WEIGHTING CRITERIA: How to Calculate the Cut-off Points for University Admission
All subjects taken at the Advanced Level of Education are grouped into four categories and weighted as follows for purposes of admission to any course of Undergraduate study.
Subject Category Weight
(i) Essential 3
(ii) Relevant 2
(iii) Desirable 1
(iv) Others 0.5
The Essential A’ Level subjects for University courses must be passed with at least a Principal Pass.
For a given candidate, not more than three subjects taken at the principal level shall carry a weight of 3, 2, or 1.
For a given candidate, principal level subjects in excess of the three defined in 1.1 (i) to (iii) above, shall be designated as “Others” and shall carry a weight of 0.5
Not more than two subjects shall be designated as “Essential”.
A pass in a subject taken at subsidiary level such as General Paper, shall carry one point. A subsidiary pass ranges from grades 1 to 6.
In case of courses where “Essential” subjects may be three or more, an “Essential set” of subjects is defined. The best-performed two subjects of the essential set shall be designated as “Essential Subjects” and weighted three. The 3rd best done subjects from the Essential Set shall be designated as the “Relevant Subject” and weighted two.
When computing points special course requirements are also taken into consideration.
For ‘O’ level grades, Distinctions 1 & 2 carry 0.3 points, Credits 3 to 6 carry 0.2 ,Passes 7 & 8 carry 0.1 and Fail (9) carry 0.0 weights respectively.
For A’ Level grades, the conversion scale is A=6, B=5, C=4, D=3, E=2, O=1, F=0 points.
6. THE COMBINED WEIGHT OF A CANDIDATE FOR ADMISSION TO THE UNIVERSITY
a) The O’Level weight of a candidate for any course in the University, is obtained by multiplying the numbers of Distinctions/Credits/Passes, by the relevant weights and adding up for the Distinctions, Credits and passes actually obtained by the candidate.
b) The A’Level weight, for a given course, of a candidate is obtained by multiplying each subject grade point by the relevant weighting factor and adding up for all the subjects taken and passed.
c) The combined weight of a candidate for a given programme, is obtained by adding the O’Level weight obtained (a) above to the A’Level weight obtained (b) above. The best candidate for each programme is the one with the highest combined weight.
d) Candidates are selected on merit from those who apply for a programme as their first choice plus those who apply for the programme as 2nd, 3rd, 4th choice etc., if they have not been admitted to programmes of their earlier choices. All choices are considered.