| Academic grading |
|---|
| Africa |
| North America |
| South America |
| Asia |
| Europe |
|
| Oceania |
In Egypt, the academic grading system functions with a worded grade and increases in increments from 10 to 30 points.
The title jayyid jiddan or very good, denotes the second highest mark possible, on par with a "B" student.[1]
| Percent | Qualification |
|---|---|
| 85–100 | Excellent (Momtaz) (Arabic: ممتاز) |
| 75–84 | Very good or Distinct (jayed jedan) (Arabic: جيد جدًا) |
| 65–74 | Good (jayed) or credit (Arabic: جيد) |
| 50–64 | Acceptable (Maqboul) or pass (Arabic: مقبول) |
| 30–49 | Weak (Daeef) (Arabic: ضعيف) |
| 0–29 | Very weak (Daeef Gedan) (Arabic: ضعيف جدًا) |
References
- ↑ "Graduate admissions". The American University in Cairo. Archived from the original on 2008-09-06.
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