Schooling in Great Britain
Schooling in Great Britain
Schooling in Great Britain.
State Schools.
English
children must go to school when they are five, first to infant schools where
they learn the first steps in reading, writing and using numbers. Young
children are divided into two groups according to their mental abilities. The
curriculum for “strong” and “weak” groups is different, which is the beginning
of future education contrasts.
When
children leave infant school at the age of seven, they go to junior schools
until they are about eleven years of age. Their school subjects include
English, arithmetic, history, geography, nature study, swimming, music, art,
religious instruction and organized games.
The
junior classroom often looks rather like a workshop, especially when the pupils are working in
groups making models or doing other practical work.
When
pupils come to the junior school for the first time, they are still often
divided into three “streams” - А, В and С - on the basis of their infant-school marks or sometimes
after a special test. The brightest children go to the A-stream and the least
gifted to the C-stream.
Towards
the end of their fourth year in the junior school, a certain percentage of
English schoolchildren still have to write their Eleven Plus Examinations, on
the results of which they will go the following September to a secondary school
of a certain type. Usually these examinations should reveal not so much what a
child has learned at school, but his mental ability.
About 5
% of elementary school - leavers in Britain go to secondary modern schools.
Modern schools do not provide complete secondary education. As the pupils are
considered to be interested in “practical” knowledge only, study programmes are
rather limited in comparison with other secondary schools. Some modern schools
do not teach foreign languages. In modern schools pupils are also streamed
according to their “intelligence”.
The
secondary technical school, in spite of its name, is not a specialized school.
It teaches many general subjects. Boys and girls in technical schools study
such practical subjects as woodwork, metalwork, needlework, shorthand
(stenography) and typing. Not more than two percent of schoolchildren in
Britain go to technical schools.
The
grammar school is a secondary school taking about 3% of children offering a
full theoretical secondary education including foreign languages, and students
can choose which subjects and languages they wish to study. In most of them
there are food, chemistry and physics laboratories. The majority (80 or 85%) of
grammar school students, mainly children of poorer families, leave the school
after taking a five-year course. Then they may take the General Certificate of
Secondary Education at the ordinary level. The others continue their studies
for another two or three years to obtain the General Certificate of Secondary Education
at the advanced level, which allows them to enter university.
The
comprehensive school combines in one school the courses of all three types of
secondary schools; so the pupils can study any subject which is taught in these
schools. Their number is growing; there are more than two thousand of them now.
They are of different types; all of them preserve some form of streaming, but
pupils may be moved from one stream to another. Comprehensive schools take over
90 % of schoolchildren in Great Britain.
The comprehensive school
is the most popular type of school, for it provides education for children from
all strata.
Private Schools
There
are many schools in Britain which are not controlled financially by the state.
They are private schools, separate for boys and girls, and the biggest and most
important of them are public schools charging high fees and training young
people for political, diplomatic, military and religious service.
The
doors of Oxford and Cambridge, the best English universities, are open to the
public school - leavers.
Other non-state schools
which charge fees are independent and preparatory schools. Many of the
independent schools belong to the churches. Schools of this type prepare their
pupils for public schools.
Some Aspects of British University Life
Of the
full-time students now attending English Universities three quarters are men
and one quarter women. Nearly half of them are engaged in the study of arts
subjects such as history, languages, economics or law, the others are studying
pure or applied sciences such as medicine, dentistry, technology, or
agriculture.
The
University of London, for instance, includes internal and external students,
the latter coming to London only to sit for their examinations. Actually most
external students at London University are living in London. The colleges in
the University of London are essentially teaching institutions, providing
instruction chiefly by means of lectures, which are attended mainly by day
students. The colleges of Oxford and Cambridge, however, are essentially
residential institutions and they mainly use a tutorial method which brings the
tutor into close and personal contact with the student. These colleges, being
residential, are necessarily far smaller than most of the colleges of the
University of London.
Education
of University standard is also given in other institutions such as colleges of
technology and agricultural colleges, which prepare their students for degrees
or diplomas in their own fields.
The
three terms into which the British University year is divided are roughly eight
to ten weeks. Each term is crowded with activity, and the vacations between the
terms - a month at Christmas, a .month at Easter, and three or four months in
summer - are mainly periods of intellectual digestion and private study.
A person
studying for a degree at a British University is called a graduate.
B. A. or
B. Sс. stands for Bachelor of Arts or of
Science, the first degree. M. A. or M. Sс. denotes Master of Arts or of Science. One can become a B. A. after
three years of hard study and an M. A. at the end of five years.
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