aidan

@aidan@lemmy.world

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aidan,

There may be some countries.

I’ve never encountered any country that didn’t accept US diplomas, or rather treated them any different than any other non-EU diploma.

It’s possible that’s for a full program.

I am talking about full bachelor’s programs.

aidan,

One example is Denmark where a US highschool diploma is only considered under quota 2

Do you have a source because from here I see

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/75ea60d4-1d9a-499f-9972-84391e89efe4.png

Which doesn’t seem too different from other countries

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/dc7ae10e-0725-4e3c-98e7-f7b1a78aa350.png

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/319b7063-9a8c-4356-ac2a-4ff758544967.png

which means you have to have other merits than just the highschool diploma. It could be additional testing and relevant work experience.

I guess that is met by the AP requirements, but it seems like wherever they can set more strict standards they try to, including with EU countries.

aidan,

Okay, so roughly the same as what I posted. Yeah I suppose it is quota 2, but as I said, it doesn’t seem much different than many other countries. It’s certainly not saying the US highschool diploma is exceptionally bad. Especially given how common AP classes are.

aidan,

What are the requirements for a Danish student?

Also again, this seems similar to the requirements for other foreign students.

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