Wo ist hier?
Im Englischen A-Level gilt:
A 90%-100%
B 80%-90%
C 70%-80%
D 50%-60%
E not passed
(F) not passed
LG
Georg
> Im Englischen A-Level gilt:
> A 90%-100%
> B 80%-90%
> C 70%-80%
> D 50%-60%
> E not passed
> (F) not passed
Gibt es "E"? Ich meinte bislang: nein. Als Begründung wurde gesagt, dass
man aus F zu leicht E machen könnte (andere bestritten diese Begründung).
--
servus, tschau, bye
Herbert
http://www.gavagai.de
At the end of the two-year GCSE course, each student receives a grade
for each subject. The pass grades, from best to worst, are:
* A* (pronounced 'A-star')
* A
* B
* C
* D
* E
* F
* G
Those who fail a course are given a U (unclassified) and the subject is
not included on their certificates.
2) AS-Levels / A-Levels
In the current system, A-levels are graded from A to E.[8] The raw mark
in papers are converted to marks on a Uniform Mark Scale (UMS), so that
every A-level subject has a maximum of 600 UMS marks, and every AS-level
subject 300. Each grade requires a specific percentage of the UMS points
available in both the A- and AS-levels:
Grade Percentage
A 80% - 100%
B 70% - 79%
C 60% - 69%
D 50% - 59%
E 40% - 49%
[Anm.: Ab 90% A*, deshalb hab ich oben das etwas verwischt.]
1) Standard Grades (Scottish Gaelic: An Ìre Choitchinne)
Students are awarded a numerical grade for each examination (which may
consist of several papers) ranging from 1 (best) to 7.
3) Schottische Highers:
Higher (GCSE equivalent) [An Àrd Ìre]
Higher examinations, in common with all National Qualification levels,
have 5 grades: A, B, C, D and No Award. A, B and C all indicate that the
candidate has achieved the Higher
2) Advanced Higer (ALevel equivalent) [An Àrd Ìre Adhartach]
? Grading analog zu A-Level?