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this post was submitted on 01 Aug 2023
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Asklemmy
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In New Zealand a university is a form of higher/tertiary education institution.
A college is a high school that's trying to sound fancy.
The kind of place that the US calls "community college" would be called a "polytech" here.
Apparently French works the same way ("university" = tertiary, "college" = high school), at least if Duolingo is to be believed.
I'm not necessarily doubting you, but I would've guessed "polytech" would be more like a "trade school" (where you go to learn skills for blue-collar jobs, like welding, plumbing, auto repair, etc.) than a "community college" (where you go for two years to earn an associates' degree in stuff like liberal arts or business or nursing, possibly before transferring somewhere else to continue towards your bachelors').
(That's despite the fact that "polytech" around here can also refer to four-year engineering schools, although ones that are lower-tier than research universities. For example, the former "Southern Polytechnic State University" ("Southern Poly") vs. "Georgia Institute of Technology" ("Georgia Tech") here in GA. Ironically, the latter is self-deprecatingly nicknamed "North Avenue Trade School," LOL!)
There's a mistake : in France, college is before high school Maternelle, primaire, collège, lycée, université = kindergarten, primary school, ?, highschool, university.
I need to study more, I guess!