No, professors typically do not have access to your grades from other classes unless you provide them with that information.
Yes, many professors have summers off from teaching classes, but they often use this time for research, writing, and other academic pursuits.
The final modifier has nothing to do with access. If your "outer" classes can see the method, they can access them just like any other methods.
That information has not been made public, nor is there any obligation for it to be released (and many other presidents have kept their grades confidential). However, individual professors have said he was an "A" student in their classes at Columbia, and we do know he graduated in the top 10% at Harvard Law School, receiving academic honors.
The JVM knows about all of your classes, no matter what package they are in or what access specifier you declared them with. The access specifier is only used to limit access from other classes.
That information has not been made public, nor is there any obligation for it to be released (and many other presidents have kept their grades confidential). However, individual professors have said he was an "A" student in their classes at Columbia, and we do know he graduated in the top 10% at Harvard Law School, receiving academic honors.
My experience was Am i Going to pass this class or Am I going to get good grades in this class.
a class can control what information or data can be accessible by other classes access modifiers sets usability of the methods defined in the class by other classes in either the same package or the other, this is how acces modifiers encapsulates the variables or the methods from being used . like there are 3 access modifiers-- 1.protected-can be used in the same class or class which has inherited it . 2.default-can be used in the same package,but no acces to other classes. 3.public-can be used by classes in different package.
It would be considered hacking. That is definitely illegal.
That is always a matter of controversy. Many institutions have guidelines, but don't enforce them. Students would like their grades in a timely fashion, if for no other reason than to help plan for the next semester's courses.
Albert Einstein's favorite subject in school was math. He had terrible grades in all other classes. He said that it was because he simply did not care for the other subjects.
No, that is highly inappropriate, and unethical. In addition, within the United States their is a privacy act which prohibits a students information from being disclosed without a students permission.
Finals are averaged with your other grades earned. If your grades overall are low, you could fail the entire class and need to retake it. If you fail finals that encompass all courses in high school and averaging with other grades turns out too low to "pass", legally and ethically, you should be made to retake the entire year / all classes.