





New Member Newbie

1 posts



Joined: Jul 2014







At the end of their secondary education, students in Brunei and Singapore will sit for the General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level (GCE O-level) examination, which are mainly set by the University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES) from the United Kingdom. Candidates are graded based on their performance relative to the cohort. In descending order, the grades are: A (1,2), B (3,4), C (5,6), D7, E8, and F9. A grade of C6 (credit) or better is considered an O-level pass. Depending on countries, students must score a minimum amount of credits in order to advance their education.





Brunei GCE-O level result: 43.78% passes (meet minimum college entry requirement - 4 'O' and above)



Brunei yesterday released its GCE O-level exam results. Around four in every 10 candidates who sat for the Brunei-Cambridge GCE O-level examinations, or 43.78%, obtained at least 4 or more GCE 'O' Level Passes, the minimum requirement for advancement to most junior colleges or other Form 6 equivalent institutions. The figure is an improvement from the 39% recorded in 2013. Last year, 6,844 candidates sat for the O-level examinations, the ministry said. Students who did not meet the minimum could resit the exam again this June.





Singapore GCE-O level result: 83.3% passes (meet minimum college entry requirement - 5 'O' and above)



Singapore's Ministry of Education has also released a press release for the results of the 2014 Singapore-Cambridge General Certificate of Education (GCE-level) Examination. A total of 30,964 school candidates sat for the exam. 83.3% of them, or 25,789, scored 5 or more GCE 'O' Level Passes, which is the minimum requirement for advancement to most junior colleges or other Form 6 equivalent institutions. This is an improvement from the 82.7% in the year 2013.





http://www.moe.gov.sg/media/press/2015/01/...examination.php

http://bt.com.bn/news-national/2015/02/10/...el-results-2014

At the end of their secondary education, students in Brunei and Singapore will sit for the General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level (GCE O-level) examination, which are mainly set by the University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES) from the United Kingdom. Candidates are graded based on their performance relative to the cohort. In descending order, the grades are: A (1,2), B (3,4), C (5,6), D7, E8, and F9. A grade of C6 (credit) or better is considered an O-level pass. Depending on countries, students must score a minimum amount of credits in order to advance their education.Brunei yesterday released its GCE O-level exam results. Around four in every 10 candidates who sat for the Brunei-Cambridge GCE O-level examinations, or 43.78%, obtained at least 4 or more GCE 'O' Level Passes, the minimum requirement for advancement to most junior colleges or other Form 6 equivalent institutions. The figure is an improvement from the 39% recorded in 2013. Last year, 6,844 candidates sat for the O-level examinations, the ministry said. Students who did not meet the minimum could resit the exam again this June.Singapore's Ministry of Education has also released a press release for the results of the 2014 Singapore-Cambridge General Certificate of Education (GCE-level) Examination. A total of 30,964 school candidates sat for the exam. 83.3% of them, or 25,789, scored 5 or more GCE 'O' Level Passes, which is the minimum requirement for advancement to most junior colleges or other Form 6 equivalent institutions. This is an improvement from the 82.7% in the year 2013.