ChatterBank3 mins ago
So Close!
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No best answer has yet been selected by Tinker. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I realise this isn't the answer you're looking for, but it might help explain your uni's actions.
And anyway an upper 2.1 is pretty good too. Congratulations!
I don't entirely agree with the system. We're all good at different things, after all. And as a Double Honours student of French and German (with Dutch and Luxembourgish (!)), I think a physisist would find my degree just as hard as I would find theirs. But hey, maybe it's just my sour grapes :)
To make it more confusing, many "newer" universities, that is, mainly the ex-polytechnics, don't stick to this system, especially with their vocational courses. Therefore a student of, say, Occupational Therapy can gain as many marks as an Astro-physisist. Rightly?
In fact, Quizmonster, I reckon your degree would be marked out of 80% these days. You studied English at one of our more established universities, didn't you? I'm at the University of Sheffield (not Hallam!) and I know English (and English Literature) come under the category of "Faculty of Arts" and are therefore subject to the 80% rule!
Sorry to hijack your question, Tinker! And don't forget that remarking, like interest rates, can go up or down...
I would imagine someone who gained a First in Philosophy (surely as intellectually rigorous as physics) in an Arts Faculty would have been highly piddled off to discover that his degree was considered to be worth only 8/10 of some chemist's, say, in a Science Faculty.
It seems most odd to me that scientists - of all people - can claim that 100% (a perfect French student's actual score in his actual exams) will be considered to be just 80%. I think this is a perfect example of where that wonderful word 'deemed' comes into its own!