According to Donna McAvoy, "Heterogeneous or nongraded education is the practice of teaching children of different ages and ability levels together in the same classroom, without dividing them or the curriculum into steps labelled by 'grade' designations."
William P. McLoughlin has written: 'Nongraded schools - where to find them' -- subject(s): Directories, Nongraded schools 'The nongraded school' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Nongraded schools 'The nongraded school, a critical assessment' -- subject(s): Nongraded schools
No ------------------------------------- If you got ungraded in your exam, that means that the examiner was unable to understand your work and therefore gave you 'ungraded' or 'ungradable'.
James Albert Burchyett has written: 'A comparison of the effects of nongraded, multi-age, team teaching vs. the modified self-contained classroom at the elementary school level' -- subject(s): Ability grouping in education, Nongraded schools, Teaching teams
Lee L. Smith has written: 'Teaching in a nongraded school' -- subject(s): Nongraded schools 'Jack out of the box' -- subject(s): Open plan schools
You need to call the assessor's office in that community to determine what that designation means. ungraded
B. Frank Brown has written: 'New directions for the comprehensive high school' -- subject- s -: High schools, Nongraded schools 'Education by appointment: new approaches to independent study' -- subject- s -: Independent study
NO its spencer coleman
No you can't
A law typically has a specific level or grade associated with the offense such as 1st, 2nd, or 3rd degree felony. An ungraded felony, although still considered a felony. has no level of the offense attached to the crime.
'U' is a grade, which stands for 'ungraded'. This usually means you have got 1-2 marks out of the whole exam.Grade SchemeHighest to LowestA* - PassA - PassB - PassC - PassD - GCSE Fail, College PassE - GCSE Fail, College PassF - FailG - FailU - Ungraded (1-2 marks)X - No Grade (0 marks)Z - Absent for Exam
about $1.00
D. Liley has written: 'A study in contraction in the primary school' -- subject(s): Nongraded schools, School size