In high school you have some subjects only in 1st or 2nd year that will be on your final "grade card" where you can be drafted for one or two exams, usually you have to do one. In the 3rd year you are drafted for 2 exams, 1 written and 1 oral. The exam grades from the 3rd year does not count towards your grade in those subjects, but get put on your "grade card" individually.
All grades are between 1-6 where 1 equals F. When all grades from all your HS-years are ready, you simply add them all together, then divide by number of grades, which gives you e.g 4.5. If you take science classes harder than the obligatory ones, you get extra "science points" (usually 1 per subject) added to your overall undivided score. The universities then look at all their applications, then calculate what score you need to get in. Usually this is done with the undivided score, and lets take the nurse school at University of Oslo as an example here, where you need 62 study points to get in.
That means you need 6/A in all subjects + 2 science points to get in, due to the amount of applicants. Much like Australia's system, but with different scoring.
All grades are between 1-6 where 1 equals F. When all grades from all your HS-years are ready, you simply add them all together, then divide by number of grades, which gives you e.g 4.5. If you take science classes harder than the obligatory ones, you get extra "science points" (usually 1 per subject) added to your overall undivided score. The universities then look at all their applications, then calculate what score you need to get in. Usually this is done with the undivided score, and lets take the nurse school at University of Oslo as an example here, where you need 62 study points to get in.
That means you need 6/A in all subjects + 2 science points to get in, due to the amount of applicants. Much like Australia's system, but with different scoring.