Academic grading in Austria
In Austria, academic grades use a 5-point grading scale with no decimals, grade 5 („Nicht genügend“) is fail, all other grades are pass.
A definition of the grades for schools is contained in Section 14 of Leistungsbeurteilungsverordnung [1].
At universities, no formal definition of the grades is available; it is the responsibility of the course instructors to announce their grading principles in advance. Typical interpretation of grades is as follows:
Grade | German meaning | English meaning | Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sehr gut | Very good | Outstanding performance with no or only minor errors |
2 | Gut | Good | Above-average standard but with some errors |
3 | Befriedigend | Satisfactory | Average performance with a number of notable errors |
4 | Genügend | Adequate | Standard but with a significant number of shortcomings |
5 | Nicht genügend | Unsatisfactory | Failing grade |
Details of the Austrian system
[edit]The Austrian grading system offers a range of five different grades (1 to 5), with 1 (Sehr gut) being the highest and 5 (Nicht genügend) the lowest grade. Students must be evaluated according to objective standards and need to earn at least a grade of 4 (Genügend) in order to pass a course.[2]
The GPA is commonly used to measure academic success and has become increasingly important for application purposes. Nowadays, most employers ask for your last school certificate when applying for an apprenticeship. The Austrian system is similar to the German system.
References
[edit]- ^ "Section 14 of Leistungsbeurteilungsverordnung". www.ris.bka.gv.at (in German). Retrieved 2025-08-19.
- ^ "Course Information". shs.univie.ac.at. Retrieved 2022-12-06.