For other uses, see K12 (disambiguation).
K–12 (pronounced "k twelve", "k through twelve", or "k to twelve") is a designation for the sum of primary and secondary education. It is used in the United States, Canada, Turkey, the Philippines, and Australia. P–12 is also occasionally used in Australia.[1] The expression is a shortening of kindergarten (K) for 4- to 6-year-olds through twelfth grade (12) for 17- to 19-year-olds, the first and last grades of free education in these countries, respectively.
Usage
The term is often used in school website URLs, generally appearing before the country code top-level domain (or in the United States, the state top-level domain). The term "PK–12" is sometimes used to add pre-kindergarten.
It is also used by American multinationals selling into the educational sector, such as Dell where UK customers are presented with this as a market segment choice.[2]
P–12
In Australia P–12 is sometimes used in place of K–12, particularly in Queensland, where it is used as an official term in the curriculum framework.[3] P–12 schools serve children for the thirteen years from prep until Year 12,[4] without including the separate kindergarten component. In Canada (Nova Scotia) P–12 is used commonly in place of K–12 and serves students from grade Primary through 12.
K–14, K–16, K–18 and K–20
K–14 education also includes community colleges (the first two years of university). K–16 education adds a four-year undergraduate university degree.
For simplicity purposes education shorthand was created to denote specific education levels of achievement. This shorthand is commonly used in articles, publications, and educational legislations. The following list contains the most commonly found shorthand descriptors:
- P–14: Pre-School to Two-Year Degree
- P–16: Pre-School to Four-Year Degree
- P–18: Pre-School to Masters Degree
- P–20: Pre-School to Graduate Degree
- K–14: Kindergarten to Two-Year Degree
- K–16: Kindergarten to Four-Year Degree
- K–18: Kindergarten to Masters Degree
- K–20: Kindergarten to Graduate Degree
The Career Technical Education (CTE) Unit of the California Community College Economic Development and Workforce Preparation Division focuses on program coordination and advocacy, policy development and coordination with K–18 workforce preparation and career and technical education systems.[5]
The ASCCC Chancellor's Office Career Technical Education (CTE) Unit of the Economic Development and Workforce Preparation Division focuses on program coordination and advocacy, policy development and coordination with K–18 workforce preparation and career and technical education systems. Responsible for the implementation of the Vocational and Technical Education Act (VTEA), managing and coordinating activities that impact other interagency and intra-agency objectives. In addition, the CTE Unit is also responsible for the development, dissemination, and implementation of the California State Plan and the annual performance reports.[6]
The following link is a table that defines the education system in the United States. The table shows the progression of the education system starting with the basic K–12 system then progressing through post-secondary education. K–14 refers to K–12 plus two years of post-secondary where training was received from vocational technical institutions or community or junior colleges. The K numbers refer to the years of educational attainment and continues to progress upward accordingly depending on the degree being sought.[7]
Further reference to K–18 education can be found in this publication by Ann Diver-Stamnes and Linda Catelli[8] in chapter 4 "College/University Partnership Projects for Instituting Change and Improvement in K–18 Education".
K |
USA (age) |
Quebec, Canada (age) |
Canada (age) |
Philippines (age) |
Kazakhstan |
Italy |
France |
Netherlands |
Poland |
Serbia
|
K1 |
Kindergarten (5) |
Kindergarten (5) |
Kindergarten (5) |
Kindergarten (5 to 6) |
Kindergarten (5 to 6) |
Scuola dell'infanzia (3 to 6) |
Ecole Maternelle |
Basisschool |
Zerówka (5 to 6) |
Preschool "1y." (5+)
|
K2–K6 |
Primary School (6 to 11) |
Primary School (6 to 12) |
Primary School (6 to 11) |
Elementary School (6 to 12) |
Primary School (5/6 to 10/11) |
Scuola primaria (elementare) (6 to 11) |
Ecole Primaire |
Basisschool |
Szkoła Podstawowa (6–13) |
Primary school - I cycle "4y." (6,5 to 11)
|
K7–K10 |
Junior High (11 to 13) |
High School (13 to 17) |
Junior High (11 to 13) |
Junior High (12 to 16) |
Incomplete Secondary School (10/11 to 15/16) |
Scuola secondaria di primo grado (media) K7–K9 (11 to 14) |
Collège |
Middelbare school |
Gimnazjum (14 to 16) |
Primary school - II cycle "4y." (11 to 15)
|
K11–K14 |
Senior High (14 to 19) |
Pre-universities (17+) |
Senior High (14 to 19) |
|
High School (15 to 18) |
Scuola secondaria di secondo grado (superiore) K10–K14 (14 to 19) |
Lycée |
Middelbare school |
Liceum/Technikum (17–19) |
High school / Gimnazjum "4y." (14 to 18)
|
K11–K12 |
|
|
|
Senior High (16 to 18) |
Secondary Specialized Schools (15+) |
Liceo |
Lycée |
Middelbare school
|
K15–K18 |
Community College (19+) |
Technical schools (17+) |
Community College (19+) |
? |
|
Università (19+) |
Lycée |
MBO/HBO
|
K18 |
Universities (19+) |
Universities (19+) |
Universities (19+) |
? |
Universities (18+) |
Dottorato/Master K18–K20 (22+) |
Université |
Universities |
|
Universities (18+)
|
K20 |
Example? |
Example? |
not applicable |
Example? |
Example? |
|
Doctorat |
Doctoraat
|
See also
References
School types |
---|
| By educational stage | |
---|
| By funding / eligibility | |
---|
| By style of education | |
---|
| Historical |
|
---|
| |
|
This article was sourced from Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. World Heritage Encyclopedia content is assembled from numerous content providers, Open Access Publishing, and in compliance with The Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act (FASTR), Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., Public Library of Science, The Encyclopedia of Life, Open Book Publishers (OBP), PubMed, U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health (NIH), U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, and USA.gov, which sources content from all federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial government publication portals (.gov, .mil, .edu). Funding for USA.gov and content contributors is made possible from the U.S. Congress, E-Government Act of 2002.
Crowd sourced content that is contributed to World Heritage Encyclopedia is peer reviewed and edited by our editorial staff to ensure quality scholarly research articles.
By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. World Heritage Encyclopedia™ is a registered trademark of the World Public Library Association, a non-profit organization.