Thursday 15 February 2018 photo 2/5
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content //s/fun/android/version/4.2
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At graduation time, a 'Desmond' shouldn't be a source of shame. Both employers' attitudes and our outdated degree classifications need to change. She got a tutu. Rubbish jokes aside, many students are deeply troubled by the prospect of discovering, at the end of their final year, that they've been accorded a 2:2. And that's mostly because of reports that "around three-quarters of large graduate employers routinely use the 2:1 to sift [job] applications". As above, if this were the case would someone finishing with 59 get a third AND a 2:2? :p: 40 up to (and including) 49 is usually a thid. 50 to to (and including) 59 is a 2:2. Closing as this thread is over three years old, you shouldn't bump old threads, and I think you've received the clarification you require. 0. The bulk of university graduates fall into Second-Class Honours, which is sub-divided into Upper Second-Class Honours and Lower Second-Class Honours. These divisions are commonly abbreviated to 2:1 (pronounced two-one) and 2:2 (pronounced two-two) respectively. Despite 2:1s and 2:2s just being.
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