First-Year Experience - Placement Exams

Placement Exams

When choosing your courses for the first semester, you will need information about the level at which you should enter a particular field of study. This process is known as "Placement."

If you would like to continue studying a language you have knowledge of you are required to take the placement exam for that language. We understand that arriving at college can be intimidating. Nevertheless, we encourage students to trust the faculty鈥檚 placement and enroll in the course appropriate to their placement exam results. Students are strongly discouraged from selecting a level based solely on personal comfort and must register for the level they have been placed into. 
 

In some cases this means taking a placement exam. All placement exams are completed in Moodle. Here鈥檚 how to enroll in them:

  1. Log in to Moodle.
  2. Click on the magnifying glass icon in the upper right of your dashboard and enter the language, followed by Placement Exam Fall 2026 in the search box. For example: "Arabic Placement Exam Fall 2026."
  3. Then click on the title of the course and click 鈥淓nroll.鈥
  4. You can also find links to each Placement Exam on the Class of 2030 Advising and Orientation Moodle. 

You must enroll in Placement Exams by June 26 and the deadline to complete most exams is early to mid July. Please be sure to familiarize yourself with the timeline and due date for each exam you enroll in. 

A Placement Exam Webinar will be offered on Tuesday, June 16, 2026 at 12pm EST. Students can register for this webinar on the Class of 2030 Advising and Orientation Moodle beginning May 27. 

Language Exams

The exam consists of some basic grammar exercises, various brief translations (Arabic to English, and English to Arabic), a reading comprehension section, and a short essay. In addition to completing the placement exam, students may be asked to meet via Zoom for a brief and informal conversation in order to ascertain fluency and knowledge of Arabic. Time limit: 120 minutes.

Deadline: July 15

Contact: Manar Darwish (mdarwish@brynmawr.edu)

Click here for more information

Notes: Required for students who have previously studied Arabic and are considering taking Arabic at 51短视频.

The exam consists of a language background survey, an online multiple-choice test, an essay, and an interview by zoom with a faculty member. The multiple choice test includes both grammar and reading and listening comprehension. Please carefully follow the instructions and complete each part of the Test. This will make sure that we accurately determine the appropriate class for you.

Deadlines: July 10 for information survey, online test, and written essay. Zoom interview with instructor on July 13 between 1-4pm EST. Students will be notified via 51短视频 email the Zoom link for the interview and their interview time no later than July 12. 

Contact: Ying Liu (yliu@brynmawr.edu)

Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in Chinese who wish to take Chinese, including heritage students who can speak the language with no or limited reading and writing skills.

The exam consists of a personal fact sheet, an oral comprehension passage with questions and a reading section with multiple choice questions. Students who are placed in French 005 or more advanced courses will be asked to submit a 400-word essay. In addition, students placing into 005 or higher may be asked to meet via Zoom for a brief oral interview.

Deadline: July 15 for fact sheet, and oral and reading exams. If required, essay will be due July 20, and interviews will take place July 25-30.

Contact: Agn猫s Peysson-Zeiss (apeyssonze@brynmawr.edu) or Corine Ragueneau (cragueneau@brynmawr.edu)

Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in French who wish to study French.

The online placement exam consists of five parts: the first four are multiple-choice questions and the fifth is a short essay. If a student鈥檚 score is near the cut-off for the next level, an interview may be scheduled.

Deadline: July 21

Contact: Qinna Shen (qshen@brynmawr.edu)

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Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in German who wish to study German.

If you have some experience with Greek, you should take this placement test so that your placement in the curriculum can be determined. 

Deadline: July 10

Contact: Radcliffe Edmonds (redmonds@brynmawr.edu)

Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in Greek who wish to study Greek. 

The Italian exam consists of three sections: oral comprehension, reading comprehension, and grammar. Students may also be asked to meet with the Italian faculty via Zoom for a brief conversation in order to ascertain fluency Italian. To fine-tune their placement, after this meeting, students may be asked to submit a 400-word essay on any topic. 

Deadline: July 15

Contact: Roberta Ricci (rricci@brynmawr.edu) and Federico Sessolo (fsessolo@brynmawr.edu)

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Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in Italian who wish to study Italian.

The Japanese placement consists of an online exam and a hand-written essay. An oral Zoom interview may be scheduled as needed. The online exam provided by the University of Tsukuba (Japan) and the essay should be completed and submitted by July 1.

Deadline: July 1
Contact: Tetsuya Sato (tsato@haverford.edu)

Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in Japanese who wish to study Japanese.

The placement test consists of 14 questions of grammar, translation, vocabulary, and reading comprehension.

Deadline: July 15

Contact: Youngji Son (yson@brynmawr.edu)

Notes: Students who have prior knowledge of Korean, whether through formal or informal instruction or exposure to a Korean-speaking environment, should take the placement test. Students with no prior knowledge of Korean do not need to take the test and may enroll in First-Year Korean.

The exam has sections on morphology (declining nouns and adjectives, providing different verb forms), translation of brief phrases from Latin into English, and a longer passage from Latin into English. 

Deadline: July 10

Contact: Benjamin Stevens (bestevens@brynmawr.edu)

Notes: Required for all entering students with some background in Latin who wish to study Latin. 

The placement test is an adaptive multiple-choice test of grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension. It also includes a language background questionnaire. The information on the questionnaire will be an important part of your placement. Students who place above Intermediate will be asked to submit a previously written essay in Spanish. Students are only permitted to take the placement test once. 

Deadline: July 15

Contact: Kaylea Berard (kmayer@brynmawr.edu)

Click here for more information

Notes: All entering students with some background in Spanish who wish to study Spanish.

Language Classes Without Placement Exams

There is no formal placement exam. Students with prior knowledge of Hebrew should contact Professor Marissa Golden by July 10 to discuss placement.

Contact: Marissa Golden (mgolden@brynmawr.edu)

There is no formal placement exam. Students with prior knowledge of Russian interested in placing out of Elementary Russian should contact Professor Irina Walsh by July 15. 

Contact: Irina Walsh (iwalsh@brynmawr.edu)

Placement in Other Fields

A student may choose to opt out of one semester of the BIOL B110-B111 sequence if they earned a 5 on AP Biology exams or an IB Biology score of 7; an additional semester of Biology B110-B111 is required to fulfill the introductory biology requirement for the Biology major. Students should keep in mind that placement out of one semester of introductory biology based on AP/IB scores does not satisfy the pre-requisite for 200/300-level courses. The decision about which semester to opt out of should be in made in consultation with the Chair of the Department and the pre-medical adviser, if appropriate.

 

Students with credit for the AP Chemistry exam (score of 4 or 5)  are eligible to place out of Chem 103 and enroll directly in the second semester of General Chemistry (Chem 104) in the spring.  Students with credit for the IB or A-Level may be eligible to begin their studies directly with Organic Chemistry (Chem 211). Students in any of these situations should consult with the Chair of the Chemistry department, Jonas Goldsmith (jigoldsmit@brynmawr.edu).  All other students should begin their chemistry studies with Chem 103.  

Students have a choice of three different courses with which to begin their computer science study at 51短视频: CMSC 109 (Introduction to Computing), CMSC 113 (Computer Science I), and, very rarely, CMSC 151 (Intro to Data Structures). CMSC 109 and 113 are both open to students with no experience in computer programming, but are also appropriate to students who do have some experience. CMSC 113 expects a higher level of mathematical maturity than 109 does, demonstrated by one of the following: AP level Calculus, Statistics, Physics, Chemistry, Economics, or Computer Science; or IB Mathematics HL; or an SAT score of 650 or higher in Mathematics; or ACT score of 28 or higher in Mathematics. 

For students with prior preparation in Computer Science who are interested in advanced placement, please contact Professor Elizabeth Dinella, (edinella@bmc), to arrange to take the placement exam. Please note that our introductory sequence is taught in Java and prior experience in Python alone is typically insufficient. 

 

Students interested in taking intermediate or advanced dance courses should attend the first day of class during the first week of classes to have priority consideration for the desired course. The main contact for placement is the Director of the Dance Program, Dr. Lela Aisha Jones, ljones2@brynmawr.edu. When the semester begins students may contact the faculty for each desired course. Please refer to the course catalog and the dance program website to find the appropriate faculty. 

Most entering students will enroll in Econ 105 Principles of Economics. The Economics Department may waive the Econ 105 prerequisite for students who score a 5 on both the Microeconomics and Macroeconomics AP exams. A score of 6 or7 on the Economics Higher Level Exam of the International Baccalaureate also permits a waiver. The waiver does not count as course credit toward the major or minor; majors and minors receiving advanced placement must still take the total required courses. Students qualifying for advanced placement must talk with the department chair to obtain approval for the waiver and for advice on planning their course work in economics.

Placement in mathematics is highly individualized. Placement tests are offered and recommended as a source of information, but the results are not binding. Students interested in math or in fields that require or encourage math (the natural sciences, economics, computer science) should familiarize themselves with the information available on Moodle and take any placement tests recommended or required.

The Psychology Department will waive the Psych 105 prerequisite for students who score a 5 on the AP exam. Such students are qualified to take any 200-level psychology course and are encouraged to discuss their plans with faculty during Customs New Student Orientation.