You might have to rejig your database structure. Your Grade table should have two columns, the ID of the grade and the name
GradeID, GradeName
Same with Subject
SubjectID, SubjectName
Now create a Student table
StudentID, StudentName
Now a table to hold which student does which subject and grade, you could call this something like StudentGrade with columns like
StudentGradeID, StudentID, GradeID, SubjectID
All of your ID fields are primary key autonumber fields and the GradeID field in the Grade table will have a relationship with the GradeID field in StudentGrade, the same with StudentID and SubjectID. When populated your tables will look like
StudentID, StudentName
1, John
2, Dave
GradeID, GradeName
1, Gr10
2, Gr11
SubjectID, SubjectName
1, Maths
2, English
So if Dave is doing Gr10 Maths you will have this in StudentGrade
StudentGradeID, StudentID, GradeID, SubjectID
1, 2, 1, 1
now let's add rows to say John is doing Gr11 Maths and Gr10 English (the new rows have ID 2 and 3)
StudentGradeID, StudentID, GradeID, SubjectID
1, 2, 1, 1
2, 1, 2, 1
3, 1, 1, 2
When you have your data set up like that it's easy to write queries that let you know what grades\subjects students are doing using a JOINs. So If you're talking about Gr10 Maths it'll be a filter on the StudentGrade table where GradeID = 1 and SubjectID = 1, and if the Student table is joined on StudentGrade via a relationship on StudentID you can get the StudentName.
Once you have your tables sorted like above you can do some further reading on joining tables and building Access forms where dropdown fields are the results of selects on the current form and it will hopefully become clearer what to do, but the important thing is that the above data structure will make it possible to write the queries you want and to store the data in a manner you want. Your original database design makes it much harder as there is a lot of "matching" between tables based on text alone and that will always end in tears as you'll write "Maths" for one person and "Math" for another and your data integrity starts to fall apart.