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Merge suggestion

I strongly agree with the suggestion that Academic grading in North America#Canada and Grade (education)#Canada be merged here. This is essentially a break-out of those sections into a full article. DoubleBlue ( Talk) 16:10, 8 June 2008 (UTC) reply

As the proponent of the merge, I believe I should also express my support here. I actually don't think this issue will be controversial, so within a few days if noone opposes, feel free to perform the merge yourself :) -- Waldir talk 16:58, 8 June 2008 (UTC) reply
I think they should be separate only because specific article for Canada, is currently just a duplicate, and woefully incomplete. There are not province wide grading systems in place in many areas but rather school specific grading systems (ie: Queens University letter grading has an associated % range that does not correspond to say those at University of Toronto). In addition some universities use Grade Point Average systems that is not reflected in either article (example: Ryerson University uses GPA) JMJimmy ( talk) 00:54, 28 February 2011 (UTC) reply
Is there even a compelling reason to have the " ...in North America" article? How similar are American and Canadian grading systems? (And how different from grading systems elsewhere?) Perhaps that article should just be split and the content feeded/merged into the " ...in Canada" and " ...in the United States" articles. Same thing for Grade (education), which should just have a {{ main}} link pointing here, or at most a small descriptive text. -- Waldir talk 14:14, 28 February 2011 (UTC) reply
This should be a separate article, but as JMJimmy said, it is woefully incomplete. To stand on its own, this article needs further evidence of research into: differences between elementary, secondary, and post-secondary grading; regional and provincial trends in academic assessment; historical development of grading schemes; rationale for grading practices; etc etc. Wish I had the time to do this all myself! -- Whimper 26 August 2012 —Preceding undated comment added 13:37, 26 August 2012 (UTC) reply

Clarification on Quebec grading and source needed

Aside from clarifications required for the table of Quebec's grading system (Needs to clarify if it's a unified system or preferable only for specific education level. For instance, secondary or university/college.) , the third source from the suppose "Ministère de l'Éducation Ministère de l'Enseignement supérieur"'s page shows a 404 error. Even though the site is under the Government of Quebec, it seems that it has not been well maintained; A couple of pages lacks information and displays errors. I suggest searching for a more reliable source. TheeChEese ( talk) 01:31, 9 January 2022 (UTC) reply

all

hi I want to ask. are we allowed to write a conceptual define on our board exams of class 9th and 10th out of our books 119.156.86.227 ( talk) 20:08, 12 February 2023 (UTC) reply

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Merge suggestion

I strongly agree with the suggestion that Academic grading in North America#Canada and Grade (education)#Canada be merged here. This is essentially a break-out of those sections into a full article. DoubleBlue ( Talk) 16:10, 8 June 2008 (UTC) reply

As the proponent of the merge, I believe I should also express my support here. I actually don't think this issue will be controversial, so within a few days if noone opposes, feel free to perform the merge yourself :) -- Waldir talk 16:58, 8 June 2008 (UTC) reply
I think they should be separate only because specific article for Canada, is currently just a duplicate, and woefully incomplete. There are not province wide grading systems in place in many areas but rather school specific grading systems (ie: Queens University letter grading has an associated % range that does not correspond to say those at University of Toronto). In addition some universities use Grade Point Average systems that is not reflected in either article (example: Ryerson University uses GPA) JMJimmy ( talk) 00:54, 28 February 2011 (UTC) reply
Is there even a compelling reason to have the " ...in North America" article? How similar are American and Canadian grading systems? (And how different from grading systems elsewhere?) Perhaps that article should just be split and the content feeded/merged into the " ...in Canada" and " ...in the United States" articles. Same thing for Grade (education), which should just have a {{ main}} link pointing here, or at most a small descriptive text. -- Waldir talk 14:14, 28 February 2011 (UTC) reply
This should be a separate article, but as JMJimmy said, it is woefully incomplete. To stand on its own, this article needs further evidence of research into: differences between elementary, secondary, and post-secondary grading; regional and provincial trends in academic assessment; historical development of grading schemes; rationale for grading practices; etc etc. Wish I had the time to do this all myself! -- Whimper 26 August 2012 —Preceding undated comment added 13:37, 26 August 2012 (UTC) reply

Clarification on Quebec grading and source needed

Aside from clarifications required for the table of Quebec's grading system (Needs to clarify if it's a unified system or preferable only for specific education level. For instance, secondary or university/college.) , the third source from the suppose "Ministère de l'Éducation Ministère de l'Enseignement supérieur"'s page shows a 404 error. Even though the site is under the Government of Quebec, it seems that it has not been well maintained; A couple of pages lacks information and displays errors. I suggest searching for a more reliable source. TheeChEese ( talk) 01:31, 9 January 2022 (UTC) reply

all

hi I want to ask. are we allowed to write a conceptual define on our board exams of class 9th and 10th out of our books 119.156.86.227 ( talk) 20:08, 12 February 2023 (UTC) reply


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