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What Is The Equivalent Of Year 11 In America

What is the american equivalent to year 11?

Secondary School starts at grade 9 for Americans. As a Canadian who had studied in UK before, I know this well.

I spent my Year 12 in an International School (UK system) and my grade 12 in Canada (we start grade 8 there).


Year 11 = Grade 10 (or Americans like to call it "sophomores")

American equivalent to Maths B (australia) ?

Funnily enough I had the opposite problem, I was applying to a American summer school and was worried they would think my Maths B and Maths C classes were for struggling students. :l

Maths A
Semester 1 (Year 11/Form 5):
Data Analysis
Managing Money
Applied Geometry
Linking 2 and 3 Dimensions
Semester 2 (Year 11/Form 5):
Land Measurement
Applied Geometry
Statistics
Managing Money
Semester 3 (Year 12/Form 6):
Managing Money
Land Measurement
Data Analysis
Operations Research
Semester 4 (Year 12/Form 6):
Statistics
Land Measurement
Navigation
and an elective topic on Data


Maths B

Semester 1 (Year 11/Form 5):
Functions (Linear, Quadratic, Absolute Value)
Periodic Functions (Trigonometry, Sin/Cosine Functions)
Applied Statistics (Mean, Median, Mode, Lie Factor)
Applied Statistics 2 (Linear/Quadratic Regression, Residual Plots)
Semester 2 (Year 11/Form 5):
Functions (Inverse Functions)
Indices and Logarithms/ Exponential Functions
Polynomials
Rates of Change
Differential Calculus
Semester 3 (Year 12/Form 6):
Exponential and Log Functions
Optimization Using Derivatives
Integration
Integral Calculus
Semester 4 (Year 12/Form 6):
Applied Statistical Analysis
Integration
Differential Calculus 2
Optimisation (Other Methods)


Maths C

Semester 1 (Year 11/Form 5):
Real and Complex Numbers
Matrices
Vectors
Groups
Structures & Patterns
Semester 2 (Year 11/Form 5):
Applications of Matrices
Vectors
Real and Complex Numbers
Dynamics
Structures and Patterns
Semester 3 (Year 12/Form 6):
Structures and Patterns
Real and Complex Numbers
Matrices
Periodic Functions
Calculus
Option I & II
Semester 4 (Year 12/Form 6):
Vectors
Calculus
Dynamics
Vectors
Option I & II

What is the equivalent of year 11 in America?

10th grade aka Sophomore year here.

It goes
Preschool (Optional) (aprox. 4 to 5 yrs old)

Elementary school
Kindergarten (5 to 6 yrs old)
1st grade (6 to 7)
2nd grade (7 to 8)
3rd grade (8 to 9)
4th grade (9 to 10)
5th grade (10 to 11)
(kinder through 5th is all Elementary)

Then you move on to Middle school AKA Junior High
6th grade (11 to 12)
7th grade (12 to 13)
8th grade (13 to 14)

Then you move on to High school
9th grade - Freshmen (14 to 15)
10th grade- Sophomore (15 to 16)
11th grade- Junior (16 to 17)
12th grade- Senior (17 to 18)

Then college if you choose.

What American Grade is Equal to English year9/Scottish S3?

S3 in Scotland is equivalent to Year 10. If your children are in Year 9 then they would be in S2 in Scotland. So, that would mean they are in Grade 8 in the US, which is the last year of Middle School (sometimes referred to Junior High). It's only a rough equivalent though.

American - Scottish

Nothing = P1 (Primary School) Year 1

Grade 1 (Elementary School) = P2 (Primary School) Year 2

Grade 2 (Elementary School) = P3 (Primary School) Year 3

Grade 3 (Elementary School) = P4 (Primary School) Year 4

Grade 4 (Elementary School) = P5 (Primary School) Year 5

Grade 5 (Elementary School) = P6 (Primary School) Year 6

Grade 6 (Middle School) = P7 (Primary School) Year 7

Grade 7 (Middle School) = S1 (High School) Year 8

Grade 8 (Middle School) = S2 (High School) Year 9

Grade 9 (High School) Freshman = S3 (High School) Year 10

Grade 10 (High School) Sophomore = S4 (High School) Year 11

Grade 11 (High School) Junior = S5 (High School) Year 12

Grade 12 (High School) Senior = S6 (High School) Year 13

Hope this helps.

I'm in year 11 what grade would it be in America?

Freshman = 9th grade
Sophomore = 10th grade
Junior = 11th grade <-------
Senior = 12th grade
Also, it's freshman, not freshmaker =P.

American grades to New Zealand years?

Actually 10th Grade is exactly equivalent to Year 11 in NZ. However as our school year runs from February to December you'll be in a strange situation. SInce you will have already finished the equivalent of Year 11 you may go into a Year 12 class upon arrival here, or you may just join Year 11 here and finish out the year.

Here's the problem though. NZ uses a system called NCEA, which is very different from America. Your teachers don't grade you here, it is based on a series of exams at the end of the year and assignments given by teachers over the year, but graded based on a national grading system. Instead of earning a single High School Diploma at the end of school, you work towards earning different levels of qualifications over the course of high school. You can leave school with anything from a Level 1 to a Level 3 NCEA qualification depending on how many exams and assignments you pass.

So you may do better to simply go into a Year 11 class to give you as much time as possible to earn credits. NCEA is only done at Years 11 to 13, before that the students are graded by teachers much the same as in the US. If you go into a Year 11 class though, you'll be wearing a uniform for longer. You may find the NZ school uniforms to be incredibly ugly. Boys wear collared shirts, shorts and woolen knee-socks with black leather dress shoes or roman sandals. Girls wear blouses and skirts.

What is the equivalent of GCSE and A level in the USA?

There is no common equivalent to GCSE in the USA; there is no exam at 16. There is no direct equivalent to A-level, though AP gets quite close.I taught at a good school in Nanjing, where many of my students were doing four A-levels, despite English being a second or third language. Some chose to rack up some APs too, which were sat with no preparation whatsoever. The Physics was a walk in the park for those doing A-level Physics and far narrower than the British course. AP calculus had one question outside the breadth of Further Maths, but the remainder was straightforward - and far less in breadth than the A-level course (of which fully half is applied maths, so calculus is mostly a subsection of the Pure papers). As one student put it, how many APs would you have to do to match four A-levels? the same group of students found an alternative answer - many of them began US university in the 2nd year, finished in three years. At least one finished faster still.While I was a first year student in the early 70s, I met an American doing an M Phil in my subject, Maths. I’d just reached 18, he was 22. We discovered to our mutual horror - for different reasons - that I’d done a lot more Maths than he had, merely by doing Maths and Further Maths. What we discovered that he had done that I hadn’t lay well outside the school curriculum. Imagine….

What are maths subjects in america? (for year 11 and 12)?

You should ask for DDN or electronic communication classes with colleges to take AP Calculus AB/BC classes like me. That's as advanced as public highschools really get. Generally, 11 and 12 year classes are geometry, trigonometry, precalculus, probability and stats, and calculus depending on which school you go to.

Medicine sounds like a different thing from what you are saying. It is very competative, so you need to rank high in all your classes. Not just with a good GPA, but with a lot of extracurricular activities and volunteering work can you go into medicine. I guess it really depends. If you want to do RN work, you would be really fine with the basics. If you wanted to go into med school, you would almost need to be perfect.

What are American school years converted to English school years?

It’s impossible to give an exact equivalent, as they’re not really the same, and there’s a lot more age variation in the US system.UK compulsory education begins in the September before a child’s fifth birthday, so they can be anything from just four to just five when they start Reception, which is roughly equivalent (academically) to US Kindergarten. However US kindergarteners can be anything from four to six, depending on the State, and it’s also much easier to delay a child who isn’t yet ready.Then the US grades and the UK years are roughly equivalent, as far as the work goes, although even then things are taught in different orders, and there’s a much wider ability level in UK schools, although less flexibility as far as age goes. So Year One in the UK has children who will turn 6 in the academic year from 1st September through to 31st August and there’s almost no flexibility about that. But within a typical Year One classroom there will be at least three different ability groups (not that the children realise it). So some children at that age will already be reading and writing fluently, and some will be doing quite complex mathematics, some will still be at the beginning reading stage, and maybe struggling with basic number concepts, and the majority will be somewhere in the middle. The teacher (plus assistant, usually) will be teaching at two or three different levels, handing out and marking work at different levels, treating each child, as far as possible, as an individual.The US system mostly works by having one standard level of work for each grade, but a much wider age range. If a child hasn’t mastered everything in that grade level by the end of the year, they may be held back. So I knew of one First Grade class, for instance, which had children as young as just-turned-six, and as old as eight-and-a-half.This kind of pattern continues throughout, with the US grade levels similar (but not the same) as the same UK year level, but typically with children about a year older.That’s why the final year of US high schools is Year 12 (mostly around age 18) whereas in the UK there’s an extra year, Year 13, which is for those who turn 18 during that academic year. This also explains why UK students are usually a year ahead as the Year 13 work and A-level exams are roughly equivalent to some AP courses or junior college in the US. It’s also why most UK degree courses are three years, while US degree courses are more often four years.

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