Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
(some colleges may group the last two grades D and F into one grade called "Bottom", 0-64%, "下") Besides the grading system and the 100 percentage based marks, there is another form of assessment based on which one course is marked simply as "Qualified/Failed" (“合格/不合格”).
1.2.2 China. 1.2.3 Hong Kong. 1.2. ... The 10 point grading system that is used starting in grade 2 goes in the order from ... which is equivalent High School in ...
The highest grade available. Equivalent to a high "A*" in the old grading system. 8: Equivalent to a low A* in the old grading system. 7: A: Equivalent to an A in the old grading system. 6: B: Equivalent to a B in the old grading system. 5: C: Equivalent to a high C in the old grading system.
It usually refers to the educational integration of the elementary school and the middle school. After graduating from elementary school, graduates can directly enter into the junior high school. The grades in schools that implement the 9-year System are usually called Grade 1, Grade 2, and so on through Grade 9. Main features of the 9-year System:
The system was used in Zhejiang Province, with the last exam offered in 2016 to "Class-of-2013" (2013级, meaning admitted to senior high school in 2013, i.e., being Grade 10 in 2013) while "Class-of-2014" students have been taking the reformed version of Gaokao since 2017.
SHANGRI-LA TOWN, China (AP) — First-grade students, hands folded on their desks, watch a teacher write a brush-like stroke on a blackboard in their Tibetan alphabet. The Shangri-La Key Boarding ...
The high school from the former system will now be called junior high school, grade 7 (age 12–13) – grade 10 (age 15–16), while senior high school will be for grade 11 (age 16–17) – grade 12 (age 17–18) in the new educational system. The senior high school will serve as a specialized upper secondary education where students may ...
Under the new system There are seven grades: five numerical grades from 1–5, where 1 is the lowest and 5 is the highest, and two other grades, "5*" and "UNCL", for students with particularly outstanding and poor performance respectively. The traditional "on-the-curve" system was not used other than to distinguish between the 5*'s and the 5's.