WordNet
n. the level of education that college students are assumed to have attained
Usage examples of "college level".
Her field was English, but of course when you teach at the college level, that's never enough.
Her written report of the incident was in the file, six typed pages of her observations on everything from his shoes (old Nikes) to his breath (cinnamon gum) to his vocabulary (college level) to the way he handled the cigarette.
If he gets the chance, that boy will be teaching his own class of forty sub-teenagers in three years' time and because he's not teaching them anything he hasn't already learned backwards he's going to be able to study - perhaps more slowly than in Europe or America, but it'll only add one year to a standard three-year course - he'll be able to study a subject at college level.
Barty, thirteen years old but listening to books at a postgraduate college level, had no doubt studied leukemia while they were awaiting the test results, to prepare himself to fully understand the diagnosis on first receiving it.
But I was still captivated by her precise diction, her cadence, and her vocabulary, which had to be college level.
We would expect the offender to be of average to above average intelligence, to have completed high school, and been capable of college level work.
You have to do well if you want to be admitted to a college level.