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British undergraduate degree classification

The British undergraduate degree classification system is a grading structure for undergraduate degrees or bachelor's degrees and integrated master's degrees in the United Kingdom. The system has been applied (sometimes with significant variations) in other countries and regions.

History

The classification system as currently used in the United Kingdom was developed in 1918.[1] Honours were then a means to recognise individuals who demonstrated depth of knowledge or originality, as opposed to relative achievement in examination conditions.

Concern exists about possible grade inflation. It is claimed that academics are under increasing pressure from administrators to award students good marks and grades with little regard for those students' actual abilities, in order to maintain their league table rankings.[2] The percentage of graduates who receive a First (First Class Honours) has grown from 7% in 1997 to 26% in 2017, with the rate of growth sharply accelerating toward the end of this period.[3] A 2018 study by the UK Standing Committee for Quality Assessment concluded that improvements in faculty skill and student motivation are only two of many factors driving average grades upward, that grade inflation is real, that the British undergraduate degree classifications will become less useful to students and employers, and that inflation will undermine public confidence in the overall value of higher education.[4] Students already believe that a First or upper Second, by itself, is no longer sufficient to secure a good job, and that they need to engage in extra-curricular activities to build their CV.[5]

Degree classification

A bachelor's degree can be an honours degree (bachelor's with honours) or an ordinary degree (bachelor's without honours). Honours degrees are classified, usually based on a weighted average (with higher weight given to marks in the later years of the course, and often zero weight to those in the first year) of the marks gained in exams and other assessments. Grade boundaries can vary by institution, but typical values are given below.

  • First Class Honours (1st, 1 or I) – typically 70% or higher
  • Second Class Honours;
    • Upper division (2:1, 2i or II-1) – typically 60–69%
    • Lower division (2:2, 2ii or II-2) – typically 50–59%
  • Third Class Honours (3rd, 3 or III) – typically 40–49%

Students who do not achieve honours may be awarded an ordinary degree, sometimes known as a 'pass'. Ordinary degrees, and other exit awards such as the Diploma of Higher Education (DipHE; for completing the first two years of a degree course) and Certificate of Higher Education (CertHE; for completing the first year of a degree course), may be unclassified (pass/fail) or, particularly in Scotland where the ordinary degree is offered as a qualification in its own right, classified into pass, merit and distinction.[6][7]

Integrated master's degrees are usually classified with honours in the same way as a bachelor's honours degree, although some integrated master's degrees are classified like postgraduate taught master's degrees or foundation degrees into:

  • Distinction – typically 70% and higher
  • Merit – typically 60–69%
  • Pass – typically 50–59%.[8][9]

At most institutions, the system allows a small amount of discretion.[10] A candidate may be elevated to the next degree class if his or her average marks are close to (or the median of their weighted marks achieves) the higher class, and if they have submitted several pieces of work worthy of the higher class. However, even students with a high average mark may be unable to take honours if they have failed part of the course and so have insufficient credits.

In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, a bachelor's degree with honours normally takes three years of full-time study and usually requires 360 credits, of which at least 90 are at level 6 (final year of a bachelor's degree) level, while an ordinary bachelor's degree normally requires 300 credits, of which 60 are at level 6.[11] In Scotland, the honours bachelor's degree takes four years and requires 480 credits with a minimum of 90 at level 10 of the Scottish framework (last year of the honours degree) and 90 at level 9 (penultimate year), while the ordinary degree takes three years and requires 360 credits with a minimum of 60 at level 9 (last year of the ordinary degree).[12]

In Scotland, it is possible to start university a year younger than in the rest of the United Kingdom, as the Scottish Higher exams are often taken at age 16 or 17 (as opposed to 18), so Scottish students often end a four-year course at the same age as a student from elsewhere in the UK taking a three-year course, assuming no gap years or students skipping the first year (direct entry to 2nd year).[13]

When a candidate is awarded a degree with honours, '(Hons)' may be suffixed to their designatory letters – for example, BA (Hons), BSc (Hons), BMus (Hons), MA (Hons).[14] An MA (Hons) would generally indicate a degree award from certain Scottish universities (c.f. Scottish MA) and is at the same level as a bachelor's degree.

Distribution of classes

The Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) has published the number of degrees awarded with different classifications since 1994–1995. The relative proportions of different classes have changed over this period, with increasing numbers of students being awarded higher honours. The table below shows the percentage of classified degrees (i.e., not including fails or unclassified degrees such as MBBS) in each class at five-year intervals; note that HESA stopped giving statistics separately for third class honours and pass degree after 2003 and that a small number of undivided second class honours degrees (shown under "other" along with "unknown", which makes up the bulk of this category) were awarded up to 1996.

Class 1994/95[15] 1999/2000[16] 2004/05[17] 2009/10[18] 2014/15[19] 2015/16[20] 2016/17[20] 2017/18[20] 2018/19[20] 2019/20[20]
1st 7% 8.2% 11.6% 14.4% 22% 23% 26% 28% 28% 35%
2:1 40.3% 42.9% 47.4% 48.3% 49.5% 49% 49% 48% 48% 47%
2:2 34.8% 34.0% 33.1% 29.8% 23.0% 22% 20% 19% 19% 15%
3rd 5.8% 5.3% 8.0% 7.5% 5.5% 5% 5% 5% 4% 3%
Pass 11.7% 9.6%
Other 0.3[21]

First Class Honours

Proportion of First Class Honours
Year Awarded
1994 7%[2]
2011 15%[22]
2019 29%[2]

First Class Honours, referred to as a 'first', is the highest honours classification and indicates high academic achievement. Historically, First Class Honours were uncommon, but as of 2019 are awarded to nearly thirty percent of graduates from British universities.[2] The increase is said by some commentators to be due to student-demanded grade inflation rather than the quality of students or improvements to their education.[2][additional citation(s) needed]

In the early 1990s, First Class Honours went to about 7% of graduates, or about one student in 15.[2] The percentages of graduates achieving a First vary greatly by university and course studied.[23] Students of law are least likely to gain a first, while students of mathematical sciences are most likely to gain a first.[24]

A first class honours degree is sometimes colloquially known (in rhyming slang) as a Geoff Hurst (First)[25] after the English 1966 World Cup footballer.

Upper Second Class Honours

The upper division is commonly abbreviated to '2:1" or 'II.i' (pronounced two-one). The 2:1 is a minimum requirement for entry to many postgraduate courses in the UK. It is also required for the award of a research council postgraduate studentship in the UK, although a combination of qualifications and experience equal to a 2:1 is also acceptable.[26][27] This is often interpreted as possession of a master's degree (sometimes at merit level or above) in addition to a 2:2 undergraduate degree.[28][29][30]

The percentage of candidates who achieve Upper Second Class Honours can vary widely by degree subject, as well as by university.[31]

A 2:1 degree is sometimes nicknamed an Attila the Hun (two-one) in the UK.[25] The term Bren gun is also sometimes used as rhyming slang.[citation needed]

Lower Second Class honours

This is the lower division of Second Class degrees and is abbreviated as '2:2' or 'II.ii' (pronounced two-two). It is also informally known as a 'Desmond', named after Desmond Tutu.[25]

Third Class honours

Third Class Honours, referred to as a "Third", is the lowest honours classification in most modern universities. Historically, the University of Oxford awarded Fourth Class Honours degrees and, until the late-1970s, did not distinguish between upper and lower Second Class Honours degrees.[1][32]

Informally, the Third Class Honours degree is referred to as a "gentleman's degree" (cf. the "gentleman's C" in U.S. parlance)[33] and in the UK as a Douglas Hurd (Third)[25] after the 1980s Conservative politician of that name, who had actually graduated with a First Class Honours degree in history in 1952.[citation needed]

Approximately 7.2% of students graduating in 2006 with an honours degree received a Third Class Honours degree.[31]

Ordinary degree

While most university bachelor's degree courses lead to honours degrees, some universities offer courses leading to ordinary degrees.[34] Some honours courses permit students who do not gain sufficient credits in a year by a small margin to transfer to a parallel ordinary degree course. Ordinary degrees may also sometimes be awarded to honours degree students who do not pass sufficient credits in their final year to gain an honours degree, but pass enough to earn an ordinary degree.[35]

Some Scottish universities offer three-year ordinary degrees as a qualification in their own right, as well as an honours degree over four years. This is in contrast to English universities that have honours degrees with three years of study. An ordinary degree in Scotland is not a failed honours degree, as in certain English universities. Students can decide, usually at the end of their second or third year, whether or not they wish to complete a fourth honours year. Scottish universities may also award their ordinary degrees with distinction if a student achieves a particularly good grade average, usually 70% or above. A common example of a Scottish ordinary degree is the Bachelor of Laws course taken by graduates of other subjects, as this is sufficient (without honours) for entry into the legal profession.

Aegrotat

An aegrotat (/ˈɡrtæt/; from Latin aegrotat 'he/she is ill')[36] degree is an honours or ordinary degree without classification, awarded to a candidate who was unable to undertake their exams due to illness or even death, under the presumption that, had they completed those exams, they would have satisfied the standard required for that degree.[37][38][39][40][41] Aegrotat degrees are often qualified with an appended '(aegrotat)'. Following the introduction of new regulations regarding mitigating circumstances, aegrotat degrees are less commonly awarded.[42]

Inter doctrinae prioris

Degrees may be granted which incorporate prior learning, such as by means of CATS points transfer. Where the substance of incorporated credit exceeds a given threshold, the granting institution may be unable to grade sufficient work to award a degree classification. Any degree granted may then be unclassified.

Variations in classification

At the University of Cambridge, undergraduate Tripos examinations are split into one or more Parts, which span either one or two years. Each student receives a formal classification for each Part (i.e. Class I, II.i, II.ii, or III).[43] Until October 2020, officially a grade simply existed for every Part of the degree, not for the overall degree. For students beginning their course of study from October 2020, a final class is awarded across the course of study, according to an algorithm determined by the Tripos.[43]

At the University of Oxford, a formal degree Class is given, and this is typically based on the final examinations. In Oxford, examinations for Prelims or Honour Moderations are also undertaken in first/second year, but these results do not typically affect the final degree classification. Until the 1970s, the four honours divisions in Oxford's moderations and final examinations were named first, second, third and fourth class, but eventually Oxford gave in and adopted the numbering used by other English universities.[1]

Variations of First Class honours

At the University of Cambridge, Triposes (undergraduate degree examinations) are split into one or more Parts. Attaining First Class Honours in two Parts culminates in graduating with a 'Double First'.[43] It is possible in some Triposes to be awarded a 'Starred First', for examination scripts that "consistently exhibit the qualities of first class answers to an exceptional degree."[44] Some Cambridge alumni who achieved Firsts in three Parts of the Tripos are described by their colleges and others as having achieved a 'Triple First'.[45][46][47][48][49]

Oxford sometimes grants a congratulatory first, which The New York Times described as "a highly unusual honor in which the examining professors ask no questions about the candidate's written work but simply stand and applaud" and Martin Amis described as "the sort where you are called in for a viva and the examiners tell you how much they enjoyed reading your papers".[50][51] A 'double first' at Oxford usually informally refers to First Class Honours in both components of an undergraduate degree, i.e., Moderations/Prelims and the Final Honours School, or in both the bachelor's and master's components of an integrated master's degree.

At University College London, candidates who perform well beyond the requirements of a standard First Class Honours may be nominated to the Dean's List. This is generated once per year and recognises outstanding academic achievement in final examinations. There are no set criteria for nomination to the list, but typically only a small number of students from each faculty are nominated per year.[52] Comparable recognition in other anglophone countries is the award of a University Medal.

Degrees in the UK are mapped to levels of the Frameworks for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree-Awarding Bodies (FHEQ), which includes the Framework for Qualifications of Higher Education Institutes in Scotland (FQHEIS), which has an alternative numbering of levels corresponding to those of the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework (SCQF). Bachelor's degrees (including the Scottish MA, but not including medical degrees, dentistry degrees or degrees in veterinary science) attained in the UK are at FHEQ level 6/FQHEIS level 9 (ordinary) or 10 (honours); master's degrees (including integrated master's degrees and first degrees in medicine, dentistry and veterinary science) are at FHEQ level 7/FQHEIS level 11, and doctoral degrees are at FHEQ level 8/FQHEIS level 12. Bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees map to first, second and third cycle qualifications in the Qualifications Framework of the European Higher Education Area.[53][54]

International comparisons

Greece

The table below depicts the Greek Grading system while illustrates approximately how the Grades are compared with ECTS and UK grades:

British class Greek equivalent
First (1st) 8.5+
Upper Second (2:1) 6.5+
Lower Second (2:2) 5+
Third-Class (3rd) No assessment/award at the end of 4th or 5th year, until all modules,

from all years, are passed successfully. Years are extended.

France

The University of St Andrews gives equivalencies between French and British grades for its study-abroad programme.[55] Equivalencies for the purposes of initial teacher training have also been derived by the UK NARIC for 1st, 2:1 and 2:2 degrees, which do not align with St Andrews' table.[56]

British class French grade range
St Andrews UK NARIC
First 16.5–20 16+
Upper Second 13.5–16.4 13+
Lower Second 10–13.4 12+
Third 7–9.9
Pass 6

South Africa

The South African Qualifications Authority[57] (SAQA) compares international degrees with local degrees before any international student continues their studies in that country. While the British degree accreditation and classification system allows students to go straight from a three-year bachelor's degree onto a master's degree (normally requiring a 1st or a 2:1 – those with a 2:2 or a 3rd usually require appropriate professional experience),[58] South Africa does not do so unless the student has proven research capabilities. South African Honours degrees prepare the students to undertake a research-specific degree (in terms of master's), by spending an in-depth year (up to five modules) creating research proposals and undertaking a research project of limited scope. This prepares students for the research degrees later in their academic career.

Spain

The UK NARIC has derived equivalencies for the grades of the Spanish grado and licenciatura degrees for purposes of initial teacher training bursaries.[56]

British class Spanish equivalent
First 8.5+
Upper Second 7+
Lower Second 6 +

The Netherlands

The Netherlands organisation for international cooperation in higher education (NUFFIC) has compared UK degree classification to Dutch degree grades.[59] Dutch equivalencies have also been calculated by the UK NARIC.[56]

British class Dutch equivalent
NUFFIC UK NARIC
First 8-10 8.5+
Upper Second 7 to 8 6.5+
Lower Second 6 to 7 6+
Third 5.5 to 6

NUFFIC also noted that the grading culture is different in the Netherlands, so that it is very rare for even the best students in the Netherlands to be awarded a 9 or a 10, which represent near perfection and absolute perfection.[59]

United States

US comparison services treat English three-year bachelor's degrees and American four-year bachelor's degrees as equivalent.[60] Some British sources, such as the Dearing Report, consider British honours degrees equivalent to a US master's degree and US bachelor's degrees as equivalent to British pass degrees in terms of the standard reached in the major subject, due to the higher degree of specialisation in the UK.[61][62] However, British institutions generally accept US bachelor's degrees for admission to postgraduate study (see below).

In comparing US bachelor's degrees to British honours degrees, equivalencies can be expressed in terms of either US grade point averages (GPAs) or letter grades. British institutions normally state equivalence in terms of GPAs. Approximate mappings between British classifications and GPAs can be inferred from the graduate admissions criteria used by British universities, which often give international equivalents. For example, University College London (UCL) equates the minimum classification for entrance to GPAs using 2:1 = 3.3 and 2:2 = 3.0.[63] Different universities convert grades differently: the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) considers a GPA of 3.5 or better as equivalent to gaining a 2:1,[64] while the department of English Language and Literature at Oxford considers a GPA of "about 3.8" equivalent to a first class degree.[65] Similarly, the UK NARIC gives equivalent GPAs for determining eligibility for teacher training bursaries.[56] Durham University's North American Undergraduate Guide gives a conversion table as a guide to understanding British classifications (rather than for admission to postgraduate study) of 1st = 3.8–4.0, 2:1 = 3.3–3.7, 2:2 = 2.8–3.2 and 3rd = 2.3–2.7.[66] The GPA conversions are summarised in the following table:

British degree
classification
US GPA Equivalent
UCL[63] Durham[66] NARIC[56] Other
First 3.8–4.0 3.7+ 3.8+ (Oxford)[65]
Upper Second 3.3+ 3.3–3.7 3.2+ 3.5+ (LSE)[64]
Lower Second 3.0+ 2.8–3.2 2.6+
Third 2.3–2.7

Letter grade equivalents are more commonly used by American institutions. World Education Services (WES),[67] a nonprofit organisation which provides qualification conversion services to many universities and employers, gives 1st = A, 2:1 = A−/B+, 2:2 = B, 3rd = B−, Pass = C. The Fulbright Commission has also created "an unofficial chart with approximate grade conversions between UK results and US GPA."[68] The table below summarises these conversions, including GPA equivalents for the WES grades given using the letter grade to GPA conversion of Duke University.[69]

British degree
classification
US equivalents (Fulbright)[68] US Grade
Equivalent (WES)[67]
Equivalent GPA to WES
Grades (using Duke conversion)[69]
Grade GPA
First A 4.00 A 4.0
Upper Second A−/B+ 3.33–3.67 A−/B+ 3.7/3.3
Lower Second B 3.00 B 3.0
Third C+ 2.30 B− 2.7
Pass C 2.00 C 2.0

Canada

Canadian academic grades may be given as letters, percentages, 12-point GPAs or 4-point GPAs. The 4-point GPAs are sometimes seen to differ from the US but other sources treat them as equivalent. The Durham conversion specifies GPAs for the US and letter grades/percentages for Canada[66] while the UK NARIC has separate GPA conversions for the four-year bachelor's honours, baccalauréat and professional bachelor's degrees (which differ from their US GPA equivalents by at most 0.1) and the three-year bachelor's degree (which is seen as a lower standard).[56] The British Graduate Admissions Fact Sheet from McGill University uses the conversion 1st = 4.0; 2:1 = 3.0; 2:2 = 2.7; 3rd = 2.0; Pass = 1.0; Fail = 0.0.[70]

British degree
classification
Canadian equivalent
(Durham)[66]
Canadian GPA equivalent (NARIC)[56] Canadian GPA
equivalent
(McGill)[70]
4-year (Bachelor Honours degree) 3-year (Bachelor's degree)
% Letter GPA % Letter 12-point GPA % Letter 12-point
First 85%+ A to A+ 3.7+ 73% A− 10 3.9+ 90% A 12 4.0
Upper Second 77% – 84% B+ to A− 3.1+ 73% B 8 3.5+ 80% B+ 10 3.0
Lower Second 67% – 76% C+ to B− 2.5 62% C+ 6 3.1 73% B 8 2.7
Third 60% - 66% 2.0
Pass 1.0

Progression to postgraduate study

Regulations governing the progression of undergraduate degree graduates to postgraduate programmes vary among universities, and are often flexible. A candidate for a postgraduate master's degree is usually required to have at least a 2:1 (or 2:2 in some cases) bachelor honours degree, although candidates with firsts are in a considerably stronger position to gain a place in a postgraduate course and to obtain funding, especially in medical and natural sciences. Some institutions specify a 2:1 minimum for certain types of master's program, such as for a Master of Research course.[71][72]

Candidates with a Third or an Ordinary degree are sometimes accepted, provided they have acquired satisfactory professional experience subsequent to graduation. A candidate for a doctoral programme is nearly always required to have a first or 2:1 at bachelor's level.

Variations

International degrees

Australia

Some universities, such as those in Australia, offer ordinary or pass degrees (for instance, as a three-year B.A. or a three-year BSc) by default. High-achieving students may be recognised with an honours classification without further coursework or research, as is often the case in engineering (which often contains a research and thesis component)[73][74] or law.[75] However, other courses (such as humanities, arts, social sciences, and sciences) and other universities may recognise high-achieving students with an honours classification with further coursework or research, undertaken either concurrently with, and as part of or in addition to, a bachelor's course,[76] or after completion of a bachelor's course requirements and attaining adequately competitive grades.[77][78]

Some graduate degrees have been or are classified;[79] however, under the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF), no graduate-level degrees (i.e., master's by coursework, master's by research, or higher research degrees) may be classified. To comply with this standard, some institutions have commenced, or will commence, offering high-achieving graduates with "distinction".[80] Notably, this is consistent with British graduate degree classification.[81]

British medical and dental degrees

In the United Kingdom, medicine is usually taught as an undergraduate course, with graduates being awarded a master's level qualification: normally the conjoined degrees of Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS, BM BCh, MB ChB, etc.) although at Queen's University Belfast (and universities in Ireland) Bachelor in the Art of Obstetrics (BAO) is added, and at some universities only the Bachelor of Medicine is awarded – all of these have equal standing. Unlike most undergraduate degrees, the MBBS is not normally considered an honours degree, and thus is not classified into first class honours, etc. Students may be awarded "Merits" and "Distinctions" for parts of the course or the whole course (depending on the institution) and "Honours" may be awarded at some institutions for exceptional performance throughout the course (as a grade above Distinction).[82][83]

Medical schools split their year groups into 10 deciles. These deciles are the major factor in the calculation of Educational Performance Measure (EPM) points used as part of medical students' Foundation Programme applications, with the top decile receiving 43 points, decreasing by a point for each decile (so the lowest gets 34 points); 7 points can be awarded for other educational achievements (other degrees and publications), and the EPM points are combined with up to 50 points from the Situational Judgement Test to give a total out of 100.[84][85]

British grade point average

Following the recommendation of the Burgess report into the honours degree classification system in 2007, the Higher Education Academy ran a pilot in 2013–2014 in collaboration with 21 institutions delivering higher education (ranging from Russell Group universities to Further Education colleges) to investigate how a grade point average (GPA) system would work best in Britain. Two main weighting systems were tested: an American-style average of all marks, weighted only by credit value, and weighting by "exit velocity" in the manner of the honours classification, where modules in the first year are given a low or zero weight and modules in the final year have a higher weight (a third model was only rarely used). Over two-thirds of providers preferred exit-velocity weighting to the straight average.[86]

A GPA scale, tied to percentage marks and letter grades, was recommended for use nationally following the study, to run in parallel with the honours degree classification system.[86]

Percentage Grade Grade points
75–100 A+ 4.25
71–74 A 4.00
67–70 A− 3.75
64–66 B+ 3.50
61–63 B 3.25
57–60 B− 3.00
54–56 C+ 2.75
50–53 C 2.50
48–49 C− 2.25
43–47 D+ 2.00
40–42 D 1.50
38–39 D− 1.00
35–37 F+ 0.75
30–34 F 0.50
0–29 F− 0.00

Nicknames

Based on colloquial rhyming slang, British undergraduate honours degree classifications have gained a number of more or less common nicknames, based on the names of various well-known current and historical figures. The following is a summary of these.

Class Nickname[87][88][89][90] Source of nickname
1st Geoff, Patty or Damien World Cup 1966 England footballer Geoff Hurst, heiress and kidnap victim Patty Hearst, or artist Damien Hirst
2:1 Attila, Don or Trevor Attila the Hun, Don Juan or Trevor Nunn (after the famous theatre director)
2:2 Desmond South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Also referred to as a drinker's or boozer's degree (origin unknown). Probably because the work required to get a first or a 2:1 does not allow for much time in the student bar[citation needed]
3rd Douglas After 1980s British Home Secretary Douglas Hurd
Thora After actress Thora Hird
Richard After King Richard III
Gentleman's degree Unknown
Vorderman Countdown television celebrity Carol Vorderman, who achieved third class grades in all her years at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge
Pass
Fail Dan[91] After the 44th Vice President of the United States, Dan Quayle.

See also

References

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british, undergraduate, degree, classification, system, grading, structure, undergraduate, degrees, bachelor, degrees, integrated, master, degrees, united, kingdom, system, been, applied, sometimes, with, significant, variations, other, countries, regions, con. The British undergraduate degree classification system is a grading structure for undergraduate degrees or bachelor s degrees and integrated master s degrees in the United Kingdom The system has been applied sometimes with significant variations in other countries and regions Contents 1 History 2 Degree classification 2 1 Distribution of classes 2 2 First Class Honours 2 3 Upper Second Class Honours 2 4 Lower Second Class honours 2 5 Third Class honours 2 6 Ordinary degree 2 7 Aegrotat 2 8 Inter doctrinae prioris 2 9 Variations in classification 2 9 1 Variations of First Class honours 3 International comparisons 3 1 Greece 3 2 France 3 3 South Africa 3 4 Spain 3 5 The Netherlands 3 6 United States 3 7 Canada 4 Progression to postgraduate study 5 Variations 5 1 International degrees 5 1 1 Australia 5 2 British medical and dental degrees 6 British grade point average 7 Nicknames 8 See also 9 ReferencesHistory EditThe classification system as currently used in the United Kingdom was developed in 1918 1 Honours were then a means to recognise individuals who demonstrated depth of knowledge or originality as opposed to relative achievement in examination conditions Concern exists about possible grade inflation It is claimed that academics are under increasing pressure from administrators to award students good marks and grades with little regard for those students actual abilities in order to maintain their league table rankings 2 The percentage of graduates who receive a First First Class Honours has grown from 7 in 1997 to 26 in 2017 with the rate of growth sharply accelerating toward the end of this period 3 A 2018 study by the UK Standing Committee for Quality Assessment concluded that improvements in faculty skill and student motivation are only two of many factors driving average grades upward that grade inflation is real that the British undergraduate degree classifications will become less useful to students and employers and that inflation will undermine public confidence in the overall value of higher education 4 Students already believe that a First or upper Second by itself is no longer sufficient to secure a good job and that they need to engage in extra curricular activities to build their CV 5 Degree classification EditA bachelor s degree can be an honours degree bachelor s with honours or an ordinary degree bachelor s without honours Honours degrees are classified usually based on a weighted average with higher weight given to marks in the later years of the course and often zero weight to those in the first year of the marks gained in exams and other assessments Grade boundaries can vary by institution but typical values are given below First Class Honours 1st 1 or I typically 70 or higher Second Class Honours Upper division 2 1 2i or II 1 typically 60 69 Lower division 2 2 2ii or II 2 typically 50 59 Third Class Honours 3rd 3 or III typically 40 49 Students who do not achieve honours may be awarded an ordinary degree sometimes known as a pass Ordinary degrees and other exit awards such as the Diploma of Higher Education DipHE for completing the first two years of a degree course and Certificate of Higher Education CertHE for completing the first year of a degree course may be unclassified pass fail or particularly in Scotland where the ordinary degree is offered as a qualification in its own right classified into pass merit and distinction 6 7 Integrated master s degrees are usually classified with honours in the same way as a bachelor s honours degree although some integrated master s degrees are classified like postgraduate taught master s degrees or foundation degrees into Distinction typically 70 and higher Merit typically 60 69 Pass typically 50 59 8 9 At most institutions the system allows a small amount of discretion 10 A candidate may be elevated to the next degree class if his or her average marks are close to or the median of their weighted marks achieves the higher class and if they have submitted several pieces of work worthy of the higher class However even students with a high average mark may be unable to take honours if they have failed part of the course and so have insufficient credits In England Wales and Northern Ireland a bachelor s degree with honours normally takes three years of full time study and usually requires 360 credits of which at least 90 are at level 6 final year of a bachelor s degree level while an ordinary bachelor s degree normally requires 300 credits of which 60 are at level 6 11 In Scotland the honours bachelor s degree takes four years and requires 480 credits with a minimum of 90 at level 10 of the Scottish framework last year of the honours degree and 90 at level 9 penultimate year while the ordinary degree takes three years and requires 360 credits with a minimum of 60 at level 9 last year of the ordinary degree 12 In Scotland it is possible to start university a year younger than in the rest of the United Kingdom as the Scottish Higher exams are often taken at age 16 or 17 as opposed to 18 so Scottish students often end a four year course at the same age as a student from elsewhere in the UK taking a three year course assuming no gap years or students skipping the first year direct entry to 2nd year 13 When a candidate is awarded a degree with honours Hons may be suffixed to their designatory letters for example BA Hons BSc Hons BMus Hons MA Hons 14 An MA Hons would generally indicate a degree award from certain Scottish universities c f Scottish MA and is at the same level as a bachelor s degree Distribution of classes Edit The Higher Education Statistics Agency HESA has published the number of degrees awarded with different classifications since 1994 1995 The relative proportions of different classes have changed over this period with increasing numbers of students being awarded higher honours The table below shows the percentage of classified degrees i e not including fails or unclassified degrees such as MBBS in each class at five year intervals note that HESA stopped giving statistics separately for third class honours and pass degree after 2003 and that a small number of undivided second class honours degrees shown under other along with unknown which makes up the bulk of this category were awarded up to 1996 Class 1994 95 15 1999 2000 16 2004 05 17 2009 10 18 2014 15 19 2015 16 20 2016 17 20 2017 18 20 2018 19 20 2019 20 20 1st 7 8 2 11 6 14 4 22 23 26 28 28 35 2 1 40 3 42 9 47 4 48 3 49 5 49 49 48 48 47 2 2 34 8 34 0 33 1 29 8 23 0 22 20 19 19 15 3rd 5 8 5 3 8 0 7 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 3 Pass 11 7 9 6 Other 0 3 21 First Class Honours Edit Proportion of First Class Honours Year Awarded1994 7 2 2011 15 22 2019 29 2 First Class Honours referred to as a first is the highest honours classification and indicates high academic achievement Historically First Class Honours were uncommon but as of 2019 are awarded to nearly thirty percent of graduates from British universities 2 The increase is said by some commentators to be due to student demanded grade inflation rather than the quality of students or improvements to their education 2 additional citation s needed In the early 1990s First Class Honours went to about 7 of graduates or about one student in 15 2 The percentages of graduates achieving a First vary greatly by university and course studied 23 Students of law are least likely to gain a first while students of mathematical sciences are most likely to gain a first 24 A first class honours degree is sometimes colloquially known in rhyming slang as a Geoff Hurst First 25 after the English 1966 World Cup footballer Upper Second Class Honours Edit 2 1 redirects here For the film format see Univisium The upper division is commonly abbreviated to 2 1 or II i pronounced two one The 2 1 is a minimum requirement for entry to many postgraduate courses in the UK It is also required for the award of a research council postgraduate studentship in the UK although a combination of qualifications and experience equal to a 2 1 is also acceptable 26 27 This is often interpreted as possession of a master s degree sometimes at merit level or above in addition to a 2 2 undergraduate degree 28 29 30 The percentage of candidates who achieve Upper Second Class Honours can vary widely by degree subject as well as by university 31 A 2 1 degree is sometimes nicknamed an Attila the Hun two one in the UK 25 The term Bren gun is also sometimes used as rhyming slang citation needed Lower Second Class honours Edit This is the lower division of Second Class degrees and is abbreviated as 2 2 or II ii pronounced two two It is also informally known as a Desmond named after Desmond Tutu 25 Third Class honours Edit Third Class Honours referred to as a Third is the lowest honours classification in most modern universities Historically the University of Oxford awarded Fourth Class Honours degrees and until the late 1970s did not distinguish between upper and lower Second Class Honours degrees 1 32 Informally the Third Class Honours degree is referred to as a gentleman s degree cf the gentleman s C in U S parlance 33 and in the UK as a Douglas Hurd Third 25 after the 1980s Conservative politician of that name who had actually graduated with a First Class Honours degree in history in 1952 citation needed Approximately 7 2 of students graduating in 2006 with an honours degree received a Third Class Honours degree 31 Ordinary degree Edit While most university bachelor s degree courses lead to honours degrees some universities offer courses leading to ordinary degrees 34 Some honours courses permit students who do not gain sufficient credits in a year by a small margin to transfer to a parallel ordinary degree course Ordinary degrees may also sometimes be awarded to honours degree students who do not pass sufficient credits in their final year to gain an honours degree but pass enough to earn an ordinary degree 35 Some Scottish universities offer three year ordinary degrees as a qualification in their own right as well as an honours degree over four years This is in contrast to English universities that have honours degrees with three years of study An ordinary degree in Scotland is not a failed honours degree as in certain English universities Students can decide usually at the end of their second or third year whether or not they wish to complete a fourth honours year Scottish universities may also award their ordinary degrees with distinction if a student achieves a particularly good grade average usually 70 or above A common example of a Scottish ordinary degree is the Bachelor of Laws course taken by graduates of other subjects as this is sufficient without honours for entry into the legal profession Aegrotat Edit An aegrotat ˈ iː ɡ r oʊ t ae t from Latin aegrotat he she is ill 36 degree is an honours or ordinary degree without classification awarded to a candidate who was unable to undertake their exams due to illness or even death under the presumption that had they completed those exams they would have satisfied the standard required for that degree 37 38 39 40 41 Aegrotat degrees are often qualified with an appended aegrotat Following the introduction of new regulations regarding mitigating circumstances aegrotat degrees are less commonly awarded 42 Inter doctrinae prioris Edit Degrees may be granted which incorporate prior learning such as by means of CATS points transfer Where the substance of incorporated credit exceeds a given threshold the granting institution may be unable to grade sufficient work to award a degree classification Any degree granted may then be unclassified Variations in classification Edit At the University of Cambridge undergraduate Tripos examinations are split into one or more Parts which span either one or two years Each student receives a formal classification for each Part i e Class I II i II ii or III 43 Until October 2020 officially a grade simply existed for every Part of the degree not for the overall degree For students beginning their course of study from October 2020 a final class is awarded across the course of study according to an algorithm determined by the Tripos 43 At the University of Oxford a formal degree Class is given and this is typically based on the final examinations In Oxford examinations for Prelims or Honour Moderations are also undertaken in first second year but these results do not typically affect the final degree classification Until the 1970s the four honours divisions in Oxford s moderations and final examinations were named first second third and fourth class but eventually Oxford gave in and adopted the numbering used by other English universities 1 Variations of First Class honours Edit At the University of Cambridge Triposes undergraduate degree examinations are split into one or more Parts Attaining First Class Honours in two Parts culminates in graduating with a Double First 43 It is possible in some Triposes to be awarded a Starred First for examination scripts that consistently exhibit the qualities of first class answers to an exceptional degree 44 Some Cambridge alumni who achieved Firsts in three Parts of the Tripos are described by their colleges and others as having achieved a Triple First 45 46 47 48 49 Oxford sometimes grants a congratulatory first which The New York Times described as a highly unusual honor in which the examining professors ask no questions about the candidate s written work but simply stand and applaud and Martin Amis described as the sort where you are called in for a viva and the examiners tell you how much they enjoyed reading your papers 50 51 A double first at Oxford usually informally refers to First Class Honours in both components of an undergraduate degree i e Moderations Prelims and the Final Honours School or in both the bachelor s and master s components of an integrated master s degree At University College London candidates who perform well beyond the requirements of a standard First Class Honours may be nominated to the Dean s List This is generated once per year and recognises outstanding academic achievement in final examinations There are no set criteria for nomination to the list but typically only a small number of students from each faculty are nominated per year 52 Comparable recognition in other anglophone countries is the award of a University Medal Degrees in the UK are mapped to levels of the Frameworks for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree Awarding Bodies FHEQ which includes the Framework for Qualifications of Higher Education Institutes in Scotland FQHEIS which has an alternative numbering of levels corresponding to those of the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework SCQF Bachelor s degrees including the Scottish MA but not including medical degrees dentistry degrees or degrees in veterinary science attained in the UK are at FHEQ level 6 FQHEIS level 9 ordinary or 10 honours master s degrees including integrated master s degrees and first degrees in medicine dentistry and veterinary science are at FHEQ level 7 FQHEIS level 11 and doctoral degrees are at FHEQ level 8 FQHEIS level 12 Bachelor s master s and doctoral degrees map to first second and third cycle qualifications in the Qualifications Framework of the European Higher Education Area 53 54 International comparisons EditGreece Edit The table below depicts the Greek Grading system while illustrates approximately how the Grades are compared with ECTS and UK grades British class Greek equivalentFirst 1st 8 5 Upper Second 2 1 6 5 Lower Second 2 2 5 Third Class 3rd No assessment award at the end of 4th or 5th year until all modules from all years are passed successfully Years are extended France Edit The University of St Andrews gives equivalencies between French and British grades for its study abroad programme 55 Equivalencies for the purposes of initial teacher training have also been derived by the UK NARIC for 1st 2 1 and 2 2 degrees which do not align with St Andrews table 56 British class French grade rangeSt Andrews UK NARICFirst 16 5 20 16 Upper Second 13 5 16 4 13 Lower Second 10 13 4 12 Third 7 9 9 Pass 6 South Africa Edit The South African Qualifications Authority 57 SAQA compares international degrees with local degrees before any international student continues their studies in that country While the British degree accreditation and classification system allows students to go straight from a three year bachelor s degree onto a master s degree normally requiring a 1st or a 2 1 those with a 2 2 or a 3rd usually require appropriate professional experience 58 South Africa does not do so unless the student has proven research capabilities South African Honours degrees prepare the students to undertake a research specific degree in terms of master s by spending an in depth year up to five modules creating research proposals and undertaking a research project of limited scope This prepares students for the research degrees later in their academic career Spain Edit The UK NARIC has derived equivalencies for the grades of the Spanish grado and licenciatura degrees for purposes of initial teacher training bursaries 56 British class Spanish equivalentFirst 8 5 Upper Second 7 Lower Second 6 The Netherlands Edit The Netherlands organisation for international cooperation in higher education NUFFIC has compared UK degree classification to Dutch degree grades 59 Dutch equivalencies have also been calculated by the UK NARIC 56 British class Dutch equivalentNUFFIC UK NARICFirst 8 10 8 5 Upper Second 7 to 8 6 5 Lower Second 6 to 7 6 Third 5 5 to 6 NUFFIC also noted that the grading culture is different in the Netherlands so that it is very rare for even the best students in the Netherlands to be awarded a 9 or a 10 which represent near perfection and absolute perfection 59 United States Edit US comparison services treat English three year bachelor s degrees and American four year bachelor s degrees as equivalent 60 Some British sources such as the Dearing Report consider British honours degrees equivalent to a US master s degree and US bachelor s degrees as equivalent to British pass degrees in terms of the standard reached in the major subject due to the higher degree of specialisation in the UK 61 62 However British institutions generally accept US bachelor s degrees for admission to postgraduate study see below In comparing US bachelor s degrees to British honours degrees equivalencies can be expressed in terms of either US grade point averages GPAs or letter grades British institutions normally state equivalence in terms of GPAs Approximate mappings between British classifications and GPAs can be inferred from the graduate admissions criteria used by British universities which often give international equivalents For example University College London UCL equates the minimum classification for entrance to GPAs using 2 1 3 3 and 2 2 3 0 63 Different universities convert grades differently the London School of Economics and Political Science LSE considers a GPA of 3 5 or better as equivalent to gaining a 2 1 64 while the department of English Language and Literature at Oxford considers a GPA of about 3 8 equivalent to a first class degree 65 Similarly the UK NARIC gives equivalent GPAs for determining eligibility for teacher training bursaries 56 Durham University s North American Undergraduate Guide gives a conversion table as a guide to understanding British classifications rather than for admission to postgraduate study of 1st 3 8 4 0 2 1 3 3 3 7 2 2 2 8 3 2 and 3rd 2 3 2 7 66 The GPA conversions are summarised in the following table British degreeclassification US GPA EquivalentUCL 63 Durham 66 NARIC 56 OtherFirst 3 8 4 0 3 7 3 8 Oxford 65 Upper Second 3 3 3 3 3 7 3 2 3 5 LSE 64 Lower Second 3 0 2 8 3 2 2 6 Third 2 3 2 7 Letter grade equivalents are more commonly used by American institutions World Education Services WES 67 a nonprofit organisation which provides qualification conversion services to many universities and employers gives 1st A 2 1 A B 2 2 B 3rd B Pass C The Fulbright Commission has also created an unofficial chart with approximate grade conversions between UK results and US GPA 68 The table below summarises these conversions including GPA equivalents for the WES grades given using the letter grade to GPA conversion of Duke University 69 British degreeclassification US equivalents Fulbright 68 US GradeEquivalent WES 67 Equivalent GPA to WESGrades using Duke conversion 69 Grade GPAFirst A 4 00 A 4 0Upper Second A B 3 33 3 67 A B 3 7 3 3Lower Second B 3 00 B 3 0Third C 2 30 B 2 7Pass C 2 00 C 2 0Canada Edit Canadian academic grades may be given as letters percentages 12 point GPAs or 4 point GPAs The 4 point GPAs are sometimes seen to differ from the US but other sources treat them as equivalent The Durham conversion specifies GPAs for the US and letter grades percentages for Canada 66 while the UK NARIC has separate GPA conversions for the four year bachelor s honours baccalaureat and professional bachelor s degrees which differ from their US GPA equivalents by at most 0 1 and the three year bachelor s degree which is seen as a lower standard 56 The British Graduate Admissions Fact Sheet from McGill University uses the conversion 1st 4 0 2 1 3 0 2 2 2 7 3rd 2 0 Pass 1 0 Fail 0 0 70 British degreeclassification Canadian equivalent Durham 66 Canadian GPA equivalent NARIC 56 Canadian GPAequivalent McGill 70 4 year Bachelor Honours degree 3 year Bachelor s degree Letter GPA Letter 12 point GPA Letter 12 pointFirst 85 A to A 3 7 73 A 10 3 9 90 A 12 4 0Upper Second 77 84 B to A 3 1 73 B 8 3 5 80 B 10 3 0Lower Second 67 76 C to B 2 5 62 C 6 3 1 73 B 8 2 7Third 60 66 2 0Pass 1 0Progression to postgraduate study EditRegulations governing the progression of undergraduate degree graduates to postgraduate programmes vary among universities and are often flexible A candidate for a postgraduate master s degree is usually required to have at least a 2 1 or 2 2 in some cases bachelor honours degree although candidates with firsts are in a considerably stronger position to gain a place in a postgraduate course and to obtain funding especially in medical and natural sciences Some institutions specify a 2 1 minimum for certain types of master s program such as for a Master of Research course 71 72 Candidates with a Third or an Ordinary degree are sometimes accepted provided they have acquired satisfactory professional experience subsequent to graduation A candidate for a doctoral programme is nearly always required to have a first or 2 1 at bachelor s level Variations EditInternational degrees Edit Australia Edit Some universities such as those in Australia offer ordinary or pass degrees for instance as a three year B A or a three year BSc by default High achieving students may be recognised with an honours classification without further coursework or research as is often the case in engineering which often contains a research and thesis component 73 74 or law 75 However other courses such as humanities arts social sciences and sciences and other universities may recognise high achieving students with an honours classification with further coursework or research undertaken either concurrently with and as part of or in addition to a bachelor s course 76 or after completion of a bachelor s course requirements and attaining adequately competitive grades 77 78 Some graduate degrees have been or are classified 79 however under the Australian Qualifications Framework AQF no graduate level degrees i e master s by coursework master s by research or higher research degrees may be classified To comply with this standard some institutions have commenced or will commence offering high achieving graduates with distinction 80 Notably this is consistent with British graduate degree classification 81 British medical and dental degrees Edit In the United Kingdom medicine is usually taught as an undergraduate course with graduates being awarded a master s level qualification normally the conjoined degrees of Bachelor of Medicine Bachelor of Surgery MBBS BM BCh MB ChB etc although at Queen s University Belfast and universities in Ireland Bachelor in the Art of Obstetrics BAO is added and at some universities only the Bachelor of Medicine is awarded all of these have equal standing Unlike most undergraduate degrees the MBBS is not normally considered an honours degree and thus is not classified into first class honours etc Students may be awarded Merits and Distinctions for parts of the course or the whole course depending on the institution and Honours may be awarded at some institutions for exceptional performance throughout the course as a grade above Distinction 82 83 Medical schools split their year groups into 10 deciles These deciles are the major factor in the calculation of Educational Performance Measure EPM points used as part of medical students Foundation Programme applications with the top decile receiving 43 points decreasing by a point for each decile so the lowest gets 34 points 7 points can be awarded for other educational achievements other degrees and publications and the EPM points are combined with up to 50 points from the Situational Judgement Test to give a total out of 100 84 85 British grade point average EditFollowing the recommendation of the Burgess report into the honours degree classification system in 2007 the Higher Education Academy ran a pilot in 2013 2014 in collaboration with 21 institutions delivering higher education ranging from Russell Group universities to Further Education colleges to investigate how a grade point average GPA system would work best in Britain Two main weighting systems were tested an American style average of all marks weighted only by credit value and weighting by exit velocity in the manner of the honours classification where modules in the first year are given a low or zero weight and modules in the final year have a higher weight a third model was only rarely used Over two thirds of providers preferred exit velocity weighting to the straight average 86 A GPA scale tied to percentage marks and letter grades was recommended for use nationally following the study to run in parallel with the honours degree classification system 86 Percentage Grade Grade points75 100 A 4 2571 74 A 4 0067 70 A 3 7564 66 B 3 5061 63 B 3 2557 60 B 3 0054 56 C 2 7550 53 C 2 5048 49 C 2 2543 47 D 2 0040 42 D 1 5038 39 D 1 0035 37 F 0 7530 34 F 0 500 29 F 0 00Nicknames EditBased on colloquial rhyming slang British undergraduate honours degree classifications have gained a number of more or less common nicknames based on the names of various well known current and historical figures The following is a summary of these Class Nickname 87 88 89 90 Source of nickname1st Geoff Patty or Damien World Cup 1966 England footballer Geoff Hurst heiress and kidnap victim Patty Hearst or artist Damien Hirst2 1 Attila Don or Trevor Attila the Hun Don Juan or Trevor Nunn after the famous theatre director 2 2 Desmond South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu Also referred to as a drinker s or boozer s degree origin unknown Probably because the work required to get a first or a 2 1 does not allow for much time in the student bar citation needed 3rd Douglas After 1980s British Home Secretary Douglas HurdThora After actress Thora HirdRichard After King Richard IIIGentleman s degree UnknownVorderman Countdown television celebrity Carol Vorderman who achieved third class grades in all her years at Sidney Sussex College CambridgePass Fail Dan 91 After the 44th Vice President of the United States Dan Quayle See also EditLatin honorsReferences Edit a b c Alderman Geoffrey 14 October 2003 Tear up the class system The Guardian Archived from the original on 31 December 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 a b c d e f Lambert Harry 21 August 2019 The great university con how the British degree lost its value New Statesman Retrieved 21 August 2019 Richmond Tom June 2018 A degree of uncertainty An investigation into grade inflation in universities Reform Archived from the original on 22 June 2018 Retrieved 21 June 2018 Degree Classification Transparent Consistent and Fair Academic Standards PDF Universities UK November 2018 p 61 ISBN 978 1 84036 415 6 Kent Chloe 14 February 2017 Increase in number of firsts awarded brings value and integrity of degrees into question Nouse University of York Retrieved 14 February 2017 Your degree classification Student Handbook General University Regulations University of Hull Archived from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Degree classification University of Nottingham Archived from the original on 18 February 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Masters Degree Grades Postgrad com Archived from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Degree classification University of the West of England Archived from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Seaton Nigel 19 April 2011 Degree classification is unfair to many students The Guardian Archived from the original on 2 December 2016 Higher education credit framework for England guidance on academic credit arrangements in higher education in England Quality Assurance Agency August 2008 ISBN 9781844828708 Archived from the original on 17 August 2016 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Interactive framework SCQF Archived from the original on 16 June 2014 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Direct entry to second year University of St Andrews www st andrews ac uk Retrieved 10 September 2018 Bachelor Eurydice European Commission Certification Archived from the original on 20 February 2017 Examination Results of Students Obtaining First Degree Qualifications by Gender and Mode of Study 1994 95 to 1998 99 Table 2 HESA Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 21 February 2017 Examination Results of Students Obtaining First Degree Qualifications at HEIs in the UK by Gender and Mode of Study 1998 99 to 2002 03 Table 2 HESA Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 21 February 2017 Higher Education Statistics for the UK 2004 05 HESA Table 8 Qualifications obtained at UK HE institutions by level of qualification obtained location of institution and subject area 2004 05 Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 21 February 2017 First degree qualifiers by mode of study domicile gender and class of degree 2009 10 Table L HESA Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 21 February 2017 First degree qualifiers by mode of qualification obtained domicile sex and class of first degree 2014 15 Table L HESA Archived from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 21 February 2017 a b c d e Higher Education Student Statistics UK 2019 20 Qualifications achieved Percentage of first degree qualifiers obtaining each classification for academic years 2015 16 to 2019 20 HESA www hesa ac uk Retrieved 2 August 2022 Unknown and undivided 2nd Is the number of first class degrees cause for concern The Guardian 12 January 2012 Archived from the original on 4 April 2015 Retrieved 30 July 2012 The Secret Tripos Topper 10 November 2012 The Secret Tripos Topper The Tab Cambridge Archived from the original on 15 November 2012 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Shepherd Jessica 17 January 2012 Is the number of first class degrees cause for concern Update The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 April 2015 Retrieved 29 October 2012 a b c d Martin Nicole 8 December 2000 How to get a Geoff Hurst in slang at university The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 1 March 2019 Prospective students Economic and Social Research Council Academic conditions Retrieved 21 August 2021 Student eligibility Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Academic qualifications Retrieved 21 August 2021 Funding and Eligibility Norwich Research Park Digital Training Partnership Academic Eligibility requirements Retrieved 21 August 2021 Eligibility criteria Imperial College London Academic eligibility Retrieved 21 August 2021 How to apply EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Compound Semiconductor Manufacturing Retrieved 21 August 2021 a b Higher Education Statistics Agency 2006 Higher Education Qualifications Obtained in the UK by Level Mode of Study Domicile Gender Class of First Degree and Subject Area 2005 06 Archived 16 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Alderman Geoffrey 14 October 2003 Tear up the class system The Guardian Henley Jon 5 July 2012 Don t judge a job applicant by their degree The Guardian Archived from the original on 28 December 2016 UCAS terms explained UCAS December 2014 Archived from the original on 17 February 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2017 Faculty Handbook Online 2013 14 Frequently Asked Questions Durham University Archived from the original on 7 November 2014 The New Oxford Dictionary of English Oxford UK Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 019861263X Aegrotat Degrees Swansea University Archived from the original on 9 September 2011 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Aegrotat Awards Aberystwyth University 1 December 2005 Archived from the original on 3 August 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Glossary of Cambridge jargon University of Cambridge Archived from the original on 14 April 2012 Regulations for first degrees London School of Economics July 2011 Archived from the original on 23 August 2013 Procedure for Consideration of Applications under the Special and Aegrotat Provisions for Undergraduate Degree Examinations University College London Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Aegrotat Awards Oxford Brookes University Archived from the original on 4 August 2016 a b c The structure of undergraduate courses at the University of Cambridge Archived from the original on 9 May 2012 Undergraduate Examinations Guidelines for Examiners and Assessors for Tripos Examinations 2015 University of Cambridge Faculty of Philosophy p 9 Archived from the original on 21 January 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on 12 October 2016 The Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework Archived from the original on 16 June 2014 The Frameworks for Higher Education Qualifications of UK Degree Awarding Bodies PDF Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education November 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 24 February 2016 Grade comparison of overseas qualifications PDF University of St Andrews Archived PDF from the original on 20 October 2016 Retrieved 15 February 2017 a b c d e f g UK NARIC 28 May 2015 Overseas degree equivalency table and methodology National College for Teaching and Leadership Archived from the original on 29 January 2017 Retrieved 15 February 2017 South African Qualifications Authority Archived from the original on 16 August 2007 Retrieved 2 August 2007 Should I do a Masters Prospects Can I do a Masters with a 2 2 or a third Archived from the original on 16 February 2017 Retrieved 15 February 2017 a b Nuffic Grading systems in the Netherlands the United States and the United Kingdom PDF studyinholland nl Archived PDF from the original on 28 March 2014 Retrieved 27 March 2014 Education in the U K World Education Services 2 February 2016 Archived from the original on 30 October 2016 Retrieved 26 May 2017 The programs result in degrees such as the Bachelor of Arts Bachelor of Science Bachelor of Engineering Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Education all of which are equivalent to a bachelor s degree in the U S system Ron Dearing 23 July 1997 Appendix 5 Higher education in other countries Quality and standards The National Committee of Enquiry into Higher Education Dearing Report Archived from the original on 24 October 2017 7 21 The team gained the impression based on an inspection of syllabuses and examination papers that the American high school diploma compares in standard with GCSE and the associate degree with GCE A level and Advanced GNVQ the bachelor s degree with a UK pass degree or higher national diploma and the Master s degree with a bachelor s honours degree from a British university Further evidence for this conclusion Howard University in Washington a university in which over 99 per cent of undergraduates are black admits overseas applicants from the West Indies with five GCE O level grades at A C to the first year of their bachelor s degree programme Johns Hopkins one of the most prestigious of the private universities states in its prospectus that advanced placement is available for students entering with either International Baccalaureat or GCE A level The rider must be added however that an American education is very much more general than a UK education right up to bachelor s level it would hardly be reasonable therefore to expect the same standard to be reached in the major subject It was also noted that in the highest quality institutions some individual modules taken by senior students compared well in level with UK final honours standard A given student would take rather fewer of these more demanding modules than a UK student however Comparing your US qualifications with those in the UK British Council Archived from the original on 1 October 2002 Master s degree in terms of specialisation the American Master s degree from prestigious colleges and universities is considered comparable to the British Bachelor Honours degree Candidates who have followed academically rigorous programmes have reached a standard comparable to that of a British taught Master s degree a b United States of America 11 December 2018 Graduate programmes Retrieved 8 October 2020 a b Entry requirements LSE Archived from the original on 15 March 2010 a b English Language amp Literature University of Oxford Archived from the original on 13 November 2010 a b c d North American Undergraduate Guide ISSUU Durham University 20 August 2017 Archived from the original on 6 May 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2017 a b United Kingdom INTERNATIONAL GRADE CONVERSION GUIDE FOR HIGHER EDUCATION World Education Services Archived from the original on 4 May 2004 Retrieved 15 February 2017 a b Transcript Postgraduate Study US UK Fulbright Commission Archived from the original on 9 July 2013 a b GPA Duke University Archived from the original on 27 February 2017 Retrieved 15 February 2017 a b Future graduate students European Fact Sheets UK PDF McGill University Archived from the original PDF on 3 April 2015 Entrance requirements Graduate Prospectus 2010 11 Archived 13 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine University of Cambridge September 2009 What are the entry requirements for graduate programmes at LSE Archived 9 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine London School of Economics BEng Bachelor of Engineering University of Melbourne Handbook University of Melbourne Archived from the original on 22 July 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Honours Policy Faculty of Engineering University of New South Wales Archived from the original on 2 July 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Honours UNSW Faculty of Law Archived from the original on 16 May 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 New Honours Program Sydney Law School Archived from the original on 16 July 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 The Honours Year School of Mathematics and Statistics University of New South Wales Archived from the original on 13 August 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Honours Programs amp courses Economics Australian School of Business University of New South Wales Archived from the original on 3 October 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Award of Honours in the Juris Doctor JD Degree PDF UNSW Faculty of Law Archived PDF from the original on 14 June 2013 Law JD Honours as of 2015 PDF UNSW Faculty of Law Archived PDF from the original on 3 April 2015 Taught Masters Degree London School of Economics Archived from the original on 19 July 2013 Retrieved 31 July 2013 Subject benchmark statement Medicine PDF Quality Assurance Agency 2002 Archived from the original PDF on 22 January 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2017 MBBS Programme Regulations 2016 17 PDF Newcastle University Archived PDF from the original on 23 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 EPM FAQs National Health Service 2017 Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 FP AFP 2017 Applicant s Handbook PDF National Health Service June 2016 Archived from the original PDF on 23 February 2017 a b Grade point average Report of the GPA pilot project 2013 14 Higher Education Academy 28 May 2015 Archived from the original on 24 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Don t worry about getting a 2 2 degree Employers seem not to be bothered 3 September 2015 Ormerod Peter 22 July 2015 There s nothing wrong with a 2 2 degree It may even be good for you The Guardian PARTY DEGREE 29 May 2011 Archived from the original on 18 August 2017 Puxley Ray 17 June 2004 More Cockney Rabbit A Dick n arry of Rhyming Slang Robson Books Ltd ISBN 9781861057303 How to get a Geoff Hurst in slang at university The Telegraph 8 December 2000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British undergraduate degree classification amp oldid 1129930517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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