another waste of money in my opinion, just means people who dont want to bethere at 16 will waste another 2 years messing about until they can leave.
The problem with modern schooling is and has been for a while the belief that grading and seperating people on ability and teaching them to their strengths is a bad thing. Without correcting this huge mistake, other efforts at trying to improve education are destined to fail.
Schools already do that with streaming.
No, they don't, not really. They still focus solely on academic achievement with no consideration of whether it's appropriate for the pupil.
I went to school in an area where they chose to abolish the 11+ and throw everyone together irrespective of ability, it failed most of the students fairly well, especially as we had at the time a school head who didn't believe in grouping based on academic ability...
It is not a bad thing to not be good at academics, it's a bad thing to not be good at academics and forced to do them anyway with no alternative. Most of the non-academic people I know thrived on practical and vocational skills, but by the time they could consider doing them (post 16) they were already so demotivated and had spent so long being broken down and told they were useless by the school system that values only academic achievements, they really didn't want to.
It has changed a lot since you were at school with the 11+. There has to be a minimal education standard to be achieved, it takes the less able longer to achieve this level. Most schools nowadays include a lot of non-academic activities focusing on things like team building or community activities.
Are non-academic qualifications offered? Or are all results still focused on succeeding or failing at academic endevours?
A more cynical man than I might suspect this has something to do with massaging unemployment figures.
That's why they need to provide "other" courses, not just academic ones.
I would welcome an American style system where they can't leave until they pass. and an E isn't a pass.
A more cynical man than I might suspect this has something to do with massaging unemployment figures.
Some people aren't cut out for academic studies, no shame or stigma in that, they might be brilliant at practical tasks or a great entrepreneur. Forcing people to stay in education/training longer doesn't address that, it just creates more issues since you either need to create more training schemes or occupy them with further studies which they may not want to do.
I went to a normal school as I didn't do well enough at my 11+ while my brother did.
I was in the top set out of 3 at high school and ended up with very good GCSE results.
11+ means f all. Kids mature at different rates, while I might have been stupid at 11 I was a Academic GOD by 16.![]()
I can understand the point that some kids just don't want to learn and they are better off in work, but what happens when they realise they were being stupid and they now don't want to work at maccys for the next 40 years.
Kids are kids, I didn't know what I wanted to do at 16, While some money might be wasted on kids that are too far gone, it will likely help a lot of kids who ware unsure.
I am for it overall. Education is the key to a successful country.