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Degree classificationA degree may be awarded with or without honours, with the class of an honours degree based on the average mark of the assessed work a candidate has completed. Below is a list of the possible classifications with common abbreviations. Honours degrees are in bold:
There are also variations between universities (especially in Scotland, where honours are usually reserved only for courses lasting four years or more) and requirements other than the correct average are often needed to be awarded honours. (In Scotland it is possible to start University a year younger than is normal in the rest of the United Kingdom as the Scottish Highers exams are taken at age seventeen, not eighteeen, thus four year courses end at the same chronological age as a rest of UK three year course, assuming no 'gap years'.) When a candidate is awarded a degree with honours, '(Hons)' is sometimes suffixed to their type of degree, such as BA(Hons) or BSc(Hons) but this is an unofficial practice. At Oxford and Cambridge, honours classes apply to examinations, not to degrees. Thus, in Cambridge, where undergraduates are examined at the end of each Part of the Tripos, a student may receive different classifications for different Parts. The final Part is usually the only one to count towards classification of the degree. At Oxford, the Final Honour School results are generally applied to the degree.
First-Class HonoursIn most universities, First-Class Honours is the highest honours which can be achieved, with about 10% of candidates achieving a First nationally. A minority of universities award First-Class Honours with Distinction, informally known as a "Starred First" (Cambridge) or a "Congratulatory First" (Oxford). In Oxford the Congratulatory First involves a ceremony where examiners stand and applaud. These are seldom awarded. A "Double First" can refer to First-Class Honours in two separate subjects, e.g. Classics and Mathematics, or alternatively to First-Class Honours in the same subject in subsequent examinations, such as subsequent Parts of the Tripos at the University of Cambridge. A Cambridge "Double First" originally referred to a first in two different Triposes. The phrase "Double First" originally referred to people who got firsts in both the classical and mathematical Triposes ("double men"). The two-Tripos criterion for a "double first", even in vaguely related subjects as English and History, constitutes a far higher hurdle than simply repeating the same performance in competition with the same students in a Part II of the same Tripos; it is harder because the subject matter is different, and the candidate has to reach a mark of excellence in competition with people who would have been studying the subject for longer at university level. At Cambridge it is possible to obtain a Double Starred First (noted recipients being Quentin Skinner, Alain de Botton, Lee Kuan Yew and Orlando Figes), or, in extremely rare cases such as Maurice Zinkin [1], Neal Ascherson and Abba Eban, a Triple-Starred First. The Graduateship (post-nominal GCGI) awarded by the City & Guilds of London Institute is mapped to a British Honours degree. http://www.city-and-guilds.co.uk/cps/rde/xchg/SID-0AC0478C-90F61E7F/cgonline/hs.xsl/643.html The Associateship (post-nominal ACGI) is conferred by the Council of the City & Guilds of London Institute on the recommendation of the Dean of the City and Guilds College in recognition of the ability to demonstrate, to the level equivalent to that of a degree of Bachelor of Science (Engineering), or Bachelor of Engineering, or Master of Engineering, the understanding and application of the principles of a branch of Engineering or of Computing Science approved by the Institute. http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/registry/studentrecords/universityandcollegecertificates/ In Latin: summa cum laude Second-Class HonoursThe bulk of university graduates fall into Second-Class Honours, which is sometimes divided into Upper Second-Class Honours and Lower Second-Class Honours. These divisions are commonly abbreviated to 2:1 (pronounced two-one) and 2:2 (pronounced two-two) respectively. The 2:1 is considered a prestigious degree, and some employers require candidates to have a "2:1 or above". However, a number of employers will also accept graduates with a "2:2 or above" degree. For example, some UK government departments accept graduates with 2:2 degrees, and numerous private sector companies will accept 2:2s. In Latin: 2:1 - Magna cum laude 2:2 - Cum Laude Third-Class HonoursThird-Class Honours is the lowest honours classification in most modern universities. (Until the 1970s, Oxford used to award Fourth-class Honours degrees, although they did not divide Second-Class Honours and so still had four classes like everyone else.) Roughly 20% of students achieving an honours degree receive a Third.[citation needed] Third Class degree graduates can have very successful careers. Carol Vorderman, who received a Third Class degree, is well known for her skill at mental arithmetic and now co-hosts Countdown[2] with Des O'Connor. Hugh Laurie also achieved a Third Class degree, and has become a very famous actor[3]. Christopher Hitchens and David Dimbleby received Third Class degrees in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Ordinary DegreeAn Ordinary degree is a pass degree without honours. A number of universities offer Ordinary degree courses to students, but most students enrol in Honours degree courses. Ordinary degrees are sometimes awarded to students who do not complete an Honours degree course. Aegrotat degreesA candidate who is unable to take his or her exams because of illness can sometimes be awarded an aegrotat degree; this is an honours degree without classification, awarded on the understanding that had the candidate not been unwell, he or she would have passed. Progression to postgraduate studyRegulations governing the progression of undergraduate degree graduates to postgraduate programmes vary between universities, and are often flexible. A candidate for a postgraduate master's degree is usually required to have at least a 2:2 degree, although candidates with 2:1s are in a considerably stronger position to gain a place on a postgraduate course and to gain funding. Some institutions specify a 2:1. Candidates with a Third or ordinary degree are sometimes accepted, provided they have acquired satisfactory professional experience subsequent to graduation. A candidate for a doctoral programme who does not hold a master's degree is nearly always required to have a First or 2:1. For highly desirable programmes a First is usually required. Undergraduate degree honours slangAn interesting form of rhyming slang has developed from degree classes, usually using names of famous people. Due to the conventions of rhyming slang, only the person's first name is used.
Thirds are often lightheartedly referred to as 'drinkers' degrees'[8], with the implication that the graduate spent more time in the union bar than studying. An alternative designation, now archaic and usually facetious, is a 'Gentleman's Third', or, before the class was abolished, a 'Gentleman's Fourth'. A Third is also known as a 'Richard' after the monarch Richard III; a 'Vorderman' after the British television celebrity Carol Vorderman who received a Third at Cambridge[9]; or indeed a 'turd'. Finally, a Pass degree is sometimes known as a 'Khyber' (after the Cockney rhyming slang phrase 'Khyber Pass'). A fail is sometimes known as a Michael Palin (as 'failing' para-rhymes with 'Palin'). See also
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