D's do exist in American grading systems, though they are often considered hardly better than failing (F's).
I don't know why E's aren't a part of our grading system. Perhaps because they're used elsewhere as E for Excellence?
When I was in primary school (i.e. considered too young for letter or numerical grades), we were graded E for Excellent, G for Good, F for Fair, and U for Unsatisfactory. But U.S. schools are all over the map in terms of how they grade their students. And we like that rat's-nest of different standards, because freedom.
The year after I left high school they changed the grading system from A, B, C, t (needs improvement [always lowercase]) and Z (failed to hand anything in) to O, (outstanding) C, (competent) S, (satisfactory) and P (preliminary...? i dunno).
Now at university they give out HD, D(N), Cr, P, and PP. So now when I come home and I say "Mum I got a D!
" and when my little sister comes home and she says "Mum! I got a O+!
" and mum's like "ZERO PLUS WHAT?!?! D: Oh god you're both fiALING?" (although after last year she's had to accept me saying "yES MUM BECAUSE I SUck..")
Got a 58 on my test from Monday. Thankfully, that's a C, not an F (though 17 kids did get F's). The teacher knows he grades horribly, so he makes the grading scale huge to compensate. An A is normally from 93-100, but for this guy it's from 80-100... and he only had two A's last semester. o_o What bothers me is that he used problems that we had never looked at before. One problem was worth 40% of the score, and we hadn't even seen it before. The one guy who did the example problems from the book when studying had seen it, and he was the only person who got an A.
/rant
Just finished up test number two, and now I've gotta keep writing my lab report, and then I have to do technical writing things for Friday... Long week is almost over!
Agh a 40% question?! NooooooOoooo O__O
Ah man, he sounds like my old maths teacher (who turned me off maths foreverrrrr) but worse, because he's at university level ;___; *pats Eich*
He used to put questions from the next chapter and from the extended homework in the tests (I didn't do a lot of homework, well, I
did, but I didn't do EXTRA in that subject) and ask us surprise times tables/division/
simple maths questions- which was fine, but I'd never learnt them (I still don't know ugh) so it was a nightmare -___-