Eleventh grade
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article does not cite any references or sources. (July 2007) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
| This article or section deals primarily with the United States and Canada and does not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please improve this article or discuss the issue on the talk page. |
Eleventh grade (called Grade 11 in some regions, also known as junior year in the U.S.) is a year of education in the United States and many other nations.
In the United Kingdom this is called "Year 12" (or "Lower Sixth") and entry into it is usually dependant upon exam results.
Students are usually 16–17 years old. Eleventh grade is the next-to-last year of secondary school. Junior is a student in the eleventh grade in high school.
Many students take the SAT Reasoning Test and/or ACT in the second half of their 11th-grade year. Typically during this year, students interested in attending higher education facilities, tend to search at around the second part of that year.
Mathematics students usually take Trigonometry, Precalculus, Calculus, or Algebra 2. Depending on the location there may be a combination of any of the three subjects. They may also take easier courses such as Geometry and Algebra I if they do not have the required prerequistes for more or less the more advanced courses that are listed above.
In English, a college-preparatory curriculum would also include American literature. Often, English Literature (also referred to as British Literature) is taught in the junior year of high school.
In a social studies curriculum, eleventh graders in the United States are usually taught History of the United States or the world in the 20th Century onwards. They may also learn more advanced World Culture and Geography knowledge along with some more advanced social studies such as psychology and government.
While normally followed by twelfth grade, some colleges will accept excelling students out of this grade as part of an early college entrance program. In the Canadian province of Quebec, Grade 11 (sec. 5) is the final year of secondary education, followed by CEGEP.
Its English equivalent is Year 12 or Lower Sixth, the sixth and penultimate year of secondary education. It is not compulsory to attend these last two years; however, successful completion will result in awarding of A-Level qualifications. At the end of year 12, half of the A-Level is completed in the candidates' chosen subjects by completing 3 of the 6 units needed to make up one "A" Level. Satisfactory completion of these 3 units (either written exams or coursework, depending on subject) will result in the awarding of "half an A-Level" (an AS-Level).
In France, the equivalent is the Première, which is the penultimate year of secondary education in that country (followed by the Terminale).
| Preceded by Tenth grade | Eleventh Grade 16–17 | Succeeded by Twelfth grade or CEGEP (Québec Only) |

