Great Britain doesn't have a written constitution, so there are no
constitutional provisions for education.The system of
education is determined by the National Education Acts. Schools in England are
supported from public funds paid to the local education authorities.These local
education authorities are responsible for organizing the schools in their
areas. If we outline the basic features of public education in Britain, firstly
we'll see that in spite of most educational purposes England & Wales are
treated as one unit, though the system in Wales is a different from that of
England. Scotland & Northern Ireland have their own education systems. Then
education in Britain mirrors the country's social system: it's class-divided
& selected. The first division is, as you, I think, have already guessed,
is between those who do & don't pay. The majority of schools in Britain are
supported by public funds & the education provided is free.They are
maintained schools, but there's also a considerable number of public schools.
Most pupils go to schools which offer free education, although fee-paying
independent schools also have an important role to play. Another important
feature of schooling in Britain is the variety of opportunities offered to
schoolchildren. The English school syllabus is divided into Arts/or Humanities/
and Sciences which determine the division of the secondary school pupils into
study groups: a science pupil will study Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics,
Economics, Technical Drawing , Biology, Geography; an Art pupil will do English
Language and Literature, History, foreign languages, Music, Art, Drama. Besides
these subjects they must do some general education subjects like PE, Home
Economics for girls, Technical subjects for girls, General Science. Computers
play an important part in education. The system of options exists in all kinds
of secondary schools. The national Education Act in 1944 provided 3 stages of
education: primary, secondary and further education. Everybody has a right to
school place for a child from age 5 to 16, and a school of college place for
him or her from 16 to 18. These places are provided free of charge. Everybody
has a duty to make sure that the child goes to school until he or she is 16,
that means that education is a compulsory from age 5 to 16 /11 years in whole/.
There's no law which provides for education on the under-fives. In England
about 47% of three- & four-year-olds receive education in nursery schools
or classes. In addition many children attend informal pre-school play groups
organized by parents and voluntary bodies. In 1944 The National Curriculum was
introduced. It sets out in detail the subjects that children should study and
the levels of achievement they should reach by the ages of 7, 11, 14 & 16,
when they are tested.The tests are designed to be easier for teachers to
manage than they were in the past.Most pupils will also be entered for GCSEs/General Certificate
of the Secondary Education/ or other public examinations, including vocational
qualifications if they are 16. Until that year headmasters and headmistresses
of schools were given a great deal of freedom in deciding what subjects to
teach and how to do it in their schools so that there was really no central
control at all over individual schools. The National Curriculum does not apply
in Scotland, where each school decides what subject it will teach.The child is
taught the subjects he or she must study under the National Curriculum. These
are English, Maths, Science/the core subjects/, Technology, a foreign language
in secondary school, as it was mentioned, PE, History, Geography, Art, Music/
foundation subjects/. The last 4 ones are not compulsory after the age of 14.
But the child must be given religious education unless the parents decide
otherwise. Each subject has a set programme of study and attaining levels for
each subject covering the years from 5 to 16. There're 10 levels. The full
requirements of the National Curriculum are being introduced gradually. All the
pupils will be following it in full by September 1997.The National Curruculum
itself was introduced in 1989(until that time the schools had a curriculum
supervised by the local LEA). According to The National Curriculum schools are
allowed to introduce a fast stream for bright children. Actually after young
people reach 16 they have 4 main 'roads' of their next life: they can leave the
school, stay at school, move to a college as a full time student, combine
part-time study with a job, perhaps through the Youth Training programme.School-leavers
without jobs get no money from the government unless they join a youth training
scheme , which provides a living allowance during 2 years of work experience.
But a growing number of school students are staying on at school, some until 18
or 19, the age of entry into higher education or universities, Polytechnics or
colleges. Schools in Britain provide careers guidance. A specially trained
person called careers advisor, or careers officer helps school students to
decide what job they want to do and how they can achieve that. Now let us talk
about the exams the young people in Britain take during their process of
education. Since 1988, most sixteen-year-old have taken the GCSE in 5,10 of
even 15 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 GSCE, either in the sixth form of a secondary school,
or in a separate 6-form college. Others may choose vocational subjects /
catering, tourism, secretariat, building skills/. Subsidized courses in these
subjects are run at colleges of further education.
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