|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
Ontario Academic Credit coursesOAC courses were the highest level courses in Ontario high schools until the formal elimination of the Ontario Academic Credit. To enter university, students were required to complete 30 high school credits (courses can have different credit values, but most courses were worth 1 credit; some courses were compulsory and there were other restrictions), 6 of which had to be at the OAC level. Assuming that one had taken the necessary prerequisite courses, one could complete OAC courses before the OAC year, thus in many schools, it was common for Grade 11 or Grade 12 students to take OAC courses. Students who completed these requirements in 4 years of high school were permitted to graduate; this practice was known as fast-tracking. However,a lot of students chose to stay in high school the extra year. Ontario universities looked at a prospective matriculant's "top-six" (the six OAC courses taken with the highest grades) and averaged them. If one's "top-six" average was above a university's "cut-off" (the lowest average they would be willing to accept for that year), one would be admitted. It should be noted that most university programmes had certain course requirements (e.g., humanities programmes typically required at least OAC English; science programmes typically required, in addition to OAC English, a combination of OAC Algebra & Geometry, OAC Calculus, OAC Biology, OAC Chemistry, and OAC Physics), thus these courses had to be completed and are considered part of the student's "top-six". Students with an average of 80% or greater over all OAC courses were named Ontario Scholars. currently the same applies for people getting an average over 80% in their grade 12 courses. Secondary school reforms and the "double cohort"
The elimination of the OAC year produced a "double-cohort" caused by both the last OAC (OS:IS) class and the first Grade 12 (OSS) class graduating in the same year (the double-cohort year, 2003). This led to more competitive admission standards at most Ontario universities. Some students under OS:IS who feared that they might not be able to gain admission to the university of their choice as a result of the double cohort decided to fast-track to graduate before 2003; a variation of this is where some students under OSS decided to take an extra year of high school to graduate in 2004 or delayed application to post-secondary institutions. Double-cohort students who chose the latter options in their turn affected those in the year after them. Informally, OAC is used to refer to the OS:IS curriculum and Grade 12 is used to refer to the OSS curriculum in discussions of the double-cohort.
|
Sites |
Searched sites for "Ontario Academic Credit" |
|
No sites found. |
Sorry, no matching site records were found. |
Want your site listed here?
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Submit
your site |
|
Relevant quality search results and fast easy navigation throughout the
different sections of the site, make Americola.com |