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Olga_L
incoming junior
Please tell me what an "INCOMING" junior would be at a university. I came across this phrase in an article.
Many thanks!
Mar 20, 2012 3:14 PM
Answers · 5
Incoming Junior, or incoming Freshman, or incoming Senior means the school year is just beginning. If someone asks "what year are you in?" the incoming Junior would say, "I'm a Junior this year". The college grade levels are:
1st year - Freshman
2nd year - Sophomore
3rd year - Junior
4th year - Senior.
A graduating senior is about to go through the graduation ceremony and receive his college diploma for a Bachelor's of Arts degree (B.A.) If they are going to continue on to a graduate degree, like a Masters (M.A.) or Doctorate (Ph.D.), they will be in graduate school, (college courses above and beyond the B.A. degree).
If a person went to college 1 year, but did not complete a full "college load" or did not complete 30 college credits, they will still be at the Freshman level. They can attend many years, and not finish a full year's amount of college credits or units, so they should not call themselves a "junior".
March 20, 2012
"I took a class when I was a freshman that was not what I really needed", said University of Texas incomin junior Lexy Bennett".
By the way, why did they not use "a" before "University of Texas junior" ?
March 20, 2012
an "incoming" junior is someone who is "about" to be or become a junior year student. it indicates a beginning of the year, which may not have already begun.
March 20, 2012
Could you show us the whole sentence? Cheers
March 20, 2012
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Olga_L
Language Skills
English, Russian
Learning Language
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