Monday, September 16, 2019
Education in Great Britain
ââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬âââ¬â- EDUCATION IN GREAT BRITAIN 6/7. Greatà   Britainà   doesà   notà   haveà   aà   writtenà   constitution,à   soà   thereà   areà   noà   constitutionalà   provisionsà   forà   education. Theà   systemà   ofà   educationà   isà   determinedà   byà   theà   Nationalà   Educationà   Acts. Schoolsà   inà   Englandà   areà   supportedà   fromà   publicà   fundsà   paidà   toà   theà   localà   educationà   authorities. Theseà   localà   educationà   authoritiesà   areà   responsibleà   forà   organizingà   theà   schoolsà   inà   theirà   areasà   andà   theyà   themselvesà   chooseà   howà   toà   doà   it.Letââ¬â¢sà   outlineà   theà   basicà   featuresà   ofà   publicà   educationà   inà  Britain. Firstly,à   thereà   areà   wideà   variationsà   betweenà   oneà   partà   ofà   the   à   countryà   andà   another. Forà   mostà   educationalà   purposesà   Englandà   andà   Walesà   areà   treatedà   asà   oneà   unit,à   thoughà   theà   systemà   inà   Walesà   isà   aà   littleà   differentà   fromà   thatà   ofà  England. Scotlandà   andà  Northernà   Irelandà   haveà   theirà   own à  educationà   systems. Secondly,à   educationà   inà   Britainà   mirrorsà   theà   countryââ¬â¢sà   socialà   system:à   ità   isà   class-dividedà   andà   selective. Theà   firstà   divisionà   isà   betweenà   thoseà   whoà   payà   andà   thoseà   whoà   doà   notà   pay.Theà   majorityà   ofà   schoolsà   inà   Britainà   areà   supportedà   byà   publicà   fundsà   andà   theà   educationà   providedà   isà   free. Theyà   areà   maintainedà   schools,à   butà   thereà   isà   alsoà   aà   considerableà   numberà   ofà   publicà   schools. Parentsà   haveà   toà   payà   feesà      toà   sendà   theirà   childrenà   toà   theseà   schools. Theà   feesà   areà   high. Asà   aà   matterà   ofà   fact,à   onlyà   veryà   richà   familiesà   canà   sendà   theirà   childrenà   toà   publicà   schoolsà   asà   wellà   asà   toà   theà   bestà   universities,à   suchà   asà   Oxfordà   andà  Cambridge. Anotherà   importantà   featureà   ofà   schoolingà   inà   Britainà   isà   aà   varietyà   ofà   opportunitiesà   offeredà   toà   schoolchildren.Theà   Englishà   schoolà   syllabusà   isà   dividedà   intoà   Artsà   (orà   Humanities)à   andà   Sciences,à   whichà   determineà   theà   divisionà   ofà   theà   secondaryà   schoolà   pupilsà   intoà   studyà   groups:à   aà   Scienceà   pupilà   willà   studyà   Chemistry,à   Physics,à   Mathematicsà   (Maths),à   Economics,à   Technicalà   Drawing,à   Biology,à   Geography;à   anà   Artà   pupilà   willà   doà   theà      Englishà   Languageà   andà   Literature,à   History,à   foreignà   languages,à   Music,à   Art,à   Drama. Besidesà   theseà   subjectsà   theyà   mustà   doà   someà   generalà   educationà   subjectsà   likeà   Physicalà   Educationà   (PE),à   Homeà   Economicsà   forà   girls,à   andà   Technicalà   subjectsà   forà   boys,à   Generalà   Science.Computersà   play anà   importantà   partà   inà   education. Thereà   isà   aà   systemà   ofà   careersà   educationà   forà   schoolchildrenà   inà  Britain. Ità   isà   aà   three-yearà   course. Theà   systemà   ofà   optionà   existsà   inà   allà   kindsà   ofà   secondaryà   schools. Besides,à   theà   structureà   ofà   theà   curriculumà   andà   theà   organizationà   ofà   teachingà   varyà   fromà   schoolà   toà   school. Headmastersà   andà   headmistressesà   ofà   schoolsà   areà   givenà   aà   greatà   dealà   ofà   freedomà   i   nà   decidingà   whatà   isà   taughtà   andà   howà   inà   theirà   schoolsà   soà   thatà   thereà   isà   reallyà   noà   centralà   controlà   at à  allà   overà   individualà   schools.Theà   Nationalà   Educationà   Actà   ofà   1944à   providedà   threeà   stagesà   ofà   education;à   primary,à   secondaryà   andà   furtherà   education. Compulsoryà   schoolingà   inà   Englandà   andà   Walesà   lastsà   11à   years,à   fromà   theà   ageà   ofà   5à   toà   16. Afterà   theà   ageà   ofà   16à   aà   growingà   numberà   ofà   schoolà   studentsà   areà   stayingà   onà   atà   school,à   someà   untilà   18à   orà   19,à   theà   ageà   ofà   entryà   intoà   higherà   educationà   inà   universitiesà   andà   Polytechnics. Britishà   universityà   coursesà   areà   ratherà   short,à   generallyà   lastingà   forà   3à   years.Theà   costà   ofà   educationà   dependsà   onà      theà   collegeà   andà   specialityà   whichà   oneà   chooses. Pre-primaryà   andà   Primaryà   Education Nurseries. Primaryà   School. Streaming. Theà   Eleven à  Plusà   Examination. Noà   Moreà   ofà   It? Inà   someà   areasà   ofà   Englandà   thereà   areà   nurseryà   schoolsà  Ã  3à   forà   childrenà   underà   5à   yearsà   ofà   age. Someà   childrenà   betweenà   twoà   andà   fiveà   receiveà   educationà   inà   nurseryà   classesà   orà   inà   infantsà   classesà   inà   primaryà   schools. Manyà   childrenà   attendà   informalà   pre-schoolà   play-groupsà   organizedà   byà   parentsà   inà   privateà   homes.Nurseryà   schoolsà   areà   staffedà   withà   teachersà   andà   studentsà   inà   training. Thereà   areà   allà   kindsà   ofà   toysà   toà   keepà   theà   childrenà   busyà   fromà   9à   oââ¬â¢clockà   inà   theà   morningà   tillà   4à   oââ¬â¢clockà      inà   theà   afternoonà   ââ¬âà   whileà   theirà   parentsà   areà   atà   work. Hereà   theà   babiesà   play,à   lunchà   andà   sleep. Theyà   canà   runà   aboutà   andà   playà   inà   safetyà   withà   someoneà   keepingà   anà   eyeà   onà   them. Forà   dayà   nurseriesà   whichà   remainà   openà   allà   theà   yearà   roundà   (heà   parentsà   payà   accordingà   toà   theirà   income. Theà   localà   educationà   authorityââ¬â¢sà   nurseriesà   areà   free.Butà   onlyà   aboutà   threeà   childrenà   inà   100à   canà   goà   toà   them:à   thereà   arenââ¬â¢tà   enoughà   places,à   andà   theà   waitingà   listsà   areà   ratherà   long. Mostà   childrenà   startà   schoolà   atà   5à   inà   aà   primaryà   school. Aà   primaryà   schoolà   mayà   be dividedà   intoà   twoà   partsà   -infantsà   andà   juniors. Atà   infantsà   schoolà   reading,à   writingà      and à  arithmeticà   areà   taughtà   forà   aboutà   20à   minutesà   aà   dayà   duringà   theà   firstà   year,à   graduallyà   increasingà   toà   aboutà   2à   hoursà   inà   theirà   lastà   year. Thereà   isà   usuallyà   noà   writtenà   timetable. Muchà   timeà   isà   spentà   inà   modellingà   fromà   clayà   orà   drawing,à   readingà   orà   singing.Byà   theà   timeà   childrenà   areà   readyà   forà   theà   juniorà   schoolà   theyà   willà   beà   ableà   toà   readà   andà   write,à   doà   simpleà   additionà   andà   subtractionà   ofà   numbers. Atà   7à   childrenà   goà   onà   fromà   theà   infantsà   schoolà   toà   theà   juniorà   school. Thisà   marksà   theà   transitionà   fromà   playà   toà   ââ¬Å"realà   workâ⬠. Theà   childrenà   haveà   setà   periodsà   ofà   arithmetic,à   readingà   andà   compositionà   whichà   areà   allà   Elevenà      Plusà   subjects. History,à   Geography,à   Natureà   Study,à   Artà   andà   Music,à   Physicalà   Education,à   Swimmingà   areà   alsoà   onà   theà   timetable. Pupilsà   areà   streamedà   accordingà   toà   theirà   abilitiesà   toà   learnà   intoà   A,à   B,à   ?à   andà   Dà   streams.Theà   leastà   giftedà   areà   inà   theà   Dà   stream. Formallyà   towardsà   theà   endà   ofà   theirà   fourthà   yearà   theà   pupilsà   wroteà   theirà   Elevenà   Plusà   Examination. Theà   hatedà   11à   +à   examinationà   wasà   aà   selectiveà   procedureà   onà   whichà   notà   onlyà   theà   pupilsââ¬â¢Ã   futureà   schoolingà   butà   theirà   futureà   careersà   depended. Theà   abolitionà   ofà   selectionà   atà   Elevenà   Plusà   Examinationà   broughtà   toà   lifeà   comprehensiveà   schoolsà   whereà   pupilsà   canà   getà   secondaryà   education. Secondaryà   Education    Comprehensiveà   Schools. Grammarà   Schools. Secondaryà   Modernà   Schools. Theà   Sixthà   Form. Noà   Moreà   Inequality?.Cutsà   onà   Schoolà   Spending Afterà   theà   ageà   ofà   11,à   mostà   childrenà   goà   toà   comprehensiveà   schoolsà   ofà   whichà   theà   majorityà   areà   forà   bothà   ââ¬âboysà   andà   girls. Aboutà   90à   perà   centà   ofà   allà   state-financedà   secondaryà   schoolsà   areà   ofà   thisà   type. Mostà   otherà   childrenà   receiveà   secondaryà   educationà   inà   grammarà   andà   secondaryà   modernà   schools. Comprehensiveà   schoolsà   wereà   introducedà   inà   1965. Theà   ideaà   ofà   comprehensiveà   education,à   supportedà   byà   theà   Labourà   Party,à   wasà   toà   giveà   allà   childrenà   ofà   whateverà   backgroundà   theà   sameà   opportunityà   inà   education.Onlyà   aboutà   20à   perà   centà   ofà   childrenà      studyà   forà   theà   Generalà   Certificateà   ofà   Education,à   Ordinaryà   Levelà   (GCEà   ?-level). Mostà   childrenà   doà   notà   passà   GCEà   examinations. Theyà   leaveà   schoolà   atà   16à   withoutà   anyà   realà   qualificationà   andà   moreà   often thanà   notà   increaseà   theà   ranksà   ofà   unemployedà   people. Pupilsà   ofà   modernà   schoolsà   takeà   theirà   Certificateà   ofà   Secondaryà   Educationà   (CSE)à   examinationsà   whileà   inà   grammarà   schoolsà   almostà   allà   childrenà   stayà   toà   sixteenà   toà   takeà   ?-levels. Moreà   thanà   halfà   ofà   themà   stayà   onà   toà   takeà   ?-levels.Someà   comprehensiveà   andà   manyà   secondaryà   schools,à   however,à   doà   notà   haveà   enoughà   academicà   coursesà   forà   sixth-formers. Pupilsà   canà   transferà   eitherà   toà   aà   grammarà   schoolà   orà   toà   aà   sixt   h-formà   collegeà   toà   getà   theà   coursesà   theyà   want. Theà   majorityà   ofà   schoolsà   inà  Scotlandà   areà   six-yearà   comprehensives. Secondaryà   educationà   inà   Northernà   Irelandà   isà   organizedà   alongà   selectiveà   linesà   accordingà   toà   childrenââ¬â¢sà   abilities. Oneà   canà   hardlyà   sayà   thatà   highà   qualityà   secondaryà   educationà   isà   providedà   forà   allà   inà  Britain.Thereà   isà   aà   highà   lossà   ofà   pupilsà   fromà   working-classà   familiesà   atà   entryà   intoà   theà   sixthà   form. Ifà   youà   areà   aà   working-classà   childà   at à  schoolà   today,à   theà   chanceà   ofà   yourà   reachingà   theà   secondà   yearà   ofà   aà   sixth-à   formà   courseà   isà   probablyà   lessà   thanà   one-twelfthà   ofà   thatà   forà   theà   childà   ofà   aà   professionalà   parent. Besides,à   governmentà      cutsà   onà   schoolà   spendingà   causedà   many à  difficulties. Secondaryà   Schoolà   Examinations Timeà   forà   Examinations. GCE. CSE. Theà   Sixthà   Forms. CEE.GCSE Pupilsà   atà   secondaryà   schoolsà   inà   Englandà   (thatà   is,à   pupilsà   betweenà   theà   agesà   ofà   twelveà   andà   eighteen)à   haveà   twoà   mainà   examsà   toà   worryà   about,à   bothà   calledà   GCEà   ââ¬âà   Generalà   Certificateà   ofà   Education. Theyà   takeà   theà   firstà   oneà   whenà   theyà   areà   aboutà   fifteen. Itââ¬â¢sà   calledà   O-à   level. Thereà   isà   anà   examà   whichà   youà   canà   takeà   insteadà   ofà   ?-level:à   ità   isà   calledà   theà   CSEà   (Certificateà   ofà   Secondaryà   Education),à   andà   ità   isà   notà   asà   difficultà   asà   O-level. Mostà   pupilsà   takeà   ?-levelà   inà   aboutà   sevenà   orà   eightà   differentà   subjec   ts.Thereà   areà   lotsà   ofà   subjectsà   toà   chooseà   fromà   ââ¬âeverythingà   fromà   carpentryà   toà   ancientà   languages. Forà   aà   lotà   ofà   jobs,à   suchà   asà   nursing,à   orà   assistantà   librarian,à   youà   mustà   haveà   fourà   orà   fiveà   ?-levels,à   andà   usuallyà   theseà   mustà   includeà   Englishà   andà   Maths. Youà   mayà   leaveà   schoolà   whenà   youà   areà   16. Butà   ifà   youà   stayà   atà   schoolà   afterà   takingà   ?-level,à   youà   goà   intoà   theà   sixthà   form. Theà   sixthà   formsà   andà   sixth-formà   collegesà   offerà   aà   wideà   rangeà   ofà   courses. Ordinaryà   levelà   alternative,à   CEEà   (Certificateà   ofà   ExtendedEducation)à   andà   CSEà   coursesà   areà   offeredà   toà   pupilsà   whoà   needà   qualificationsà   atà   aà   lowerà   level. Butà   ifà   youà   haveà   madeà   upà   yourà      mindà   toà   gainà   entryà   toà   aà   university,à   Polytechnicà   orà   collegeà   ofà   furtherà   educationà   youà   haveà   toà   startà   workingà   forà   theà   secondà   mainà   examinationà   ââ¬âà   A-level. Mostà   peopleà   takeà   ?-levelà   whenà   theyà   areà   aboutà   eighteen. Ità   isà   quiteà   aà   difficultà   exam,à   soà   peopleà   donââ¬â¢tà   usuallyà   takeà   ità   inà   moreà   thanà   3à   subjectsââ¬âà   andà   someà   onlyà   inà   oneà   orà   twoà   subjects. Threeà   ?-levelsà   areà   enoughà   toà   getà   youà   inà   toà   mostà   universities.Forà   others,à   suchà   asà   Oxfordà   andà  Cambridge,à   youà   haveà   toà   takeà   specialà   examsà   asà   well. Aà   newà   school-leavingà   certificateà   isà   planned,à   however,à   andà   O-levelà   andà   CSEà   willà   beà   replacedà   byà   oneà   publicà   exam,à   th   eà   Generalà   Certificateà   ofà   Secondaryà   Educationà   (GCSE). Ità   isà   toà   showà   howà   childrenà   workedà   throughoutà   5à   yearsà   ofà   secondaryà   school. 5. Parliamentary elections in the United Kingdom should be seen as a referendum on the performance of sitting MPs, not merely as a snapshot nationwide opinion poll determining party voting weights for the next Parliament.The electoral system affects the degree to which voters may hold their representatives to account for their actions in the previous Parliament; changes which would diminish this accountability mechanism should be resisted. The UK presently has a legislature whose unelected chamber better reflects the relative strength of the Labour, Conservative, Liberal Democrat and None of the Above parties. Conversely, if Labour and the Conservatives each won 50% of the vote, the other chamber would have a sizable Labour majority. 51% of the seats in the Lower House delivers 100% of t   he power, and this can be captured by Labour on about 40% of the vote.Nevertheless, whenever Labour runs into opposition from the chamber which, in any other context, would be described as more ââ¬Å"representativeâ⬠ by people who go in for that kind of thing, it threatens to force its legislation through under the Parliament Acts, on the grounds that the Lower House is more ââ¬Å"democraticâ⬠. The Lower Houseà  isà  more democratic. Contrary to the self-serving views of the Liberal Democrats and other jejune supporters of electoral ââ¬Å"reformâ⬠, what matters for democracy is not representativeness or proportionality, so much as accountability and responsiveness.When MPs behave in accordance with their constituents' wishes, this is to be preferred to their merely existing in party groupings of such sizes as best reflect their constituents' choices at the previous election. When discussing electoral reform in the UK, retaining a ââ¬Å"constituency linkâ⬠ i   s often posited as a requirement. That is to say, it is felt to be necessary that everyone should have an MP who is in some sense ââ¬Å"theirsâ⬠, normally meaning that people are grouped into geographical areas and each area gets its own MP. A weaker version of this permits multiple MPs for each area.This is supposed to be good because it means that there's automatically someone in Parliament to go to with one's grievances. There is a much better reason why it happens to be good. If we merely say that everyone must have one or a small number of MPs, that does not imply that every MP must have his own constituency. The German federal electoral system and its antipodean imitator in New Zealand affords MPs who have no constituencies: they are elected from party lists and assigned in such numbers as ensure that the proportion of MPs in each party in the chamber match the proportion of the vote each party won.This category of MPs shares the same vice as MPs in a chamber fully elect   ed by a proportional system: they can't be voted out of office directly. If your MP decides to go against the wishes of his constituents, they can contact him and say, ââ¬Å"Hi, your majority at the last election was 2000; we, the undersigned 1001 who voted for you last time will vote against your party next time unless you buck the whip on this issue we care about. â⬠ The easier it is to do this, the more likely the behaviour of an MP will reflect the wishes of constituents.Don't believe the canard about votes not counting: every vote against the person who won counts against his majority and makes him more susceptible to pressure from his constituents before the next election. The electoral system can restrain this tactic. It works well under First Past The Post, and similar systems. Generally, increasing the number of MPs who represent a single constituency has the effect of making this tactic harder, as the punishment from electors may be spread across several MPs, especia   lly if the electors cannot choose which MPs from a paricular party get the benefit of their vote.This is a notorious problem with the European Parliamentary elections in Great Britain: if some MEP is the ringleader for a particularly odious policy, she cannot easily be voted out without voting out the colleagues from her party. Even when a free choice on the preferential ordering of MPs is permitted, it is difficult to stop the disliked MP from riding back to election on the coattails of his more popular colleagues. So, in order of preferability, the electoral systems rank as follows: * First Past The Post, and Alternative Vote Single Transferable Vote in multimember constituencies * Proper Proportional Representation systems with open lists * Proper Proportional Representation systems with closed lists Having said all this, it must be stressed that electoral reform for the House of Commons should not be considered in isolation from the composition of the other chamber, and the rela   tion between the Commons and three other institutions: the executive, the House of lords, and the courts.Some notes: Alternative Vote is the Australian name for a system which when used in single-member constituencies is identical to STV: electors rank the candidates in order of preference, and the least popular candidate is repeatedly eliminated until someone has over 50%; essentially, once a candidate is eliminated, a vote is regarded as counting for whichever remaining candidate was most preferred by its caster.The effect of this system tends to be obliteration of extremists without penalising or ââ¬Å"wastingâ⬠ protest votes. It should be noted that in the British debate, ââ¬Å"Proportional Representationâ⬠ is used to mean proper PR systemsà  andà  STV/AV. The Australian Electoral Commissionà  usedà  to have an excellent webpage with a classification of all the electoral systems used in Australia's twenty-odd legislative chambers, but they've apparently improved    it off their site now.Other fallacious views on electoral systems which it is useful to rebut at this juncture include the contention that FPTP entrenches a two-party system (in fact, the number of parties is contingent on the geographical concentration of voters), that AV in the UK in 1997 would have led to a larger Labour majority (only if you didn't tell people and the parties what the electoral system was in advance, otherwise the parties would have behaved differently), and that geographical constituencies are a relic of a bygone age and are being replaced by PR across Europe, or at least the world.FPTP is described by Hilaire Barnett in her militantly Anglosceptic tome on the British constitution as ââ¬Å"stillâ⬠ existing in some dusty English-speaking corners of the planet; in fact some countries using PR have been moving towards constituencies: Italy did in the 1990s, and the Dutch are considering a similar move. 2. POLITICAL PARTIESThe idea of political parties first    took form in Britain and the Conservative Party claims to be the oldest political party in the world. Political parties began to form during the English civil wars of the 1640s and 1650s. First, there were Royalists and Parliamentarians; then Tories and Whigs. Whereas the Whigs wanted to curtail the power of the monarch, the Tories ââ¬â today the Conservatives ââ¬â were seen as the patriotic party.Today there are three major political parties in the British system of politics: * The Labour Party ââ¬â the centre-Left party currently led by Ed Miliband * The Conservative Party (frequently called the Tories) ââ¬â the centre-Right party currently led by David Cameron * The Liberal Democrat Party (known as the Lib Dems) ââ¬â the centrist, libertarian party currently led by Nick Clegg In addition to these three main parties, there are some much smaller UK parties (notably the UK Independence Party and the Green Party) and some parties which operate specifically in Scot   land (the Scottish National Party), Wales (Plaid Cymru) or Northern Ireland (such as Sinn Fein for the nationalists and the Democratic Unionist Party for the loyalists). Each political party chooses its leader in a different way, but all involve all the Members of Parliament of the party and all the individual members of that party.By convention, the leader of the political party with the largest number of members in the House of Commons becomes the Prime Minster (formally at the invitation of the Queen). Political parties are an all-important feature of the British political system because: * The three main political parties in the UK have existed for a century or more and have a strong and stable ââ¬Ëbrand image'. * It is virtually impossible for someone to be elected to the House of Commons without being a member of an established political party. * All political parties strongly ââ¬Ëwhip' their elected members which means that, on the vast majority of issues, Members of Pa   rliament of the same party vote as a ââ¬Ëblock'. Having said this, the influence of the hree main political parties is not as dominant as it was in the 1940s and 1950s because: * The three parties have smaller memberships than they did since voters are much less inclined to join a political party. * The three parties secure a lower overall percentage of the total vote since smaller parties between them now take a growing share of the vote. * Voters are much less ââ¬Ëtribal', supporting the same party at every election, and much more likely to ââ¬Ëfloat, voting for different parties at successive elections. * The ideological differences between the parties are less than they were with the parties adopting more ââ¬Ëpragmatic' positions on many issues. In the past, class was a major determinant of voting intention in British politics, with most working class electors voting Labour and most middle class electors voting Conservative.These days, class is much less important be   cause: * Working class numbers have shrunk and now represent only 43% of the electorate. * Except at the extremes of wealth, lifestyles are more similar. * Class does not determine voting intention so much as values, trust and competence. In the British political system, there is a broad consensus between the major parties on: * the rule of law * the free market economy * the national health service * UK membership of European Union and NATO The main differences between the political parties concern: * how to tackle poverty and inequality * the levels and forms of taxation * the extent of state intervention in the economy * the balance between collective rights and individual rights    
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