Secondary Education
There is usually a move from primary to secondary school at about the age of eleven, but schools are organized in a number of different ways.
Until the 1960-s there existed the tripartite system of secondary schools. Under it, most children took an examination at the end of primary school (the eleven Plus). The highest-scoring pupils (about twenty per cent) went to grammar schools which offered an academic five-year course leading to the General Certificate of Education at the ordinary level (the GCE O-level). On obtaining this certificate a pupil either left the school or continued his studies for another two years in what is called the "Sixth Form" to obtain the same certificate but at the advanced level (A-level). The sixth form curriculum provided (and it still does) intense specialization.
The secondary technical school admitted five to two per cent of the pupils, and as the name implies, it offered a general education with a technical bias. It served those pupils who are more mechanically inclined. The pupils were given opportunities to try their hand at the machines in the work-shops. There was more science and mathematics taught on its curriculum. In other words, this school was to give a good foundation for careers in branches of industry or agriculture. However, for various reasons they were widely considered inferior to grammar schools.
The secondary modern school was attended by about seventy-five per cent of the pupils of the age-group eleven to sixteen and led to the Certificate of Secondary Education (the CSE) which was not accepted for entering a university. These schools were given the task of providing a general non-academic education for children of average ability. Many of these schools developed a bias in one of the following courses: secretarial, art and crafts, trade and commerce, agriculture, gardening, etc.
For years the tripartite system was under assault for separating children too early. And in early 70s the Labour government began its major reform the task of which was to escape from class patterns, to create new institutions, to mobilize the nation's talent. Under it, in 1965 the national 11+ examinations were abolished. And within the next decade about ninety per cent of all maintained secondary schools were reorganized on comprehensive lines.
Comprehensive schools admit children without reference to ability or aptitude. The children represent a total social cross-section. Their curricula attempt to satisfy two seemingly contrary requirements. On the one hand, they try to reflect the broad aims of education and offer demanding courses leading to public examinations. On the other hand, they allow for difference in the abilities and other characteristics of children, even of the same age. Accordingly, they provide courses that focus on practical life skills considered essential for the world we live in. Comprehensive schools in most places are all-through schools, that is, one school takes the whole age group 11-18. Some LEAs, however, have introduced new patterns.
One variation is comprehensive schools for children of 11 - 16 (the minimum school-leaving age) linked with sixth-form colleges for pupils who stay on after 16.
Other LEAs have middle schools for ages 8 - 12, 9 - 13 or 10 - 14, linked with upper schools (or high schools) for ages 12/13/14 - 18. Middle schools bridge the traditional division at 11 between primary and secondary education, and in areas with this system the first schools which children attend compulsorily (from 5 to 8/9/10) are called first schools. Thus children in these areas go to three schools instead of two as follows: first school-middle school-upper (high) school.
Comprehensive schools are usually much bigger than the schools of the tripartite system (at least 1,000 pupils). The area from which a comprehensive school takes its pupils is called a catchment area. Within each comprehensive school the children may be grouped according to their ability for specific subjects, and the divisions will be called "sets". In others, pupils are placed into A, B or C "streams" according to their abilities and aptitudes.