ChatterBank1 min ago
university degrees
11 Answers
my niece tells me she got a 2+ or she may have said 2 pass is it quite a low degree i think it is is there such a pass?
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by JENNY WREN. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The classes of degree (in this country anyway) are :
A First (70%+)
An Upper Second, or 2:1 (60-70%)
A Lower Second, or 2:2 (50-60%)
A Third (40-50%)
And, if the University's pass mark is less than 40%, A Pass (Pass%-40%).
These percentages are guides too, and change in different establishments. From what you've said, I reckon she means a 2:1
A First (70%+)
An Upper Second, or 2:1 (60-70%)
A Lower Second, or 2:2 (50-60%)
A Third (40-50%)
And, if the University's pass mark is less than 40%, A Pass (Pass%-40%).
These percentages are guides too, and change in different establishments. From what you've said, I reckon she means a 2:1
Successful candidates in Honours degrees are placed in different classes: Class I (a 'first'); Class II, Division 1 (an 'upper second'); Class II, Division 2 (a 'lower second'); Class III (a 'third').
An indication of the range of classes is shown below:
Class Range of Marks
First 70-100%
Upper second 60-69%
Lower second 50-59%
Third 40-49%
Pass 35-39%
Fail Below 35%
Hope this helps!
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Einstein, of course not: given 5 years of commercial experience alongside a degree, it might be regarded differently... But solely on the basis of a degree, I'm well aware how much more work I had to do at a top Uni and how much higher a standard it needed to be than for my counterparts at ex-polys. I would hope an employer would recognise that also.
surely assessment is standardised across the county? All final exam papers are the same and coursework is moderated therefore a 2:1 is a 2:1 from any establishment? it's just the reputation of the institution that affects the perception of the all-round academic experience of the individual rather than the grade? correct me if i am wrong?
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Nykkieberry - absolutely not. Why bother going to a University if everybody is doing the same course??? I mean that an Engineering degree from, say Birmingham, generally has a lot more practical input (e.g. more time out on site) than a degree from say, Imperial (which is very theoretical). Very difficult to standardise there. If you then were to standardise the courses so everyone who did Chem Eng (say) did exactly the same course, the course would be so broad that it would be bog all use to anyone. I'm all for diversification and the like, I'm afraid.