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«Презентация "Secondary Education"»
Compulsary from 5 till 16
State schools
- are free
-schools provide
their pupils with books and equipment
for their studies
a bout 93 percent of all children
Private schools
( Independent schools )
-parents pay money for these schools
a bout 7 percent of all children
3 stages of education :
PRIMARY (5-1 1 )
SECONDARY (11-16)
FURTHER (16-18)
State and Public schools
The great majority of children (about 9 million) attend Britain’s 30,500 state schools. No tuition fees are payable in any of them. A further 600,000 go to 2,500 private schools, often referred to as the “independent sector” where the parents have to pay for their children
Fettes College
Eton school
INFANT SCHOOLS (5-7)
JUNIOR SCHOOLS (7-11)
MODERN SCHOOLS
GRAMMAR SCHOOLS
COMPREHENSIVE SCHOOLS
The Nursery schools
A nursery school is not compulsary and for children between the ages of three and five, staffed by qualified teachers . Children are taught to sing, draw, they play different creative games .
The infant school
The first school is the infan t school, for children between five and seven. At this stage the children become acquainted with the Reading, Writing and Arithmetic in the form of games.
The Junior school
The Junior school is for children aged seven to eleven. Towards the end of their fourth year in the junior school, a certain percentage of English schoolchildren still have to write their “11+” Examinations
The grammar school provided a traditional literary and scientific education up to the age of eighteen, it gives pupils the more academic education, and prepares them for entry to universities.
The secondary modern school provides a general education, including much instruction of a practical sort, up to the age of fifteen only, when the children leave school to go to work.
The Technical school providing technical education up to the age of eighteen, was established by the Educational Act of 1944, but as yet there are very few schools of this type.
Comprehensive school
Comprehensive schools admit children of all abilities and provide a wide range of secondary education for all or most of the children in a district. The comprehensive system aims to develop the gifts of all children to the full, to reveal those who often remain unsuspected under the old system, and to raise the standards of all children.
After six years of primary education children take exams in core subjects and go to a secondary school.
Children study compulsory (core) subjects:
- English, Literature
- Mathematics
- IT (information technology)
- Religious Education
and optional courses:
- one foreign language
- one science subject
- one art subject
- History
- Geography
- PE (physical education)
- Design and Technology
- can leave school if they wish:
- go to a college of further education to study for more practical (vocational) diplomas relating to the world of work, such as hairdressing, typing or mechanics
- work
- About two thirds of the pupils
- continue their studies in the sixth form (2 years)
16-18 years old
- choose 4-5 subjects , which are necessary to pass the advanced level exams
- have further examinations which are necessary for getting into university or college
- are prepared for a national exam called "A" level (advanced level) (after the first year)
- "A 2" level (after the second year)
- IB (International Baccalaureate)
A lot of people think that school uniforms in England are for the children from rich families at the country’s best schools.
But it isn’t always true.In fact, uniforms first came to schools for poor because they were cheaper.
Today a lot of British schools have uniforms. Usually they differ only in colours but include a blazer, a pullover, a shirt (a blouse), trousers (a skirt), tights or socks, shoes and boots, a scarf and gloves of a certain colour, a cap or a hat. School badge is on a cap and on a blazer’s pocket.
One of the most important elements of the uniform is a school tie.