An interesting and fascinating article on schools in England posted on notesfromtheuk.com.
APROMPTreply asked what A-Levels and Sixth Form are, and Diane Clement wanted me to “explain all the education jargon in the U.K., especially this new stuff that sounds like American charter schools.”
Let’s start with Sixth Form, because it’s damn near manageable. The phrase is left over from an earlier way of organizing education—or at least of talking about how it’s organized. What I (being American) call grades and are called years here but were once called forms. The First Form was the first year of secondary school.
Irrelevant photo: rhododendrons and azaleas in bloom at Lanhydrock House
Students who stayed in school to study for A-Levels (those are tests, and if I live through this part of the explanation I’ll get to them) went into the Sixth Form, which took two years and was divided into the Upper and Lower Sixths, because it would all be too simple otherwise. To ward off the…
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Thanks for the reblog. That’s wonderful of you.
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I taught for a number of years, even though I wasn’t really suited for that profession. Most of my friends are teachers or retired from teaching. I thought they might find this interesting.
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