Details, Explanation and Meaning About Ontario Academic Credit

Ontario Academic Credit Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Ontario Academic Credit, usually referred to as OAC or Grade 13, was, until 2003, the final year of high school in Ontario, Canada. Students were not required to complete that year in order to receive the Ontario Secondary School Diploma (OSSD); many students graduated after Grade 12. OAC credits were a university requirement, however, so those wishing to reach that level stayed on to complete those courses.

Prior to the introduction of OAC in the mid 1980s, Ontario had 13 grades. OAC replaced Grade 13, and more formally allowed for the completion of schooling after only 12 Grades, where previously, this had been an exceptional circumstance. To enter university, students were required to complete 30 high school courses (credits), 6 of which had to be at the OAC level; students who completed these requirements in 4 years of high school were permitted to graduate. However, most students chose to stay in high school the extra year.

Previously, there were two high school diplomas in Ontario, the Ontario Secondary School Graduate Diploma (OSSGD) which was awarded after Grade 12 and the Ontario Secondary School Graduate Honours Diploma (OSSGHD) awarded after Grade 13. The "Grade 13 diploma" was recognised in some jurisdictions as being the equivalent of first year university and having it would enable some students to apply directly for entry into second year at Canadian universities outside of Ontario. This practice ended with the replacement of Grade 13 and the OSSGHD with OAC.

The elimination of OAC was announced by the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party soon after their election to office in 1995 and was scheduled to take effect eight years later. The extra year was replaced with an extra ten days of schooling at each lower grade. Most Ontario universities which had offered three-year Bachelor's programs began to phase those out in favour of four-year Honours degrees.

The elimination of OAC in 2003 produced a "double-cohort" caused by both the last OAC class and the first Grade 12 class graduating in the same year. This has lead to more stringent admission standards and overcrowding at many Ontario universities.


This is an Article on Ontario Academic Credit. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Ontario Academic Credit


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything