fbpx
Wikipedia

Abitur

Abitur (German: [abiˈtuːɐ̯]), often shortened colloquially to Abi, is a qualification granted at the end of secondary education in Germany. It is conferred on students who pass their final exams at the end of ISCED 3, usually after twelve or thirteen years of schooling (see also, for Germany, Abitur after twelve years). In German, the term Abitur has roots in the archaic word Abiturium, which in turn was derived from the Latin abiturus (future active participle of abire, thus "someone who is going to leave").

As a matriculation examination, Abitur can be compared to A levels, the Matura or the International Baccalaureate Diploma, which are all ranked as level 4 in the European Qualifications Framework.

In Germany

Overview

The Zeugnis der Allgemeinen Hochschulreife ("certificate of general qualification for university entrance"), often referred to as Abiturzeugnis ("Abitur certificate"), issued after candidates have passed their final exams and have had appropriate grades in both the last and second last school year, is the document which contains their grades and formally enables them to attend university. Thus, it encompasses the functions of both a school graduation certificate and a college entrance exam.[1]

The official term in Germany for this certificate of education is Allgemeine Hochschulreife; the contraction Abi is common in colloquial usage. In 2005, a total of 231,465 students passed the Abitur exam in Germany. The numbers have risen steadily and in 2012, a total of 305,172 students obtained the Allgemeine Hochschulreife.[2] This number reflects those who pass the traditional Abitur at their high school. Adding (for 2012) the 51,912 students who obtained the Hochschulreife at vocational training schools, that total number increases to 357,084. If those who obtain the Fachhochschulreife (144,399 in 2012) are also added, then the total of those who obtained the right to study at a university or a Fachhochschule is 501,483 (2012).[3]

History

Until the eighteenth century, every German university had its own entrance examination. In 1788 Prussia introduced the Abiturreglement, a law, for the first time within Germany, establishing the Abitur as an official qualification. It was later also established in the other German states. In 1834, it became the only university entrance exam in Prussia, and it remained so in all states of Germany until 2004. Since then, the German state of Hesse allows students with Fachhochschulreife (see below) to study at the universities within that state.[citation needed]

Equivalency

The academic level of the Abitur is comparable to the International Baccalaureate, the GCE Advanced Level and the Advanced Placement tests. Indeed, the study requirements for the International Baccalaureate differ little from the German exam requirements. It is the only school-leaving certificate in all states of Germany that allows the graduate (or Abiturient) to move directly to university. The other school leaving certificates, the Hauptschulabschluss and the Realschulabschluss, do not allow their holders to matriculate at a university. Those granted certificates of Hauptschulabschluss or Realschulabschluss can gain a specialized Fachhochschulreife or an Abitur if they graduate from a Berufsschule and then attend Berufsoberschule or graduate from a Fachoberschule.

However, the Abitur is not the only path to university studies, as some universities set up their own entrance examinations. Students who successfully passed a "Begabtenprüfung" ("test of aptitude") are also eligible. Students from other countries who hold a high school leaving certificate that is not counted as being equivalent to the Abitur (such as the American high school diploma) and who do well enough on the ACT or SAT test, may also enter German universities. A person who does not hold the Abitur and did not take an aptitude test may still be admitted to university by completing at least the 10th grade and doing well on an IQ test (see: Hochbegabtenstudium).

Other qualifications called Abitur in colloquial usage

In German, the European Baccalaureate is called europäisches Abitur, the French-German Baccalaureate is called deutsch-französisches Abitur, and the International Baccalaureate is called internationales Abitur, neither to be confused with the German Abitur.

The term Fachabitur was used in all of Western Germany for a variation of the Abitur until the 1990s; the official term for the German qualification is fachgebundene Hochschulreife. This qualification includes only one foreign language (usually, English). The Abitur, in contrast, usually requires two foreign languages. The Fachabitur also allows the graduate to start studying at a university but is limited to a specified range of majors, depending on the specific subjects covered in his Fachabitur examinations. But the graduate is allowed to study for all majors at a Fachhochschule (University of Applied Sciences, in some ways comparable to polytechnics). Today, the school leaving certificate is called fachgebundenes Abitur ('restricted subject Abitur').

Now the term Fachabitur is used in most parts of Germany for the Fachhochschulreife (FHR). It was introduced in West Germany in the 1970s together with the Fachhochschulen. It enables the graduate to start studying at a Fachhochschule and, in Hesse, also at a university within that state. In the Gymnasiums of some states it is awarded in the year before the Abitur is reached. However, the normal way to obtain Fachhochschulreife is graduation from a German Fachoberschule, a vocational high school, also introduced in the 1970s.

The term Notabitur ('emergency Abitur') describes a qualification used only during World War I and World War II. It was granted to male German Gymnasium students who voluntarily enlisted for military service before graduation as well as young women who were evacuated from the major cities before they could complete their Gymnasium education as planned (approximately three to five million children and teenagers had to be evacuated during the war). The Notabitur during World War I included an examination, roughly equivalent to the Abitur exam. The World War II Notabitur, in contrast, was granted without an examination. After the war this was a major disadvantage for the students concerned since, unlike its World War I counterpart, the certificate was generally not recognised in West Germany and never recognised in East Germany. Universities requested the Abitur to consist of written exams including at least two foreign languages (almost always Latin and French, the latter sometimes replaced by English). Students, who received the Notabitur during World War II were offered to re-enter school to prepare for and take the exam after the war had ended. Those special Abitur preparation classes were made up of young adults of different age and sex, which was very unusual at the time.

 
This German graduate (Abiturient) wrote on his car: "Class of 2008: Not knowing anything, but knowing where it is written. Abipedia" (a portmanteau word compiled from Abitur and Wikipedia)

Equivalent high school graduation certificate in other countries

The equivalent graduation certificate in the Czech Republic, Austria, Poland, Italy and other countries of continental Europe is the Matura; while in England, Wales, Northern Ireland, Hong Kong, Singapore, and the West Indies, it is A-levels; in Scotland it is Higher Grade; in the Republic of Ireland it is the Leaving Certificate; in Greece and Cyprus it is the "apolytirion" (a kind of high school diploma); in Malta it is the Matriculation Certificate (MATSEC), in Hungary it is called "érettségi bizonyítvány" roughly equivalent with the German phrase Zeugnis der Allgemeinen Hochschulreife as it originates from the Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy.

In Australia, the graduation certificate awarded to high school students is the Senior Secondary Certificate of Education (SSCE). However, the name of the SSCE varies from state to state. In Victoria, it is called the Victorian Certificate of Education (VCE); in New South Wales it is called the Higher Schools Certificate (HSC).

In India various states name it differently. Each Indian state has its own examination board, some individual states having their own entrance test system. Passing the specified examination qualifies the student to enter into undergraduate program in a university. For example, in the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana this is known as Board of Intermediate Examination (BIE).

For professional, specialist programs and well reputed institutions there are entrance tests. For engineering there is a Joint Engineering Entrance Joint Entrance Examination conducted at all India level. For medical undergraduate MBBS programs there is a national eligibility and entrance test known as NEET-UG National Eligibility and Entrance Test conducted at all of India. There is also an all India level examination conducted by Central Board of Secondary education CBSE the certification is known as Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC).

Exams

During the final examinations (Abiturprüfungen), students are tested in four or five subjects (at least one of which is oral). Procedures vary by state.

Course Type of examination
1st advanced course Written
2nd advanced course Written
Basic course or 3rd advanced course Written
Basic course Oral
Basic course Oral, presentation or BLL (literally "exceptional learning achievement", a 20-page paper or success in a recognized competition)

Although some tested subjects are chosen by the student, three areas must be covered:

Occasionally, schools (especially berufsorientierte Gymnasien) offer vocational subjects such as pedagogy, business informatics, biotechnology and mechanical engineering.

Final exams are usually taken from March to May or June. Each written basic-level examination takes about three hours; advanced-level examinations take four-and-a-half hours, and written exams are in essay format. Oral examinations last about 20 min. Papers are graded by at least two teachers at the school. In some parts of Germany students may prepare a presentation, research paper or participate in a competition, and may take additional oral exams to pass the Abitur if the written exam is poor.

Before reunification, Abitur exams were given locally in West Germany, but Bavaria has conducted centralized exams (Zentralabitur) since 1854. After reunification, most states of the former East Germany continued centralized exams, and at the beginning of the 21st century, many states adopted centralized exams. In 2013, all other states except Rheinland-Pfalz also introduced centralized written exams at least in the core subjects (German, mathematics and the first foreign language, usually English). The exams are structured as follows:

The Kultusministerkonferenz (KMK) of several states expanded the exams to scientific subjects and the social sciences. The physics and chemistry exams include an experiment that must be performed and analyzed.

Scoring

Each semester of a subject studied in the final two years yields up to 15 points for a student, where advanced courses count double. The final examinations each count quadruple.

The exact scoring system depends on the Bundesland in which one takes Abitur. Passing the Abitur usually requires a composite score of at least 50%. Students with a score below that minimum fail and do not receive an Abitur. There are some other conditions that the student also has to meet in order to receive the Abitur: taking mandatory courses in selected subject areas, and limits to the number of failing grades in core subjects. Finally, students often have the option of omitting some courses from their composite score if they have taken more courses than the minimum required.

The best possible grade of 1.0 can be achieved if the score ranges between 823 and 900 points; the fraction of students achieving this score is normally only around 0.2%–3%[4] even among the already selective population of Abitur candidates. Around 12%–30% of Abitur candidates achieve grades between 1.0 and 1.9.[5]

German gymnasium grade system
Grades by education Descriptor Equivalent
Grading Abitur grade US system (approximately)[i]) UK system (approximately)[i][6]
15 points 1.0 "sehr gut" (very good: an outstanding achievement) A[7] A*
14 points
13 points 1.3 A
12 points 1.7 "gut" (good: an achievement substantially above average requirements)
11 points 2.0 A− B
10 points 2.3
9 points 2.7 "befriedigend" (satisfactory: an achievement which corresponds to average requirements) B+ C
8 points 3.0 B
7 points 3.3 B−
6 points 3.7 "ausreichend" (sufficient: an achievement which barely meets the requirements) C D
5 points 4.0 D E
4 points N/A "mangelhaft" / "ungenügend" / "nicht bestanden" (not sufficient / failed: an achievement that does not meet the requirements) F U (Ungraded)
3 points
2 points
1 point
0 points
  1. ^ a b This conversion serves as an orientation, conversions might differ.

Statistics

Historically, very few people received their Abitur in Germany because many attractive jobs did not require one. The number of persons holding the Abitur has steadily increased since the 1970s, and younger jobholders are more likely to hold the Abitur than older ones. The percentage of students qualified for tertiary education is still lower than the OECD average.

Percentage of students graduating with Abitur or FHR (Studienberechtigtenquote):

Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Percentage 37.2% 36.1% 38.2% 39.2% 41.5% 42.5% 43.4% 44.5% 45.1% 46.5% 49.0%

Percentage of 'jobholders' holding Hauptschulabschluss, Realschulabschluss or Abitur in Germany:[8]

1970 1982 1991 2000
Hauptschulabschluss 87.7% 79.3% 66.5% 54.9%
Realschulabschluss 10.9% 17.7% 27% 34.1%
Abitur 1.4% 3% 6.5% 11%

The International Abitur

The International Abitur is offered at schools outside Germany that are accredited by the German government. The five Abitur exams (three written exams and two oral exams) are in the following subjects: German literature, European history or economics or mathematics or a natural science or a language. In February of senior year (grade 12), all students take the written examinations for the German International Abitur in three subjects including German. In late spring, students have mandatory oral examinations in two subjects, which are overseen by a German educational official. The final GPA includes grades from both junior and senior years, as well as for the five Abitur exams. The final diploma that students receive after successful completion of these exams allows them to qualify for admission to universities in Germany.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ For some subjects, additional entrance exams may be required, for example in sports, music and fine arts.
  2. ^ "Fachserie 11, Reihe 1" (PDF) (in German). Statistisches Bundesamt. 5 November 2013. p. 282. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  3. ^ "Schnellmeldungsergebnisse zu Studienberechtigten der allgemeinbildenden und beruflichen Schulen" (PDF). Statistisches Bundesamt. 27 February 2014. p. 3. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
  4. ^ German: Abiturnoten-Ländervergleich 2005 – Abiturnote "sehr gut" in den Bundesländern 2005 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft, 15 August 2007
  5. ^ German: Abiturnoten-Ländervergleich 2005 – Verteilung der Abiturnoten in den Bundesländern 2005 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft, 15 August 2007
  6. ^ "A-level results 2016: Trends and stats from the national data | Schools Week". Schools Week. 18 August 2016. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
  7. ^ See Education in the United States.
  8. ^ Frietsch, Rainer (November 2003). (PDF). Studien zum deutschen Innovationssystem (5–2004). ISSN 1613-4338. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 October 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2009.

abitur, german, abiˈtuːɐ, often, shortened, colloquially, qualification, granted, secondary, education, germany, conferred, students, pass, their, final, exams, isced, usually, after, twelve, thirteen, years, schooling, also, germany, after, twelve, years, ger. Abitur German abiˈtuːɐ often shortened colloquially to Abi is a qualification granted at the end of secondary education in Germany It is conferred on students who pass their final exams at the end of ISCED 3 usually after twelve or thirteen years of schooling see also for Germany Abitur after twelve years In German the term Abitur has roots in the archaic word Abiturium which in turn was derived from the Latin abiturus future active participle of abire thus someone who is going to leave As a matriculation examination Abitur can be compared to A levels the Matura or the International Baccalaureate Diploma which are all ranked as level 4 in the European Qualifications Framework Contents 1 In Germany 1 1 Overview 1 2 History 1 3 Equivalency 1 3 1 Other qualifications called Abitur in colloquial usage 1 4 Equivalent high school graduation certificate in other countries 1 5 Exams 1 6 Scoring 1 7 Statistics 2 The International Abitur 3 See also 4 ReferencesIn Germany EditOverview Edit The Zeugnis der Allgemeinen Hochschulreife certificate of general qualification for university entrance often referred to as Abiturzeugnis Abitur certificate issued after candidates have passed their final exams and have had appropriate grades in both the last and second last school year is the document which contains their grades and formally enables them to attend university Thus it encompasses the functions of both a school graduation certificate and a college entrance exam 1 The official term in Germany for this certificate of education is Allgemeine Hochschulreife the contraction Abi is common in colloquial usage In 2005 a total of 231 465 students passed the Abitur exam in Germany The numbers have risen steadily and in 2012 a total of 305 172 students obtained the Allgemeine Hochschulreife 2 This number reflects those who pass the traditional Abitur at their high school Adding for 2012 the 51 912 students who obtained the Hochschulreife at vocational training schools that total number increases to 357 084 If those who obtain the Fachhochschulreife 144 399 in 2012 are also added then the total of those who obtained the right to study at a university or a Fachhochschule is 501 483 2012 3 History Edit Until the eighteenth century every German university had its own entrance examination In 1788 Prussia introduced the Abiturreglement a law for the first time within Germany establishing the Abitur as an official qualification It was later also established in the other German states In 1834 it became the only university entrance exam in Prussia and it remained so in all states of Germany until 2004 Since then the German state of Hesse allows students with Fachhochschulreife see below to study at the universities within that state citation needed Equivalency Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Abitur news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The academic level of the Abitur is comparable to the International Baccalaureate the GCE Advanced Level and the Advanced Placement tests Indeed the study requirements for the International Baccalaureate differ little from the German exam requirements It is the only school leaving certificate in all states of Germany that allows the graduate or Abiturient to move directly to university The other school leaving certificates the Hauptschulabschluss and the Realschulabschluss do not allow their holders to matriculate at a university Those granted certificates of Hauptschulabschluss or Realschulabschluss can gain a specialized Fachhochschulreife or an Abitur if they graduate from a Berufsschule and then attend Berufsoberschule or graduate from a Fachoberschule However the Abitur is not the only path to university studies as some universities set up their own entrance examinations Students who successfully passed a Begabtenprufung test of aptitude are also eligible Students from other countries who hold a high school leaving certificate that is not counted as being equivalent to the Abitur such as the American high school diploma and who do well enough on the ACT or SAT test may also enter German universities A person who does not hold the Abitur and did not take an aptitude test may still be admitted to university by completing at least the 10th grade and doing well on an IQ test see Hochbegabtenstudium Other qualifications called Abitur in colloquial usage Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Abitur news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In German the European Baccalaureate is called europaisches Abitur the French German Baccalaureate is called deutsch franzosisches Abitur and the International Baccalaureate is called internationales Abitur neither to be confused with the German Abitur The term Fachabitur was used in all of Western Germany for a variation of the Abitur until the 1990s the official term for the German qualification is fachgebundene Hochschulreife This qualification includes only one foreign language usually English The Abitur in contrast usually requires two foreign languages The Fachabitur also allows the graduate to start studying at a university but is limited to a specified range of majors depending on the specific subjects covered in his Fachabitur examinations But the graduate is allowed to study for all majors at a Fachhochschule University of Applied Sciences in some ways comparable to polytechnics Today the school leaving certificate is called fachgebundenes Abitur restricted subject Abitur Now the term Fachabitur is used in most parts of Germany for the Fachhochschulreife FHR It was introduced in West Germany in the 1970s together with the Fachhochschulen It enables the graduate to start studying at a Fachhochschule and in Hesse also at a university within that state In the Gymnasiums of some states it is awarded in the year before the Abitur is reached However the normal way to obtain Fachhochschulreife is graduation from a German Fachoberschule a vocational high school also introduced in the 1970s The term Notabitur emergency Abitur describes a qualification used only during World War I and World War II It was granted to male German Gymnasium students who voluntarily enlisted for military service before graduation as well as young women who were evacuated from the major cities before they could complete their Gymnasium education as planned approximately three to five million children and teenagers had to be evacuated during the war The Notabitur during World War I included an examination roughly equivalent to the Abitur exam The World War II Notabitur in contrast was granted without an examination After the war this was a major disadvantage for the students concerned since unlike its World War I counterpart the certificate was generally not recognised in West Germany and never recognised in East Germany Universities requested the Abitur to consist of written exams including at least two foreign languages almost always Latin and French the latter sometimes replaced by English Students who received the Notabitur during World War II were offered to re enter school to prepare for and take the exam after the war had ended Those special Abitur preparation classes were made up of young adults of different age and sex which was very unusual at the time This German graduate Abiturient wrote on his car Class of 2008 Not knowing anything but knowing where it is written Abipedia a portmanteau word compiled from Abitur and Wikipedia Equivalent high school graduation certificate in other countries Edit The equivalent graduation certificate in the Czech Republic Austria Poland Italy and other countries of continental Europe is the Matura while in England Wales Northern Ireland Hong Kong Singapore and the West Indies it is A levels in Scotland it is Higher Grade in the Republic of Ireland it is the Leaving Certificate in Greece and Cyprus it is the apolytirion a kind of high school diploma in Malta it is the Matriculation Certificate MATSEC in Hungary it is called erettsegi bizonyitvany roughly equivalent with the German phrase Zeugnis der Allgemeinen Hochschulreife as it originates from the Austrian Hungarian Monarchy In Australia the graduation certificate awarded to high school students is the Senior Secondary Certificate of Education SSCE However the name of the SSCE varies from state to state In Victoria it is called the Victorian Certificate of Education VCE in New South Wales it is called the Higher Schools Certificate HSC In India various states name it differently Each Indian state has its own examination board some individual states having their own entrance test system Passing the specified examination qualifies the student to enter into undergraduate program in a university For example in the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana this is known as Board of Intermediate Examination BIE For professional specialist programs and well reputed institutions there are entrance tests For engineering there is a Joint Engineering Entrance Joint Entrance Examination conducted at all India level For medical undergraduate MBBS programs there is a national eligibility and entrance test known as NEET UG National Eligibility and Entrance Test conducted at all of India There is also an all India level examination conducted by Central Board of Secondary education CBSE the certification is known as Higher Secondary Certificate HSC Exams Edit During the final examinations Abiturprufungen students are tested in four or five subjects at least one of which is oral Procedures vary by state Course Type of examination1st advanced course Written2nd advanced course WrittenBasic course or 3rd advanced course WrittenBasic course OralBasic course Oral presentation or BLL literally exceptional learning achievement a 20 page paper or success in a recognized competition Although some tested subjects are chosen by the student three areas must be covered Language literature and the arts German Sorbian in Saxony and Brandenburg foreign languages typically English French Latin Ancient Greek Spanish Italian or Russian rarely Dutch Chinese Japanese Ancient Hebrew Turkish Modern Greek Portuguese or Polish Music visual or performing arts literature Social sciences Political science history geography economics Psychology philosophy religion ethics Mathematics natural sciences and technology Mathematics physics chemistry biology Computer science technology nutritional science SportsOccasionally schools especially berufsorientierte Gymnasien offer vocational subjects such as pedagogy business informatics biotechnology and mechanical engineering Final exams are usually taken from March to May or June Each written basic level examination takes about three hours advanced level examinations take four and a half hours and written exams are in essay format Oral examinations last about 20 min Papers are graded by at least two teachers at the school In some parts of Germany students may prepare a presentation research paper or participate in a competition and may take additional oral exams to pass the Abitur if the written exam is poor Before reunification Abitur exams were given locally in West Germany but Bavaria has conducted centralized exams Zentralabitur since 1854 After reunification most states of the former East Germany continued centralized exams and at the beginning of the 21st century many states adopted centralized exams In 2013 all other states except Rheinland Pfalz also introduced centralized written exams at least in the core subjects German mathematics and the first foreign language usually English The exams are structured as follows German Choose 1 out of 3 tasks Topics are usually lyric poetry classic and contemporary literature or linguistics history and changes to the language Each task is usually divided into two or three parts English Choose 1 out of 3 tasks Topics may vary but are usually connected to personal identity and multiculturalism science and technology or environmental change and globalization politics economy and culture Classical literature is rarely taught and students primarily deal with literature of the last century Each task consists of three parts comprehension summary analysis and interpretation and commentary and discussion Mathematics Choose three of six tasks one in each area differential and integral calculus analytic geometry and linear algebra and probability theory Each task is usually split into five or six smaller tasks The Kultusministerkonferenz KMK of several states expanded the exams to scientific subjects and the social sciences The physics and chemistry exams include an experiment that must be performed and analyzed Scoring Edit Each semester of a subject studied in the final two years yields up to 15 points for a student where advanced courses count double The final examinations each count quadruple The exact scoring system depends on the Bundesland in which one takes Abitur Passing the Abitur usually requires a composite score of at least 50 Students with a score below that minimum fail and do not receive an Abitur There are some other conditions that the student also has to meet in order to receive the Abitur taking mandatory courses in selected subject areas and limits to the number of failing grades in core subjects Finally students often have the option of omitting some courses from their composite score if they have taken more courses than the minimum required The best possible grade of 1 0 can be achieved if the score ranges between 823 and 900 points the fraction of students achieving this score is normally only around 0 2 3 4 even among the already selective population of Abitur candidates Around 12 30 of Abitur candidates achieve grades between 1 0 and 1 9 5 German gymnasium grade systemGrades by education Descriptor EquivalentGrading Abitur grade US system approximately i UK system approximately i 6 15 points 1 0 sehr gut very good an outstanding achievement A 7 A 14 points13 points 1 3 A12 points 1 7 gut good an achievement substantially above average requirements 11 points 2 0 A B10 points 2 39 points 2 7 befriedigend satisfactory an achievement which corresponds to average requirements B C8 points 3 0 B7 points 3 3 B 6 points 3 7 ausreichend sufficient an achievement which barely meets the requirements C D5 points 4 0 D E4 points N A mangelhaft ungenugend nicht bestanden not sufficient failed an achievement that does not meet the requirements F U Ungraded 3 points2 points1 point0 points a b This conversion serves as an orientation conversions might differ Statistics Edit Historically very few people received their Abitur in Germany because many attractive jobs did not require one The number of persons holding the Abitur has steadily increased since the 1970s and younger jobholders are more likely to hold the Abitur than older ones The percentage of students qualified for tertiary education is still lower than the OECD average Percentage of students graduating with Abitur or FHR Studienberechtigtenquote Year 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010Percentage 37 2 36 1 38 2 39 2 41 5 42 5 43 4 44 5 45 1 46 5 49 0 Percentage of jobholders holding Hauptschulabschluss Realschulabschluss or Abitur in Germany 8 1970 1982 1991 2000Hauptschulabschluss 87 7 79 3 66 5 54 9 Realschulabschluss 10 9 17 7 27 34 1 Abitur 1 4 3 6 5 11 The International Abitur EditThe International Abitur is offered at schools outside Germany that are accredited by the German government The five Abitur exams three written exams and two oral exams are in the following subjects German literature European history or economics or mathematics or a natural science or a language In February of senior year grade 12 all students take the written examinations for the German International Abitur in three subjects including German In late spring students have mandatory oral examinations in two subjects which are overseen by a German educational official The final GPA includes grades from both junior and senior years as well as for the five Abitur exams The final diploma that students receive after successful completion of these exams allows them to qualify for admission to universities in Germany citation needed See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abitur Look up Abitur in Wiktionary the free dictionary Education in Germany Abitur after twelve yearsReferences Edit For some subjects additional entrance exams may be required for example in sports music and fine arts Fachserie 11 Reihe 1 PDF in German Statistisches Bundesamt 5 November 2013 p 282 Retrieved 15 April 2014 Schnellmeldungsergebnisse zu Studienberechtigten der allgemeinbildenden und beruflichen Schulen PDF Statistisches Bundesamt 27 February 2014 p 3 Retrieved 15 April 2014 German Abiturnoten Landervergleich 2005 Abiturnote sehr gut in den Bundeslandern 2005 Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft 15 August 2007 German Abiturnoten Landervergleich 2005 Verteilung der Abiturnoten in den Bundeslandern 2005 Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Gewerkschaft Erziehung und Wissenschaft 15 August 2007 A level results 2016 Trends and stats from the national data Schools Week Schools Week 18 August 2016 Retrieved 24 October 2016 See Education in the United States Frietsch Rainer November 2003 Intensivierung von Bildungsabschlussen zwischen 1970 2000 PDF Studien zum deutschen Innovationssystem 5 2004 ISSN 1613 4338 Archived from the original PDF on 7 October 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abitur amp oldid 1129808649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.