 10 – 24. 9 | F | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 0 – 9. 9 | NG | 0 | 0 | 0 |
In Irish secondary schools, grades are awarded using letters along this scale:
Any score below 10% is classed as NG or No Grade. Ireland (pronounced /ˈaɾlənd/ Éire) is the third largest island in Europe, and the twentieth-largest island in the world
At Higher Level, a C grade and above is considered an 'Honour' grade.
Leaving Certificate results are measured by the number of 'points' awarded to the student. The Leaving Certificate ( Ardteistiméireacht) commonly referred to as the Leaving Cert (Irish Ardteist) is the final course in the Irish It is usually the amount of points awarded to the student that forms the basis for the student's acceptance or otherwise into a course of higher education (e. g. , a university degree course).
A number of points between 0 and 100 are awarded to the student for each Leaving Certificate exam sat. The student then combines the points from his or her six top scoring exams, giving a final total score between 0 and 600. The number of points awarded for a particular grade depend on whether the student sat for the exam for the 'Higher Level' course or the 'Ordinary Level' course. The number of points awarded for each grade at the two levels are as follows:
Anything below a D3 is considered a failing grade, and no points are awarded.
In Italian primary school, a 5-point grading scale is used:
In high school, a 10-point scale is used, 6 being the minimum grade for passing. Italy (Italia officially the Italian Republic, (Repubblica Italiana is located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe, and on the two largest See also Primary education A primary school (from French école primaire) is an institution where children receive the first stage of Compulsory High school is the name used in some parts of the world (in particular Scotland, North America and Australia) to describe an institution Specifications such as +, −, "double minus" ("="), half grades ("double plus") and "between" grades, such as 6/7, are often used. Note that the grades used in primary school are derived from this scale, with Non Sufficiente meaning "5 and under," and the other grades standing respectively for 7, 8, 9, and 10. A 10 is very rare to score, as well as a 1. The weakest grade a student can normally get is a 3 or a 4. An 8 is usually considered a very good grade, and a 9 is an excellent grade. The average is between and 6 and 8.
Universities in Italy use a 30-point scale, simply divided in two: no passing (0 to 17 points) and passing grades (18 to 30 points), for ordinary exams, and a 110-point scale for the final dissertation, which is divided in two as well, with 66 being the minimum grade for passing. Italy (Italia officially the Italian Republic, (Repubblica Italiana is located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe, and on the two largest For outstanding results, the Lode "praise" is added to the maximum grade.
| ECTS Grade | Definition | % of successful students | Corresponding Italian grades |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Excellent | 10% | 30-30 Laude |
| B | Very Good | 25% | 27-29 |
| C | Good | 30% | 24-26 |
| D | Satisfactory | 25% | 19-23 |
| E | Sufficient | 10% | 18 |
| FX | Fail | 14-17 | |
| F | Fail | 0-13 |
To someone familiar with both the Italian and the U. European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System ( ECTS) is a standard for comparing the study attainment and performance of students of Higher education across the S. college systems, Italian grades are best translated into American grades (and vice versa) according to the following table:
| U. S. Grade | Definition | Corresponding Italian grades |
|---|---|---|
| A−, A, A+ | Excellent | 28-30 Lode |
| B−, B, B+ | Good | 25-27 |
| C−, C, C+ | Satisfactory | 21-24 |
| D−, D, D+ | Barely passing | 18-20 |
| E or F | Fail | 0-17 |
Liechtenstein uses the Swiss Grading System. The grading system in Latvia has recently been changed to a 10-point scale In Education, a grade (or mark is a teacher's standardized Evaluation of a Student 's work
See Romania. In Lithuania the grading system has been changed to a 10-point scale since 1995 In Luxembourg a grade system from 01 to 60 is used in primary and secondary schools
In The Netherlands, grades from 1. The Netherlands ( Dutch:, ˈnedərlɑnt is the European part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, which consists of the Netherlands the Netherlands 0 up to 10. 0 are used, with 1 being worst and 10 being best. The grades 9 and 10 are hardly ever given on examinations (on average, a 9 is awarded in only 1. 5%, and a 10 in 0. 5% of cases). Generally, either one or two decimal places are used, and a +/− means a quarter (rounded to either 0. 8 or 0. 3 if only one decimal place is used). Thus, a grade of 6. 75 (or 6. 8) could be written as 7−, whereas a grade of 7+ would count for 7. 25 or 7. 3.
The grade scale with the labels:
Usually 5. 5 constitutes a pass, whereas 5. 4 and below constitute a fail. If no decimal places are used, 6 and up is a pass and 5 and below is a fail. Sometimes, when no decimal place is used, an additional grade, 6−, is used as "barely passed. " In contrast with the usual interpretation as a 5. 75, this grade represents what would have been a 5. 5 if a decimal place were used. In some other situations, the decimal point is expressly forbidden to be used for any grade between 5. 0 and 6. 0, so that graders are forced to specify a clear pass/fail decision.
An alternative system classifies grades of 6. 0 and up as always passing, but also allows one or two classes in a school year with a score between 5. 0 and 6. 0. However, the average of all grades over the year must be over 6. 0. If students do not reach the average of 6. 0 or have more than two courses with a score between 5. 0 and 6. 0, a secondary exam must be taken to pass the failing classes. A score below 5. 0 is always insufficient and the exam must be retaken.
Depending on the grade, several honors are available, including met genoegen and cum laude. Latin honors are Latin phrases used to indicate the level of academic distinction with which an Academic degree was earned This honor system is typically only used at universities. For an average grade of at least 7, but not meeting the criteria for cum laude, met genoegen (with pleasure) is sometimes awarded; this is strongly dependent on the criteria the university maintains. The criteria for the cum laude honor vary as well, usually requiring at least an 8 or 8. Latin honors are Latin phrases used to indicate the level of academic distinction with which an Academic degree was earned 5 average grade. Various other conditions often apply as well, such as the condition of receiving no grades below a certain limit (6 or 7), or completing within certain time restrictions.
When different variations of cum laude are used, the degree of honor is usually dependent on the average grades over the school year. Usually, if the average score of the student is at least an 8. 0, but less than 8. 5 over the whole school year, the honor cum laude is awarded. If the grade is over 8. 5, but less than 9. 0(or 9. 5 in some schools), magna cum laude is awarded. Lastly, if the grade is over 9. 0 (or 9. 5 in some schools), summa cum laude is awarded.
Australian primary and secondary schools are currently migrating to a common reporting and assessment format. In colleges and universities the international system ranging from A to F is used A 10% (8-12 B 25% (20-30 C 30% (24-36 D 25% (20-30 At Poland 's primary middle and high schools a 1-6 point grade system is used 1 - fail 2 - pass but very low performance 3 - satisfactory In Portuguese middle-schools a five-point grading scale is used where 5 (very good or excellent is the best possible grade 4 (good 3 (satisfactory In Romanian Primary schools a 4-point grading scale is used Foarte Bine (FB very good Bine (B good Suficient/Satisfăcător (S In Serbia a five-point grading scale is used in Elementary schools and Secondary schools 5 (excellent 4 (very good 3 In Slovakia, a five-point grading scale is used in primary and secondary schools In Slovenia, a five-point grading scale is used in elementary and high schools 5 excellent (best possible grade 4 very good 3 good Spain uses a 0 to 10 grading scale for elementary and high schools 9 These grades are used in the Grundskola (primary school and the Gymnasium (secondary school MVG - Mycket väl godkänd (Passed with special distinction VG - Väl godkänd In Switzerland, usually a 6-point grading scale similar to that in Germany is used but in reverse order and with a higher failing grade Ukraine introduced a new grading system after 2002 The new system provides grades that lie within 1 and 12 and are matched with the 5-point grade system that was used previously This is an article about the grading used in most of the United Kingdom. For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Australia topics. Education is the responsibility of the states in Australia. For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic Australia topics. In 2005 the Federal Government introduced a universal common assessment and reporting standards legislation that all states had to adhere to. The grading system is now structured as follows, though the percentages are only an approximate guide:
| Letter | Percentile |
|---|---|
| A | 93-above |
| B | 92-83 |
| C | 82-73 |
| D | 72-63 |
| E | 62-below |
Most Australian tertiary institutions use close variations of the following grading structure:
Many courses also have Non-Graded Pass (NGP) and Non-Graded Fail (F), in which it is considered more appropriate to have qualitative than quantitative assessment. However, in some universities, an F1 category may be given a 'Pass Conceded' if the student's Weighted Average is greater than a nominated threshold. (More often than not, this is around the 53-55 range. )
Grade point averages are not generally used in Australia below a tertiary level. They are calculated according to more complicated formula than some other nations:
Grade Point Average (GPA) = Sum of (grade points × course unit values) / total number of credit points attempted, in which grade points are as follows:
Whenever a course result is a Non-Graded Pass, the result will only be included if the GPA is less than 4, and will be assigned the grade point of 4, otherwise NGP results will be disregarded.
The term course unit values is used to distinguish between courses which have different weightings e. g. between a full year course and a single semester course.
The High School Certificate system varies from state to state. For example, in New South Wales, the UAI (Universities Admissions Index) determines tertiary positions. Government Supported Positions are given to students that achieve above a certain UAI threshold. (An example of this is a UAI of 85 for Civil Engineering at the University of New South Wales. [13]) The value of the UAI corresponds with the percentile the student is placed within the state of New South Wales.