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Education is compulsory from the age of five to sixteen, and there is usually a move from primary to secondary school at about the age of eleven, but schools are organized in a number of different ways. The Department of Education and Science maintains overall control although local education authorities and head teachers have considerable powers in planning and administration. Plans were introduced into Parliament in 1988 for more centralized control, including a national curriculum for all schools.
Until the 1960s most children took an examination at the end of primary school (the Eleven Plus): those who passed it successfully went to grammar schools while those who did not went to secondary modern school.
Education is compulsory from the age of five to sixteen, and there is usually a move from primary to secondary school at about the age of eleven, but schools are organized in a number of different ways. The Department of Education and Science maintains overall control although local education authorities and head teachers have considerable powers in planning and administration. Plans were introduced into Parliament in 1988 for more centralized control, including a national curriculum for all schools.
Until the 1960s most children took an examination at the end of primary school (the Eleven Plus): those who passed it successfully went to grammar schools while those who did not went to secondary modern school. A few areas especially in the south of England still have selective exams at the age of eleven, but about 90 per cent of secondary schools in Britain are now comprehensive, taking children of all abilities from their local area.
Most parents
choose to send their children to free state schools financed from public
funds but an increasing number of secondary pupils attend fee-paying
independent schools outside the school system. Many of these are boarding
schools (школа-интернат), which provide accommodation for
pupils during term time.Many independent
AFTER SIXTEEN
Since 1988, most sixteen-year-olds have taken the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) or the Scottish Certificate of Education (SCE) in five, ten or even fifteen subjects.
Pupils going on to higher education or professional training usually take “A” level examinations in two or three subjects. These require two more years of study after GCSE, either in the sixth form of a secondary school, or in a separate sixth-form college. Other pupils may choose vocational subjects such as catering, tourism, secretarial or building skills. Subsidised courses in these subjects are run at colleges of further education.
School-leavers with jobs sometimes take part-time vocational courses, on day-release from work. School-leavers without jobs get no money from the government unless they join a youth training scheme, which provides a living allowance during two years of work experience.
There are forty-seven
universities in Britain and thirty polytechnics, plus 350 colleges and
institutes of higher education (some of which train teachers).
Undergraduate courses normally take three
years of full-time study, although a number of subjects take longer,
including medicine, architecture and foreign languages (where courses
include a year abroad). They lead in most cases to a Bachelor's degree
in Arts or Science. There are various postgraduate degrees, including
Master of Philosophy and Doctor of Philosophy, the last two being awarded
for research in Arts or Sciences.
Degrees are awarded either by the Institution
itself, or by the Council for National Academic Awards, particularly
in vocational areas. Students of law, architecture and some other professions
can take qualifications awarded by their own professional bodies instead
of degrees.
At present, students who have been accepted
by universities or other institutions of higher education receive a
grant from their local authority, which covers the cost of the course,
and may cover living expenses, books and travel, although parents with
higher incomes are expected to make a contribution. Until 1990 the grant
did not have to be paid back, but now a system of loans has been introduced.
Universities accept students mainly on the
basis of their "A" level results, although they may interview
them as well. The Open University was started in 1971 to teach adults
who did not have these formal qualifications. Nearly a quarter of all
adult part-time students follow its degree courses on radio and television.
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