this post was submitted on 20 Sep 2023
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I will probably never get used to the fact regular school is called "grade school" and college/uni is called "grad school".
For me, I took trade school classes (common to do in the beginning of high school here) and now take online studies (uncommon to start during high school, but I've done this anyways).
In the US at least, "grade school" is the same as "elementary school" - you attend there between the ages of around 5 and 11. After that is "middle school" or "junior high," then "high school." Graduate from high school and you've completed public education.
After that is "college," what a lot of the world calls "uni." It's generally not free. First two years are basically an extension of high school with a few degree-specific classes. You can get an Associate's degree from that. The third and fourth years are almost all degree-specific classes. Finish that, and you have your Bachelor's degree.
College up to and including your Bachelor's degree is called "undergraduate." Most grants, scholarships, and other financial aid ends here.
The next stage is graduate school, where you earn your Master's degree. After that is your postgraduate, where you work towards your PhD.
Trade school in the US (also called vo-tech, or vocational-technical school) exists as well. Some people take it at the same time as high school, others take it instead of college. Sometimes you get a degree, but often it's a certification or license. Trade schools usually aren't free but often there are programs you can sign up for that pay for it.
What would online courses be called or fall under?
Depends what program they're for. You can take online courses for any of them, although for a Master's or PhD you probably have research you have to do.