English Schooling

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  • 28.04.2017
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English children must go to school when they are five. First they go to infant schools, where they learn the first steps in reading, writing and using numbers. When children leave the infant school, at the age of seven, they go to junior schools until they are about eleven years of age. Their school subjects are English, arithmetic, history, geography, nature study, swimming, music, art, religious instruction and organized games. Towards the end of their fourth year in the junior school English schoolchildren have to write their Eleven Plus Examinations, on the result of which they will go the following September to a secondary school of a certain type. About 40% of elementary school leavers in Britain go to secondary modem schools. Modem schools are the most popular secondary schools, but they do not provide complete secondary education, because study programmers are rather limited in comparison with other secondary schools.
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English Schooling English children must go to school when they are five. First they go to infant schools, where they learn the first steps in reading, writing and using numbers. When children leave the infant school, at the age of seven, they go to junior schools until they  are about eleven years of age. Their school subjects are English, arithmetic, history, geography,  nature study, swimming, music, art, religious instruction and organised games. Towards the end of their fourth year in the junior school English schoolchildren have to write  their Eleven Plus Examinations, on the result of which they will go the following September to a  secondary school of a certain type. About 40% of elementary school leavers in Britain go to  secondary modem schools. Modem schools are the most popular secondary schools, but they do  not provide complete secondary education, because study programmes are rather limited in  comparison with other secondary schools. The secondary technical school, in spite of its name, is not a specialised school. It teaches many  general subjects. The grammar school is a secondary school which offers a full theoretical  secondary education including foreign languages, and students can choose which subjects and  languages they wish to study. They leave the school after taking a five­year course. Then they  may take the General Certificate of Education at the ordinary level. The others continue their  studies for another two or three years to obtain the General Certificate of Education at the  advanced level, which allows them to enter university. The comprehensive school combines in  one school the courses of all types of secondary 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 the most important of them are public schools. They charge high fees  and train young people for political, diplomatic, military and religious service. Other non­state  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.