Experiencing English 1 Related Information n Levels of

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Experiencing English 1 Related Information n Levels of Education in the United States and

Experiencing English 1 Related Information n Levels of Education in the United States and Canada n Grading Systems in the U. S. Passage B Wish for Freshman Year

Experiencing English 1 Related Information 1. Levels of Education in the United States and

Experiencing English 1 Related Information 1. Levels of Education in the United States and Canada is divided into the following levels at the indicated ages. Passage B Wish for Freshman Year

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Primary Education Elementary School ages 6 - 12 Pre-school

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Primary Education Elementary School ages 6 - 12 Pre-school ages 2 - 6 Passage B Wish for Freshman Year

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Secondary Education High School ages 14 - 18 Junior

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Secondary Education High School ages 14 - 18 Junior High School ages 12 - 14 Passage B Wish for Freshman Year

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Post Secondary Education Junior College ages 18 - 20

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Post Secondary Education Junior College ages 18 - 20 4 Year College ages 18 - 22 Graduate School ages (MA) 22 - 24 Graduate School Post Graduate ages (PH. D. ) 22 - 26/8 after PH. D. Passage B Wish for Freshman Year

Experiencing English 1 Related Information 2. Grading Systems in the U. S. Most colleges

Experiencing English 1 Related Information 2. Grading Systems in the U. S. Most colleges use letter grades like A, B, C, D, F, and some use plus or minus like B- or C+. To compute students’ averages they say A=4, B=3, C=2, D=1, F=0. It takes an average of 2. 0 to graduate. Grades of F must be repeated to get credit. Passage B Wish for Freshman Year

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Most students take 5 or occasionally 6 courses per

Experiencing English 1 Related Information Most students take 5 or occasionally 6 courses per semester, and most courses are 3 credits. It usually takes between 120 and 130 credits to graduate. A few colleges use numerical grades instead of letters. If so, most likely A=90, B=80, C=70, D=60, but this may be up to the professor. Passage B Wish for Freshman Year