Advanced Highers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Advanced Higher is an optional qualification which forms part of the Scottish secondary education system. It is normally taken by students aged around 17-18 after they have completed Highers, which in turn are the main university entrance qualification. Advanced Higher is one level of National Course offered by the Scottish Qualifications Authority as part of the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework.
Universities within Scotland traditionally tended to take students with only NQ Higher or A-level qualifications, but many have since begun to take students with qualifications gained elsewhere in Britain or, as with Glasgow University, for example, an International Baccalaureate.
The Advanced Higher is Level 7 on the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework[1]
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[edit] History
Advanced Highers were introduced in 2001 to replace the Certificate of Sixth Year Studies (often abbreviated to CSYS or just SYS). The final CSYS exams were taken by students at the end of the 2001/02 educational year. In 2007 a noticeable decrease of 2.4% in those taking Advanced Highers has prompted concern in certain areas.[2]
[edit] UCAS tariff
In the UCAS tariff of valuing qualifications for university entry, Advanced Highers are usually considered on the same footing as A Levels, which are offered to students of the same age elsewhere in the United Kingdom.
According to the online UCAS tariff of January 2006, Advanced Highers are worth the same number of points as A-Levels[3]
- A - 120
- B - 100
- C - 80
- D - 72
[edit] A-levels and Advanced Highers
Although in actual fact superior, an Advanced Higher qualification might be equivalent to an A-level in terms of UCAS points, syllabus content and examination difficulty.
Some English Universities, such as Oxford University and Cambridge University, have begun to take into account the extra difficulties associated with Advanced Highers and have been giving slightly lower conditions for entry into their institutions. Oxford University's admissions forms require schools to comment on the percentage of students achieving the top grades in examinations, presumably to provide contextual background to the achievements of a particular student. The question is framed in terms of the percentage of candidates achieving AAA+ at A-level and AAB+ for Advanced Higher, possibly indicating that greater value is attributed to the Advanced Higher[4]
[edit] Subjects
The following subjects are available at Advanced Higher:[5]
- Accounting
- Administration
- Applied Mathematics: Mechanics
- Applied Mathematics: Statistics
- Art and Design Enquiry: Design
- Art and Design Enquiry: Expressive
- Art and Design: Research and Appreciation
- Biology
- Building and Architectural Technology
- Business Management
- Chemistry
- Civil Engineering
- Classical Greek
- Classical Studies
- Computing
- Drama
- Economics
- Electronics
- English
- French
- Gaelic (Learners)
- Gaidhlig
- Geography
- Geology(currently unavailable)
- German
- Graphic Communication
- History
- Home Economics — Fashion and Textile Technology
- Home Economics — Health and Food Technology
- Home Economics — Lifestyle and Consumer Technology
- Information Systems
- Italian
- Latin
- Managing Environmental Resources
- Mathematics
- Mechatronics
- Media Studies
- Modern Studies
- Music
- Philosophy (Unavailable as of 2007 diet)
- Physical Education
- Physics
- Politics
- Product Design
- Psychology
- Religious, Moral and Philosophical Studies
- Russian
- Sociology
- Spanish
- Technological Studies
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Scottish Qualifications Authority official website
- Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework official website
- Article in The Times: Highers Pass A Levels as Oxbridge Gold Standard
[edit] References
- ^ The Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework
- ^ "The Hearald : News". The Herald. http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/news/display.var.1599251.0.0.php. Retrieved on 2007-08-07.
- ^ UCAS Tariff: Tariff tables
- ^ Highers pass A-levels as Oxbridge gold standard - Times Online
- ^ SQA- CAT of NQ.s 2005-2006

