Academic grading in Australia


systems in Australia include:

Tertiary institutions

Australian universities issue results for each subject, based on the following gradings:
%ACU, ACS, Adelaide, Bond, Canberra, CDU, CQU, CSU,
UDivinity, Flinders, JCU, MQ, Newcastle, QUT, SCU, UNE, UNSW,
USYD, Torrens, UOW, USC, USQ, UTS, WSU, ACAP, AIM
UniSAUSQ Griffith, UQ identify specific grades in some coursesANU, Curtin, Deakin, ECU, Monash, Murdoch,
RMIT, UTAS, Swinburne, UWA, VU UNDA
FedUniLa TrobeMelbourne
100High Distinction High Distinction High Distinction 7High Distinction High Distinction AFirst Class Honours
95–99High Distinction High Distinction High Distinction 7High Distinction High Distinction AFirst Class Honours
90–94High Distinction High Distinction High Distinction 7High Distinction High Distinction AFirst Class Honours
85–89High Distinction High Distinction High Distinction 7High Distinction High Distinction AFirst Class Honours
80–84Distinction Distinction A6High Distinction High Distinction AFirst Class Honours
75–79Distinction Distinction A6Distinction Distinction BSecond Class Honours Div A
70–74Credit Credit B5Distinction Distinction BSecond Class Honours Div B
65–69Credit Credit B5Credit Credit CThird Class Honours
60–64Pass Pass 1 C4Credit Credit CPass
55–59Pass Pass 1 C4Pass Pass DPass
50–54Pass Pass 2 C4Pass Pass DPass
40–49Fail Fail 1 Fail 1, 2, 3Fail Marginal Fail Fail Fail
<; 40Fail Fail 2 Fail 1, 2, 3Fail Fail Fail Fail

Note that the numbers above do not correspond to a percentile, but are notionally a percentage of the maximum raw marks available. Various tertiary institutions in Australia have policies on the allocations for each grade and scaling may occur to meet these policies. These policies may vary also according to the degree year, but generally, only 2–5% of students who pass may be awarded a High Distinction grade, and 50% or more of passing students are awarded a basic Pass grade. Raw marks for students who fail are not scaled and do not increase the allocations of higher grades. Some universities also have a Pass Conceded grade for marks that fall in the range of 45–49 inclusive.
A few universities do not issue numeric grades out of 100 for individual subjects, instead relying on qualitative descriptors. Griffith University and The University of Queensland issue results of High Distinction, Distinction, Credit, Pass, and Fail.

Grade point average

Grade point averages are not generally used in Australia below a tertiary level. At universities, they are calculated according to a more complicated formula than in some other nations:
where grade points are as follows:
GradeUniSAWSU
JCU
QUT
UQ
Griffith
USQ FedUniCSU VUMacquarieAdelaideCQU
Flinders
Newcastle
SCU ANU
Charles Darwin
UTAS UWA
AIM ACU
UTSMonashSUTBond
Murdoch
RMIT UNDA
High Distinction77777777444
Distinction66666666333
Credit55555555222
Pass4.5 / 4 4444444111
Conceded Pass / Near Pass / Fail Level 1/Marginal Fail3.5 / 3 3330n/an/a00.70.50
Fail1.5 / 1 21.5001.5000.300
Withdrawn Fail/Late Withdrawal1.511.500000000

A conceded pass is a pass for a course that has been awarded only after supplementary assessment has been undertaken by the student.
Where a course result is a Non-Graded Pass, the result will only be included if the GPA is less than 4, and will be assigned the grade point of 4, otherwise NGP results will be disregarded. The term course unit values is used to distinguish between courses which have different weightings, for example between a full year course and a single semester course.
Some other universities, such as the University of Melbourne, University of New South Wales, University of Sydney, and University of Wollongong use a Weighted Average Mark for the same purpose as a GPA. The WAM is based on the raw percentage grades, or marks, achieved by the student, rather than grade points such as High Distinction or Distinction.