Undergraduate Teaching 2019-20

What do classification grades mean?

What do classification grades mean?

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The baseline level is the II.1: a II.1 piece of workshows a solid and competent grasp of the course material. Thestudent has beenable to get most things out, but without very clear evidence of additional insight. They may be slow to see cross-connections between different course elements, or to extrapolate knowledge and experience to new situations.

A first class piece of workshows good grasp of the material, with some definite evidence of going beyond the II.1 level by showinginitiative,insight, originality,creativity, ability to generalise and extrapolate to new situations.  Naturally, this may manifest itself differently depending on the context: mathematical material requires a different kind of ‘insight’ than experimental work or essay-based descriptive work.

A II.2 piece of work falls below the II.1 standard: the student can cover most of the material, but has gaps in their understanding which lead to incomplete or clumsy solutions, and to missing important details when interpreting experimental results or qualitative material.

Third-class work reveals major gaps in the student’sunderstanding, but shows just enough competence to contribute toan undergraduate degree with honours.  However, this standard, if continued across thewholebody of work,  is not acceptableat Masters level.

Last updated on 23/08/2019 12:56