Tablo
What is the difference between 'stage' and 'grade' when I am referring to the students thar tare in school and in grade 1 or 2. Thank you for helping!
Jan 29, 2024 10:09 PM
Answers · 10
2
Hi Tablo, we use the word 'grade' in American English to refer to the year that students are in - ex - The 6-year old boy is in 1st grade. A 'stage' usually refers to a level - ex - first stage, second stage, last stage of a project.
January 29, 2024
1
In the UK, 'stage' isn't used for this at all. 'Grade' is understood but we use 'year'. "My son is in year 10", "When I was in year 7 ... ".
January 30, 2024
1
The U.K. words ("level", "year") are different from the U.S. word ("grade") but one thing we still agree on is never to use "stage". It is used for theatre and, as JK noted, for psychology (e.g., "Billy is going through a stage where he is starting to notice girls").
January 30, 2024
1
"Stage" isn't a term from the world of education. In Developmental Psychology, "stages" are periods of development in childhood. Notable developmental psychologists who spoke of development in "stages" included Freud, Piaget and Erikson.
January 30, 2024
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