Jan 9, 2004 20:48
20 yrs ago
141 viewers *
English term
grade vs. mark
Non-PRO
English
Other
Is there a diffrence? Is grade AE and mark BE or are they interchangeable?
TIA
TIA
Responses
+14
43 mins
Selected
Not exactly the same (UK)
A grade is a category: A, B, C, ... or 1, 2, 3, ...
A mark is more like a score: 17/20, 85/100.
Of course, they are parallel scales: e.g. all marks in the range 85-100 might merit grade A.
In the UK, major exam results in secondary school are given as grades. Individual essays, reports, etc., may be given marks or grades.
A mark is more like a score: 17/20, 85/100.
Of course, they are parallel scales: e.g. all marks in the range 85-100 might merit grade A.
In the UK, major exam results in secondary school are given as grades. Individual essays, reports, etc., may be given marks or grades.
Peer comment(s):
agree |
David Knowles
: mark is numeric; grade is alphabetic/symbolic
1 min
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neutral |
RHELLER
: not in the U.S. (we would use score, as you have suggested)
42 mins
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Sure, Rita - I thought I made it clear enough I was talking about UK usage as I saw it
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agree |
John Bowden
: Certainly true of the UK
1 hr
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agree |
Kardi Kho
3 hrs
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agree |
Nado2002
3 hrs
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agree |
Charlie Bavington
: For the UK, I'd agree 100%. No idea about USA (altho you only ever hear people talk about "grades" on American TV progs, it seems to me).
5 hrs
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agree |
Rajan Chopra
5 hrs
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agree |
Ildiko Santana
6 hrs
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agree |
Empty Whiskey Glass
9 hrs
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agree |
Gordon Darroch (X)
14 hrs
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agree |
Jörgen Slet
1 day 1 hr
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agree |
Alexandra Tussing
1 day 1 hr
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agree |
Refugio
: In the US a half century ago, marks were given for indiviudual tests or papers, and grades were the final evaluation.
1 day 10 hrs
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agree |
Tantie Kustiantie
: according to my experience, In indonesia marks is given for studemt from elementary to high scholl level, and grade is given to student at university as final evaluation.
2 days 6 hrs
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agree |
mportal
2 days 13 hrs
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4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thank you everybody for your help and all the great explanations. "
+12
1 min
same meaning but mark is never used in AE
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Peer comment(s):
agree |
Daniel Mencher
: Well, I wouldn't say that "mark" is never used, but it's used seldom enough to make "grade" notably American.
4 mins
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thanks Dan :-)
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agree |
Iolanta Vlaykova Paneva
8 mins
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thank you Yolanta :-)
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agree |
Marian Greenfield
: I would agree with Dan, actually, as I might say, I got bad marks in xxx..., but it is rare to use marks in AE
13 mins
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thanks Marian :-)
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agree |
Fuad Yahya
30 mins
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thanks Fuad :-)
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agree |
sarahl (X)
: to me, a mark is someone you're supposed to kill. ;-)
1 hr
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Sarah - you always keep me laughing :-)
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neutral |
Ildiko Santana
: I agree with Davidás answer. "Never say never" Rita! ;)
6 hrs
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thanks
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agree |
Tanja Abramovic (X)
8 hrs
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thanks Tanja :-)
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agree |
Empty Whiskey Glass
10 hrs
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thanks Svetozar :-)
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agree |
senin
15 hrs
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thank you!
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agree |
Alexandra Tussing
: not entirely never though, just very rarely
1 day 2 hrs
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thank you!
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agree |
horizon
: I agree with Dan.
1 day 5 hrs
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thank you!
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neutral |
Refugio
: He got high marks for ...?
1 day 10 hrs
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this expression is common but is rarely used at school in the U.S.; the specific question here was grade vs. mark
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agree |
Tantie Kustiantie
: i agree with Dan answer
2 days 6 hrs
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agree |
Rajiv Arora
5 days
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5 mins
same
In my experience, which is a 12-year career in New York public elementary/middle/high schools, they are the same, although I heard "grade" used much more often.
Good luck!
-Dan
Good luck!
-Dan
10 mins
just to support Rita
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?key=34011&dict=CA...
grade
a number or letter that shows how good someone's work or performance is:
Steve never studies, but he always gets good grades.
UK Carla got a grade A in German.
grade
a number or letter that shows how good someone's work or performance is:
Steve never studies, but he always gets good grades.
UK Carla got a grade A in German.
+1
16 mins
UK - grades, too
They are interchangeable in the sense of 'did you get good marks / grades for your test?'
I think grade is becoming more popular now in UK. My daughter talks about her grades, rather than her marks.
Often she will just say 'I got an A in Maths' - leaving out grade
Her report talks about performance grading and effort grading (I've just had a look!).
So, basically, I would use grades!
I think grade is becoming more popular now in UK. My daughter talks about her grades, rather than her marks.
Often she will just say 'I got an A in Maths' - leaving out grade
Her report talks about performance grading and effort grading (I've just had a look!).
So, basically, I would use grades!
Discussion