I'm going to come out with another one of those funny "language" questions.
In another thread, someone mentioned that they had met their husband in "college" and that he then went to medical school.
You may laugh, but what is "college"? I get a little confused when I hear words like "freshman", "sophomore" and "senior", as well, because I don't know what these represent. Our schooling system is different in Australia. It's time for me to work out what you guys are referring to!
We start here with a year of kindergarten (which may mean something different in the US too?), then a year of pre-school, and then start seven years of primary school. When you graduate from this, you're off to high school (secondary school) for five years (grades 8-12). All pre-tertiary education is free if you attend a public school. Generally you'll be 17 when you finish, although education is only compulsory to age 15. After completing year 12, you may go on to university. In my day you could go straight into a medical degree, which took seven years, but now you do an undergraduate degree in any discipline and enter from that point. "College" generally means a post-compulsory schooling alternative to university, such as a technical college.
Do you see my confusion? Please answer this ignorant (ex) high school teacher!
PS - Incidentally, while university is not free, you do not have to pay up-front. Repayments of a small percentage only commence once a certain level of income is reached.
In another thread, someone mentioned that they had met their husband in "college" and that he then went to medical school.
You may laugh, but what is "college"? I get a little confused when I hear words like "freshman", "sophomore" and "senior", as well, because I don't know what these represent. Our schooling system is different in Australia. It's time for me to work out what you guys are referring to!
We start here with a year of kindergarten (which may mean something different in the US too?), then a year of pre-school, and then start seven years of primary school. When you graduate from this, you're off to high school (secondary school) for five years (grades 8-12). All pre-tertiary education is free if you attend a public school. Generally you'll be 17 when you finish, although education is only compulsory to age 15. After completing year 12, you may go on to university. In my day you could go straight into a medical degree, which took seven years, but now you do an undergraduate degree in any discipline and enter from that point. "College" generally means a post-compulsory schooling alternative to university, such as a technical college.
Do you see my confusion? Please answer this ignorant (ex) high school teacher!
PS - Incidentally, while university is not free, you do not have to pay up-front. Repayments of a small percentage only commence once a certain level of income is reached.
Comment