Назад
British education.
British education helps us to develop fully the abilities of
individuals, for their own benefit and of society as a whole. Compulsory
schooling takes place between the agers of 5 and 16, but some pupils
remain at shool for 2 years more, to prepare for further higher
education. Post shool education is organized flaxebly, to provide a wide
range of opportunities for academic and vacational education and to
continue studying through out life.
Administration of state schools is decentralised. The department of
education and science is responsible for national education policy, but
it doesn't run any schools, if doesn't employ teachers, or prescribe
corricular or textbooks. All shools are given a considerable amount of
freedom. According to the law only one subject is compulsary. That is
religious instruction.
Children recieve preschool education under the age of 5 in nursery
schools or in infant's classes in primary schools.
Most pupils receive free education finenst from public fonds and the
small proportions attend schools wholy independent. Most independent
schools are single-sex, but the number of mixing schools is growing.
Education within the mantained schools system usually comprises two
stages: primary and secondary education. Primary schools are subdevided
into infant schools (ages 5 - 7), and junior schools (ages 7 - 11).
Infant schools are informal and children are encouraged to read, write
and make use of numbers and develop the creative abilities. Primary
children do all their work with the same class teacher exept for PT and
music. The work is beist upon the pupils interests as far as possible.
The junior stage extence over four years. Children have set pirits of
arithmetic, reading, composition, history, geography nature study and
others. At this stage of schooling pupils were often placed in A, B, C
and D streams according their abilities. The most able children were put
in the A stream, the list able in the D stream. Till reccantly most
junior shool children had to seat for the eleven-plus examination. It
usually consisted of an arithmetic paper and an entelligent test.
According to the results of the exam children are sent to Grammar,
Technical or Secondary modern schools. So called comprehansive schools
began to appear after World War 2. They are muchly mixed schools which
can provide education for over 1000 pupils. Ideally they provide all the
courses given in Grammar, Technical and Secondary modern schools.
By the law all children must receive full-time education between the
ages of 5 and 16. Formally each child can remain a school for a further
2 or 3 years and continue his studies in the sixth form up to the age of
18 or 19. The course is usually subdevided into the lower 6 and the
upper 6. The corricular is narrowed to 5 subjects of which a pupil can
choose 2 or 3.
The main examinations for secondary school pupils are general
certeficate of education (the GCE) exam and certificate of secondary
education (the CSE) exam. The GSE exam is held at two levels: ordinary
level (0 level) and advanced level (A level).
Candidats set for 0 level papers at 15 - 16 years away. GCE level is
usually taken at the end on the sixth form. The CSE level exam is taken
after 5 years of secondary education by the pupils who are of everage
abilities of their age.
|