Can someone explain to me how the education levels work in US? What is “senior high”, “grade 10”, “high school” whatever, what age group are these in, etc.
Not sure what OP is talking about, doesn’t sound like the K-12 education system.
But as for your question, there are 12 “grades” in the US public education system, plus kindergarten, which comes before first grade.
The first five grades are generally called “elementary school,” which has its own seperate building. Most kids begin around age 4-5 in kindergarten.
Then, grades 6-8 are called either “middle school” or “junior high,” these are usually kids from age 11-14, and the building is generally seperate but can also be connected to the next set of grades.
Finally, grades 9-12 are called “high school” or more formally, “secondary education.” Grade 9 are “freshmen,” grade 10 are “sophomores,” grade 11 are “juniors,” and grade 12 are “seniors.” These kids range from 14-18.
Each grade is a little less than a year long, from late summer of one year to spring of the next, with a 2-3 month summer vacation.
I think that’s all? I mean, you also have pre-school, which is an optional class that you can send your kid to before they start kindergarten.
Yes our school starts middle school at 5th grade. It’s a mixed bag. I know a district near us was K-3 / 4-5 / 6-8 / 9-12. But that was mostly because they didn’t have big enough schools.
I don’t know what senior high is and we stop saying grade numbers after 8th grade. High school is 9th-12th grade but we normally refer to those grades as freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior year.
Also, these grades are usually separated into 3 schools: elementary, middle, and high school. Though some places have a combined elementary + middle school. So it goes like this:
In Plano, Texas, they have a “senior high” for 11th-12th grades. It’s unusual in the US. Plano has such a large school district that they thought a few large “senior high schools” (~1300 students per grade) would allow offering classes that only a few students were interested in
Can someone explain to me how the education levels work in US? What is “senior high”, “grade 10”, “high school” whatever, what age group are these in, etc.
Not sure what OP is talking about, doesn’t sound like the K-12 education system.
But as for your question, there are 12 “grades” in the US public education system, plus kindergarten, which comes before first grade.
The first five grades are generally called “elementary school,” which has its own seperate building. Most kids begin around age 4-5 in kindergarten.
Then, grades 6-8 are called either “middle school” or “junior high,” these are usually kids from age 11-14, and the building is generally seperate but can also be connected to the next set of grades.
Finally, grades 9-12 are called “high school” or more formally, “secondary education.” Grade 9 are “freshmen,” grade 10 are “sophomores,” grade 11 are “juniors,” and grade 12 are “seniors.” These kids range from 14-18.
Each grade is a little less than a year long, from late summer of one year to spring of the next, with a 2-3 month summer vacation.
I think that’s all? I mean, you also have pre-school, which is an optional class that you can send your kid to before they start kindergarten.
Outstanding, comrade, thank you for the information
Some regions have middle school start at 5th grade though. But yeah, I don’t think this post refers to a US school system.
Yes our school starts middle school at 5th grade. It’s a mixed bag. I know a district near us was K-3 / 4-5 / 6-8 / 9-12. But that was mostly because they didn’t have big enough schools.
I don’t know what senior high is and we stop saying grade numbers after 8th grade. High school is 9th-12th grade but we normally refer to those grades as freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior year.
Also, these grades are usually separated into 3 schools: elementary, middle, and high school. Though some places have a combined elementary + middle school. So it goes like this:
Thank you comrade, really appreciate the explanation
I thought @JoeDaRedTrooperYT@lemmygrad.ml was Filipino, not burger?
“senior high” isn’t a thing in USAmerika anyways
I am a Filipino
Here in the Philippines Grade 7-10 is junior high, 10-12 is senior high
In Plano, Texas, they have a “senior high” for 11th-12th grades. It’s unusual in the US. Plano has such a large school district that they thought a few large “senior high schools” (~1300 students per grade) would allow offering classes that only a few students were interested in
Yeah, I’ve heard of this in massive districts before but it’s not customary
OP says in their profile they’re from the Philippines, which makes this post make more sense.
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