The Education System in the USA
Introduction
In the USA , children start school when
they are five or six years old. Depending on the state, schooling is compulsory
until the age of 16 or 18. Children younger than five can go to a nursery
school or preschool.
At the age of five or six, the
children attend elementary school (also known as grade school or grammar
school), which last six years. The fist year at elementary school is called
kindergarten.
After elementary school, students
attend middle school (also known as junior high school) for three years. Then
they continue at high school. In some states, students have to stay in school
until they are 18 years old. In other states they may leave school at 16 or 17
with parental permission.
Age
|
School
|
< 5
|
nursery school / preschool
|
5-11
|
elementary school
|
11-14
|
middle school / junior high school
|
14-18
|
high school / senior high school
|
When students in the USA say what
year they are in, they usually use ordinal numbers, e. g. ‘tenth grade’.
(In the UK
students would use cardinal numbers, e. g. ‘year ten’.)
Classes
At elementary school pupils
primarily learn how to read, write and count. There are about 20 to 30 pupils
in one class.
At junior and senior high school,
mandatory subjects are English, maths, biology, chemistry, physics, physical
education and history. Schools also offer optional courses from which the
students can choose, e. g. art, modern languages, computers. Physical
education is a very important subject in the United States – many students
participate in sports programs.
Gifted and talented students can
take advanced courses in their schools or attend additional courses at
community colleges in the afternoons or during the holidays. Often such courses
are later acknowledged by universities, and can facilitate early graduation.
Grading Scale
In the USA (as in other English speaking
countries) letter grades are used in reports.
§
A > 90 % (excellent)
§
B > 80 % (very good)
§
C > 70 % (improvement needed)
§
D > 60 % (close fail)
§
E > 50 % (fail)
§
F < 50 % (fail)
In general, only grades A to C are
a 'pass' – a plus (+) or minus (-) might be added (e. g. A-, B+).
School Uniforms
It
is not common for students in the USA to wear school uniforms, but
many schools have dress codes telling students what kind of clothing is or is
not allowed in school. Some schools (especially private schools) have started
to require their students to wear school uniforms in order to improve school
discipline and avoid 'fashion cliques'.
There are several ways to continue аn
education: universities, colleges, community colleges, and technical and
vocational schools. A university in the USA usually consists of several
colleges; each college specializes in a subject area. There are colleges of
liberal arts, colleges of education and business colleges. A program for
undergraduates usually takes four years and leads to the Bachelor of Arts or
Science degree. After that, students may leave the university or go on for a
graduate or professional degree. The university may be funded from several
different sources. A publicly funded university gets some money form the state
government. A privately funded university gets money from private sources only.
A university may be funded by a religious group.
College students usually spend four
years at the college, too, and get the Bachelor's degree. In contrast to
universities, colleges don't have graduate or professional programs. Colleges
in the USA
differ greatly in size — they may include from 100 students to 5000 and more.
Most of the larger institutions fall into the category of universities, the
largest being the University of California, State university of New York, New
York university, Columbia University and others.
The course of study in a community
college lasts two years and doesn't lead to any degree. Community colleges may
give courses in the regular academic subjects or subject like dental
technology, sewing and other non-academic subjects. Not all students of
community colleges have high school diplomas.
Technical, or vocational schools
have no academic programs and provide only job training. Programs may take from
six months to two years and more.