Автор: Пользователь скрыл имя, 16 Марта 2011 в 20:11, доклад
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.
1.Introduction
2.Primary Education
3.Secondary Education
4.Further Education
5.References
Ministry of
Education and Science of Ukraine
Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko
Report about
education in Great Britain
Lviv 2010
Plan
Introduction
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 & Nothern Ireland have their own education
systems. Then education in Britain mirrows 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 groops: 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 sybjects 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 underfives.
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 Sertificate
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 sybjects 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.
Primary Education
Compulsory education begins at 5 when children in England & Wales go to infant schools or
departaments;
at 7 many go on to junior schools or departaments. In some areas of
England there are nursery schools for children under 5 years of age.
Some children between 2 & 5 receive education in nursery classes
or in infants classes in primary schools. Many children attend informal
pre-school play-groups organized by parents in private homes. Nursery
schools are staffed with teachers and students in training. There are
all kinds of toys to keep the children busy from 9 o'clock till 4 o'clock
p.m.- while their parents are at work here the babies play, lunch &
sleep. They can run about and play in safety with someone keeping an
eye on them.For day nurseries which remain open all the year round the
parents pay according to their income.Most children start school at
5 in a primary school. A primary school may be divided into two parts-
infants & juniors. At infants schools reading, writing & arithmetic
are taught for about 20 minutes a day during the first year, gradually
increasing to about 2 hours in their last year. There is usually no
written timetable. Much time is spent in modelling from clay or drawing,
reading and singing.By the time children are ready for the junior school
they will be able to read & write, do simple addition and subtraction
of numbers.At 7 children go on from the infants school to the junior
school. This marks the transition from play to 'real work'. The children
have set periods of arithmetic, reading and composition which are all
Eleven-Plus subjects. History, Geography, Nature Study, Art & Music,
PE, Swimming are also on the timetable.Pupils are streamed, according
to their ability to learn, into A,B,C & D streams. The least gifted
are in the D streams. Formerly towards the end of their fourth year
the pupils wrote their 11-Plus Exams. The hated 11+ was a selective
procedure on which not only the pupils' future schooling but their careers
depended. The abolition of selection at 11+ brought to life comprehensive
schools where pupils can get secondary education.As you have already
guessed the usual age of transfer from primary to secondary school is
11.Most primary schools are state- funded although many of them are
run by churches and the child is taught in order with the National Curriculum.Independent
fee-paying schools which are called preparatory schools, prepare children
for the Common Entrance Examination set by the independent secondary
schools. Usually parents prefer state primary schools -95 % and only
5% prefer independent.A number of LEAs in England (local education authorities)
have established "first" schools for pupils aged 5 to 8,9,10
& "middle" schools covering various age ranges between
8 & 14.It goes without saying it that the period of primary schooling
is very interesting and fun for boys and girls during that period their
character is forming, they are becoming personalities.
Secondary
Education
At the age
of 11, most children go to comprehevsive schools of which the mayority
are for both boys & girls.About 90 % of all state-financed secondary
schools are of this type. Most other children receive secondary education
in grammar & secondary modern schools. ( Until 1960s most children
took an examination at the end of primary school(The 11+): those who
passed it succesfully went to grammar schools while those who did not
went to secondary modern schools. A few areas especially in the south
of England still have selective exams at the age of 11.)Comprehensive
schools were introduced in 1965. The idea of comprehensive education,
supported by the Labour Party, was to give all children of whatever
background the same opportunity in education.At 16 students in England
and Wales take GCSE examinations. In 1988 these examinations replaced
the GCE(General Sertificate of Education) and O-levels(Ordinary levels)
which were usually passed by about 29 % of school students. GCSE exams
are taken by students of all levels of ability in any of a range of
subjects, and may involve a final examination, and assessment of work
done by the student during the 2-year course, or both of these things.Some
comprehensive schools, however, do not have enough academic courses
for 6-formers. Students can transfer either to a grammar school or to
6-form college to get the courses they want. 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 2 years of work experience.At 18 some students take A-level(Advanced
level) examinations, usually in two or three subjects. It is necessary
to have A-level in order to go to a university or Polytechnic.But some
pupils want to stay on at school after taking their GCSE, to prepare
for a vocational course or to work rather then for A-level examinations.
Then they have to take the CPVE examination which means the Certificate
of Pre-Vocational Education.In Scotland students take the SCE examinations(Scottish
Sertificate of Education). A year later, they can take examinations
called Highers after which they can go streight to a university.Secondary
education in Northern Ireland is organized along selective lines according
to children's abilities. One can hardly say that high quality secondary
education is provided for all in Britain. There is a high loss of pupils
of working- class families at entry into the 6 form. If you are a working-
class child at school today, the chance of your reaching the second
year of a sixth-form course is probably less than one-twelfth of that
for the child of a professional parent. Besides, government cuts on
school spending caused many difficulties.Durind all the prosess of education
the child is taught in order with the National Curriculum. Even the
schools which do specialize in different subjects -nowadays an increasing
number- have to teach in order with the National Curriculum & the
parents are sure that their child will have a broad-based education.
Those schools usually do specialize in technology and often are working
with local business.There are so many types of schools in Britain that
from the first sight seems you can 'sink' in variety. First division
is from independent & state scools. Some types can be both state
and independent, for example grammar schools. There are a lot of voluntary
or church schools in Britain which are to encourage the set of belief,
they are funded by the local council. Most parents choose to send their
children to free state schools financed from the public funds but an
increasing number of secondary pupils attend fee-paying independent
schools outside the school system. Many of these are boarding schools,
which provide accommodation for pupils during term time. There are about
2,500 independent schools educating more than 500,000 pupils of all
ages. They charge fees, varying from about 100 ? a term for day pupils
at nursery age to 2.000 ? a term for senior boarding pupils.Another
type of school is known as grant-maintained or self-governing school.
Every, in fact, school can become grant- maintained. Those schools offer
education free of charge, but are run by their teachers and governors,
independent from the local council. They get their money from central
government through the Funding Agency of Schools. This includes a share
of what the local council would have spent on administration.What should
the school do to become grant-maintained? The idea usually belongs to
parents. If any parent want the school of his/her child to become grant-maintained
he/she should tell the other parents about his/her idea and call the
council of parents. After the decision is made parents their headmaster/headmistress
write a letter to the government with an ask to become a self- governing
school. If the government accepts, the school will be sure the local
council won't step in if the things go wrong and the school won't have
to share money from the government. Some self-governing schools provide
boarding places.There is another important type of schools- City Technology
Colleges. It's a new type of free secondary school. They are set up
in large towns and cities through partnerships between the government
and business and is a type of spesialized schools.There are schools
known as the selective schools. They admit academically able pupils(
pupils who can and want to study). Some of them offer places to pupils
with an aptitude in a particular subject.There is a type of schools
called public schools.Those are private schools and about 5 per cent
of pupils prefer to be educated there. These are schools for the privileged.
Only very rich families can afford to pay for the study, because the
fees are very high.They are free from state control & most of them
are boarding. It goes without saying that education is of a high quality;
the discipline is very strict.There are about 500 public schools in
England and Wales, most of them are single-sex and about half of them
are for girls. The most famous public schools are Eton, Harrow, Rugby,
Winchester, Oundle, Uppingham, Charterhouse. They are famous for their
ability to lay the foundation of a successful future by giving their
pupils self-confidence, the right accent, a good academic background
and, perhaps most important of all, the right friends & contacts.They
never think they are school-leavers, but they are 'the old school ties'
& 'the old boys network'.Public schools educate the rulling class
of England. Winston Churchill, Lord Byron & many others were educated
in Harrow school. In Gorgonstoun was educated the Prince of Wales.There
are many other types of schools like county, all-through, two-tier and
others.Now let's talk about the prosess itself. The school year is divided
into terms, three months each, named after seasons: autumn, winter and
spring terms.The autumn term starts on the first Tuesday morning in
September. In July school break up for eight weeks.Each group of 30
pupils is the responsibility of a form tutor the same as in Russian
schools nowadays. The same is that each school day is divided into periods
of 40-50 minutes, time for various lessons with 10-20 minutes' brakes
between them. At the end of the term or before some national holiday,
called in England speech-days pupils are gathered in tha assembly area
or hall.Like in our schools in English classrooms also exist desks arranged
in rows(each row is called an aisle) , chalkboard/blackboard, different
kinds of laboratories, technical rooms, rooms for computer studies on
so on.Pupils at many secondary schools in Britain have to wear the school
uniform. This usually means a white blouse for girls, with dark-coloured
skirt and pullover and for boys these are shirt and tie, dark trousers
and dark-coloured pullovers. Pupils also wear blasers with scool badge
on the pocket. Shoes are usually black or brown. Senior students do
not have to wear their school uniform. Of course it's good for the teachers
and for the pupils themselves, because there's no problem of finding
the clothes they want(actually it's a problem of parents), but the young
people in Britain often do not like their school uniform. If they do
not like it so much that they don't wear it at first they will be given
a warning, then a punishment.Corporal punishment has recently been banned
in state schools, but in most schools it's still allowed, caning is
the usual punishment for serious misbehavior in class, damage and vandalism.
Many teachers remark that standarts of discipline have fallen since
corporal punishment was banned by the government.And withoun saying
that in each school exist system of rewards for the best pupils.A very
interesting topic is the social, cultural and sporting life in British
secondary schools nowadays. Firstly each school or 6-form college has
its School/College Council which organizes the social & cultural
life at the school, helps to plan the policy for the whole school. School
Councils run discos & parties, stage drama productions and decorate
the student common room; some of the students help in local hospitals,
homes for the handicapped & elderly people.There also are lots of
clubs & societies, national voluntary youth organizations(Boy Scouts
& the Girl Guides), several youth organizations associated with
political parties( YCND-Youth Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament).
Further Education
After finishing
secondary school or college you can apply to a university, polytechnic,
college of education or you can continue to study in a college of further
education.The academic year in Britain's univercities, Polytechnics,
Colleges of education is divided into 3 terms, which usually run from
the beginning of October to the middle of December, the middle of January
to the end of March, from the middle of April to the end of June or
the beginning of July.There are 46 universities in Britain. The oldest
and best-known universities are located in Oxford, Cambridge, London,
Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool, Edinburgh, Southampton, Cardiff, Bristol,
Birmingham.Good A-level results in at least 2 subjects are necessary
to get a place at a university. However, good exam passes alone are
not enough. Universities choose their students after interviews. For
all British citizens a place at a university brings with it a grant
from their local education authority.English universities greatly differ
from each other. They differ in date of foundation, size, history, tradition,
general organization, methods of instruction, way of student life.After
three years of study a university graduate will leave with the Degree
of Bachelor of Arts, Science, Engineering, Medicine, etc. Later he may
continue to take Master's Degree and then a Doctor's Degree. It goes
without saying it that research is an important feature of university
work.The 2 intellectual eyes of Britain- Oxford & Cambridge Universities-
date from the 12 & 13 centuries. They are known for all over the
world and are the oldest and most prestigious universities in Britain.
They are often called collectively Oxbridge, but both of them are completely
independent. Only education elite go to Oxford and Cambridge, most of
their students are former public leavers.The normal length of the degree
course is 3 years, after which the students take the Degree of Bachelor
of Arts or B.A.. Some courses, such as languages and medicine, may be
one or two years longer. The students may work for other degrees as
well. The degrees are awarded at public degree ceremonies. Oxbridge
cling to their traditions, such as the use of Latin at degree ceremonies.
Full academic dress is worn at examinations.Oxbridge universities consist
of a number of colleges. Each college is different, but in many ways
they are alike, each has its name, its coat of arms, each is governed
by a Master and offers teaching in a wide range of subjects. The largest
ones have more than 400 members, the smallest ones-less than 30. Within
the college one will normally find a chapel, a dining hall, a library,
rooms for undergraduates, fellows, the Master and teaching purposes.Oxford
is one of the oldest universities in Europe- the second largest in Britain,
after London. The town of Oxford is first mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle in 911 AD and it was popular with the early English kings.
THe university's earlier charter is dated to 1213.There are now 24 colleges
for men, five for women and another five both for men and women.Among
the oldest colleges are University College(founded in 1249), All Souls(1438),
Christ Church(1525).Cambridge University started during the 13th century
and was grown until today. Now there are more than 30 colleges.They
line the right bank of the Cam. There are beautiful college gardens
with green lawns and lines of tall trees. The oldest college is Peterhouse(1284)
and the most recent is Robinson College(1977), the most famous is King's
College.The University was only for men until 1871, when the first women's
college was opened.That was the first time in Britain woman could get
good education officially. In the 1970s, most colleges opened their
doors to both men and women. Almost all colleges are now mixed.Many
great men studied at Cambridge, among them Desiderius Erasmum(1469-1536),
the great Dutch scholar, Roger Bacon(1214-1292), the philosopher, Milton,
the poet Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658), the soldier, Newton, the scientist,
and Kapitza, the famous Russian physicist.The universities have over
a hundred societies and clubs, enough for every interest one could imagine.
Sport is a part of students' life at Oxbridge, the most popular ones
are rowing and punting.The Scottish universities of St.Andrews, Glasgow,
Aberdeen & Edinburgh date from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.In
the nineteenth and the early part of the twentieth centuries the so-called
Redbrick universities were founded. These include London, Manchester,
Leeds , Liverpool, Shetfield, and Birmingham. During the late sixties
and early seventies some 20 'new' universities were set up. Sometimes
they are called 'concrete and glass' universities. Among them are the
universities os Sussex, York, East Anglia and some others.During these
years the government set up 30 Polytechnics. The Polytechnics, like
the universities, offer first and higher degrees. Some of them offer
full-time and sandwich courses(for working students) . Colleges of Education
provide two-year courses in teacher education or sometimes three years
if the graduate specializes in some Particular subjects.Some of them
who decide to leave school at the age of 16 may go to a further education
college where they can follow a cource in typing, engineering, town
planning, cooking , or hairdressing, full-time or part-time. Further
education colleges have strong ties with commerce and industry.There's
an interesting form of studies which is called the Open University.
It's intended for people who study in their own free time and who 'attend'
lectures by watching TV and listening to the radio. They keep ih touch
by phone and letter with their tutors and attend summer schools. The
Open University students have no formal qualifications and would be
unable to enter ordinary universities.Some 80,000 overseas students
study at British universities or further education colleges or train
in nursing, law, banking or in industry.
References
1.http://schools.keldysh.ru/