• snooggums
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    114 days ago

    Kindergarten to 6th grade (12 yoa) in the majority of the US. 7th and 8th are middle school.

      • @chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        83 days ago

        Generally not understood as such though. I would say common vernacular is more accurate to the intended meaning than the technical truth

        • Drusas
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          12 days ago

          I guess it depends on your region because it was definitely considered grade school when/where I grew up.

        • @Jerb322@lemmy.world
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          23 days ago

          I went to one school, K through 8. Called it grade school. But it was a private Lutheran church school.

          I think it depends on if you are talking private or public schools.

          • @chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 days ago

            Sure, but my point was general consensus. For the purposes of this discussion, I’ll use the US. According to Pew (https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/06/06/us-public-private-and-charter-schools-in-5-charts/) 83% of k-12 students went to public schools. Many of our parents couldn’t afford to send it to private if they wanted to.

            This of course varies by country, googling for a few countries (Japan, UK, Germany) actually all betrayed my expectations,with higher public school percentages for primary schools than the US. They generally do have different grade structures though. Edit: for those 3, primary/grade school went to 4th or 6th grade.

            Personally elementary/grade school was up to 5th grade, 6-8th was middle, 9-12 high school. Technically I started school in Saint Vincent, in what I believe was a private school, but we moved back to the US when I was in 2nd grade going to third.