Abitur (from Latin abire = leave, go off) is a designation used in Germany, Finland and Estonia for final exams that pupils take at the end of their secondary education, usually after 12 or 13 years of schooling (see also for Germany: Abitur after twelve years). The official term in Germany for this certificate of education is Allgemeine Hochschulreife; the contraction Abi is common in colloquial usage. The Zeugnis der Allgemeinen Hochschulreife (often referred to as Abiturzeugnis), issued after candidates have passed their final exams, is the document which contains their grades and which formally enables them to attend university. This means it includes the functions of a school leavigraduation certificate and a university entrance exam.[1] However, the Abitur is not the only entrance exams, as some universities set up their own entrance examinations. Also students do not necessarily need to hold the Abitur in order to enter the university, because succeeding at the "Begabtenprüfung" ("test of aptitude") also opens the way to college. Also students from other countries, who hold a highschool leaving certificate that is not counted as the Abitur (such as the american high school diploma) who did well on the ACT or SAT may enter college even if they do not hold the Abitur. A person, who does not hold the Abitur and did not participate in an aptitude test, may still be allowed to go to college if he or she completed at least 10th grade and does well on an IQ-Test (see: Hochbegabtenstudium). In 2005, a total of 400,000 students passed the Abitur exam in Germany.
Even though the Abitur is often compared to a high school diploma of the United States, the academic level of the Abitur is more comparable to the International Baccalaureate and Advanced Placement tests — indeed, the study requirements for the International Baccalaureate differ little from the Finnish exam requirements. It is the only school-leaving certificate in all states of Germany that allows the graduate (or Abiturient) to move directly to university. The other school leaving certificates, the Hauptschulabschluss and the Realschulabschluss, do not allow their holders to matriculate at a university. Those granted certificates of Hauptschulabschluss or Realschulabschluss can gain a specialized Fachabitur or an Abitur if they graduate from a Berufsschule and then attend Berufsoberschule.
The importance of the Abitur has grown beyond admission to the university, however, in that it has increasingly become a prerequisite to start an apprenticeship in some professions (e.g. banking). Therefore, career opportunities for Hauptschule or Realschule graduates who do not have the Abitur have almost universally seen a downturn in recent years. More than just being a leaving certificate, the Abitur is widely regarded as a matter of personal prestige as well.
The official term for Abitur in Germany is Zeugnis der allgemeinen Hochschulreife (often translated as General Qualification for University Entrance or Certificate for Overall Maturity for Higher Education). The equivalent exam in Austria, Poland and other countries of continental Europe is the Matura; while in England, Wales, Northern Ireland, Hong Kong, Singapore, and the West Indies, it is A-levels; in Scotland it is Higher Grade ; in Greece and Cyprus it is the "apolytirion" (a kind of high school diploma), in Malta it is the Matriculation Certificate (MATSEC). However, during their time of studies and at the end exams students receive only grades on a scale of 15 (best) to 0 points (failed). These points are weighted and then added up and converted to the final grade. If a student receives 14 points or more on average in all of his/her courses and exams he/she will get a final grade of 1.0.
The composite score of the Abitur is between 280 and 840, though both borders are rarely awarded. Students with a score below 280 fail and will not receive the Abitur. There are some more conditions that the student has to meet in order to receive the abitur. The student also has the option of omitting courses (if he/she has taken more than necessary) from his/her composite score.
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Historically, very few people received their Abitur in Germany, because there were a number of attractive jobs, which did not need one. Still there are attractive jobs open for people without an Abitur, such as nurse or kindergarten teacher. The number of persons holding the Abitur has been going up since the 1970 and younger jobholders are more likely to hold the Abitur than older ones, but the vast majority of Germans still do not hold the Abitur and the majority of students graduating from German schools do not receive the Abitur. According to the Statistisches Bundesamt in 2003/2004 about 23% of all students leaving school graduated with an Abitur (Fachabitur [1.2%], Realschulabschluss [42.6%], Hauptschulabschluss [25.0%], without any school leaving certificate [8.3%])
Percentage of jobholders holding Hauptschulabschluss, Realschulabschluss or Abitur in Germany:[2]
1970 | 1982 | 1991 | 2000 | |
Hauptschulabschluss | 87.7 % | 79.3 % | 66.5 % | 54.9 % |
Realschulabschluss | 10.9 % | 17.7 % | 27 % | 34.1 % |
Abitur | 1.4 % | 3 % | 6.5 % | 11 % |
The Abitur in North Rhine Westphalia has been centrally administered since 2007, when final examinations were provided by the Ministry for Schools and Further Education. In 2013, two years will sit their finals simultaneously due to the introduction of the Abitur after 12 years, amid fears of a shortage of apprenticeship and university placements.
The Abitur graduates (Abiturienten) of 2007 were the first to sit centrally prepared final examinations. However, those students who failed the exams the previous year did not sit those, but tests set by the course tutor in question.
All the marks awarded during the qualification stage (semesters 12/1, 12/2, 13/1 and 13/2) that are of relevance constitute the final grade or mark, the importance of which lies in its weight when it comes to university places ("Numerus clausus"). In German law, the Abitur enables every graduate to apply for whatever subject they please, and at whatever state university. Some Universities, however, also require the students applying for some subjects to have other qualifications such as the Latinum (certificate of Latin comprehension), or sometimes Graecum (certificate of ancient Greek comprehension). Those may be awarded by some schools or students can attend prep courses at the university.
There are several quotas at German universities
In legal terms, a course is a subject that has been studied for one semester. Courses are further divided up into Leistungskurse (LK)/intensive courses and Grundkurse(GK)/basic courses. In order to qualify for final Abitur examinations, students are required to have covered two subjects as LKs and between seven and ten as GKs. The choices as to which subjects to study at Abitur level are made in year 11; the general rule being that no subject may be studied that was not covered during year 11, the introductory stage. In both LKs students sit final Abitur examinations, as in two GKs of their choosing, one of which is a written and the other an oral examination or interview (the “fourth subject”). Interviews are not centrally administered but prepared and conducted by the course tutor and two other teachers of the respective school.
Students are, unlike their counterparts in other countries, not entirely free with regard to the choices they are required to make on subjects and courses. Three 'subject fields' need to be covered:
Subject field | Subject | Annotations |
---|---|---|
Linguistic- literary- arts field |
German | compulsory subject from 12/1 to 13/2 |
English | Foreign languages mandatory: one foreign language from 12/1 to 13/2 Language offers differ from institution to institution |
|
French | ||
Latin | ||
other foreign languages | ||
Art | compulsory: two courses in year 12* (i.e. one subject studied for the period of 1 year) | |
Music | ||
Literature | ||
Humanities Social Science field |
History | compulsory: two courses of History and ‘SoWi’ each |
Social Science (SoWi) | ||
Geography | ||
Philosophy | not offered everywhere | |
Education | ||
Psychology | ||
Mathematics- natural sciences- technical field |
Maths | compulsory subject from 12/1 to 13/2 |
Biology | Classical natural sciences mandatory: one classical natural science from 12/1 to 13/2 |
|
Chemistry | ||
Physics | ||
Computer Science | subject offers depend on the individual schools | |
Home Economics | ||
Technology | ||
unclassified | R.E. | mandatory: two courses in year 12* (either catholic, protestant or Jewish R.E.; alternatively, Philosophy may be chosen. |
P.E. | compulsory subject from 12/1 to 13/2, although a maximum of three courses may be considered for the Abitur |
An emphasis has to be put on either languages or the sciences, i.e. either (at least) two foreign languages or (at least) two natural sciences (one of which must be a ‘classical’ one) have to be covered during the four semesters of study.
Up until the 18th century, every German university had its own entrance examination. In 1788 Prussia introduced the Abiturreglement, a law that—for the first time within Germany—established the Abitur as an official qualification. It was later also established in the other German states. In 1834 it became the only university entrance exam in Prussia, and it remained so in all states of Germany until 2004. Since then the German state of Hesse allows also students with the Fachhochschulreife (see below) to study at the universities within the state.
In the German language the European Baccalaureate is called europäisches Abitur, and the International Baccalaureate is called internationales Abitur, both not to be confused with the German Abitur.
Fachabitur was used up until the 1970s in all of Germany for a variation of the Abitur. The official term for this German qualification is fachgebundene Hochschulreife. This qualification includes only one foreign language (in most cases English). The Abitur, in contrast, mostly includes two foreign languages. This school leaving certificate also allows the graduate to start studying at a university. However, he is limited to a specified range of majors. The range of majors depends on the specific subjects covered in his Abitur examinations. But the graduate is allowed to study all majors at a Fachhochschule (University of Applied Sciences, in some ways comparable to polytechnics). Today this school leaving certificate is called fachgebundenes Abitur.
Now the term Fachabitur is used in most parts of Germany for the Fachhochschulreife. This school leaving certificate was introduced in West Germany in the 1970s together with the Fachhochschulen. It enables the graduate to start studying at a Fachhochschule, and in Hesse also at a university within the state. In the Gymnasiums of some states it is reached in the year before the Abitur is reached. However, the normal way to receive the Fachhochschulreife is the graduation from a German Fachoberschule, a vocational high school also introduced in the 1970s.
The term Notabitur is used for a qualification which existed only during World War I and World War II. It was granted to male German Gymnasium (prep school) students who voluntarily enlisted for military service before graduation. The Notabitur during WWI included an examination, roughly equivalent to the Abitur exam. The WWII Notabitur, in contrast, was granted without any examinations. After the war this was a major disadvantage for Germans with this qualification since it was, unlike its WWI counterpart, generally not recognised in West Germany and never recognised in East Germany.
A similar test has also existed in Finland since the mid-19th century. The test is called ylioppilastutkinto in Finnish and studentexamen in Swedish. The official English language translation is matriculation examination. Since 1919, the test has been arranged by a national body, the Matriculation Examination Board. Before that, the administration of the test was the responsibility of the University of Helsinki.
Successful completion formerly legally entitled one to enroll as a university student (hence "matriculation"). Although the legal requirement has been lifted, matriculation without completing the test is still an exception. The universities are now free to arrange their own entrance examinations in addition to considering scores from the Matriculation Examination. Thus, universities accept students based both on entrance exam points, matriculation exam points, and also by a combined score from the two. Matriculation entitles one to wear the student cap.
Each examinee is required to participate in at least four tests in order to matriculate. As of 2005 the only mandatory part of the test is that of äidinkieli ("mother tongue"; Finnish for most students, Swedish or Sámi for some), including a composition test. The student then has to choose three other subjects from
The exam takes place at schools according to minute regulations laid out by the national board. Each exam takes six hours. After the exam, the teachers grade the papers and send the graded papers to the national board which then re-grades every paper. The grading of the exam may be appealed against. In this case, the board re-examines the grading. The result of the re-examination is final and cannot be appealed to any authority.
The score of each test varies with the subject. For example, the maximum score for the test in Finnish or Swedish as a first language is 114 points, in mathematics 66 points and in foreign languages 299 points. The tests are graded according to normal distribution into seven verbal grades with Latin names: Improbatur (I), Approbatur (A), Lubenter Approbatur (B), Cum Laude Approbatur (C), Magna Cum Laude Approbatur (M), Eximia Cum Laude Approbatur (E) and Laudatur (L), from bottom to top. (A rough translation of the grades is "rejected", "accepted", "gladly accepted", "accepted with praise", "accepted with much praise", "accepted with excellent praise", and "praised"/"lauded".) In general, at least the grade A is required for the test to be passed. In every exam,
Traditionally, the test is taken in the spring, but it is also arranged every autumn and may be taken in up to three parts. Thus completing the matriculation exam may take up to one and half years. Usually, the last set of exams is taken at the end of the third year in upper secondary school. The exams take place in late March, but for the school-leavers, the school ends in mid-February, giving the students ample time to prepare for the test in solitary study. This occasion is celebrated by the traditional festivity of penkkarit.
If the student receives an improbatur in any of the obligatory exams, the whole exam is failed. However, a single failed obligatory exam may be compensated by good results from other exams. For this purpose, there is a compensation system where the total exam result of the student is calculated and it is compared to the result of the failed test. In order to get his/her diploma accepted, student must gather enough compensation points from all the other exams. Improbatur is divided to four classes (i+, i, i−, i=), each describing the depth of student's failure (i+ being the least bad) and each class has its own number of compensation points to be reached for an acceptable result (12, 14, 16 and 18 respectively). Points from accepted exams are awarded as follows: L 7 points, E 6, M 5, C 4, B 3 and A 2.
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