Презентация к уроку английского языка "The system of education and the oldest universities of Great Britain" - скачать
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- Презентация к уроку английского языка "The system of education and the oldest universities of Great Britain" - скачать
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- 2. The aim of education in general is to develop to the full the talents of both
- 3. The education service: The Department of Education and Science (DES) It is concerned with the formation
- 4. The Nursery school The infant school The Junior school The Primary School Eleven-Plus Examination Secondary Schools
- 5. The Nursery schools A nursery school is a school for children between the ages of three
- 6. Secondary Schools Comprehensive school Comprehensive schools admit children of all abilities and provide a wide range
- 7. State and Public schools Fettes College Eton school The great majority of children (about 9 million)
- 8. Higher education in England has several branches: colleges and universities. Virtually all higher education is selective,
- 9. THe university of Oxford www.ox.ac.uk The university of Oxford located in the city of Oxford is
- 10. University of Cambridge www.cam.ac.uk The start of the University is generally taken as 1209, when some
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The aim of education in general is to develop to the
The aim of education in general is to develop to the
The educational system of Great Britain has developed for over a hundred years. It is a complicated system with wide variations between one part of the country and another.
All children and young people between the ages of 5 and 16 in England, Scotland and Wales, and 4 and 16 in Northern Ireland, must, by law, receive full-time education.
The education service:
The Department of Education and Science (DES)
It is
The education service:
The Department of Education and Science (DES)
It is
Local Education Authorities (LEAs)
They are charged with the provision and day-to-day running of the schools and colleges in their areas and the recruitment and payment of the teachers who work in them.
Schools
The choice of text-books and timetable are usually left to the headmaster. The content and method of teaching is decided by the individual teacher.
Her Majesty’s Inspectorate
He gives professional advice
The Nursery school
The infant school
The Junior school
The Primary School
The Nursery school
The infant school
The Junior school
The Primary School
Eleven-Plus Examination
Secondary Schools
Universities
Colleges
The General Certificate of Education, "Advanced" level
3 types:
The grammar School
The secondary modern
the Technical school
The comprehensive school
The Nursery schools
A nursery school is a school for children
The Nursery schools
A nursery school is a school for children
The infant school
The first school is the infant school, for children between five and seven. At this stage the children become acquainted with the Reading, Writing and Arithmetic in the form of games.
The Junior school
The Junior school is for children aged seven to eleven. Towards the end of their fourth year in the junior school, a certain percentage of English schoolchildren still have to write their “11+” Examinations
Secondary Schools
Comprehensive school
Comprehensive schools admit children of all abilities and
Secondary Schools
Comprehensive school
Comprehensive schools admit children of all abilities and
The grammar school provided a traditional literary and scientific education up to the age of eighteen, it gives pupils the more academic education, and prepares them for entry to universities.
The secondary modern school provides a general education, including much instruction of a practical sort, up to the age of fifteen only, when the children leave school to go to work.
The Technical school providing technical education up to the age of eighteen, was established by the Educational Act of 1944, but as yet there are very few schools of this type.
State and Public schools
Fettes College
Eton school
The great majority of
State and Public schools
Fettes College
Eton school
The great majority of
Higher education in England has several branches: colleges and universities.
Virtually all
Higher education in England has several branches: colleges and universities.
Virtually all
The word university (Latin - universitas) like the word college (Latin - collegium) meant originally a society of people with a common employment; it was only later that it came to be associated with scholarship.
Higher education
THe university of Oxford
www.ox.ac.uk
The university of Oxford located in the
THe university of Oxford
www.ox.ac.uk
The university of Oxford located in the
Today Oxford University is comprised of thirty-nine colleges. and six permanent private halls, together with that of the University's libraries and museums, gives the city its unique character More than 130 nationalities are represented among a student population of over 18,000.
There have been many famous people who have studied at Oxford University and they include John Locke, Adam Smith, Lewis Carroll, Oscar Wilde, J. R. Tolkien, Indira Gandhi, Baroness Margaret Thatcher, Bill Clinton, All in all, Oxford has produced four British and at least eight foreign kings, 47 Nobel prize-winners, 25 British Prime Ministers, 28 foreign presidents and prime ministers.
University of Cambridge
www.cam.ac.uk
The start of the University is generally taken as
University of Cambridge
www.cam.ac.uk
The start of the University is generally taken as
The University at present has more than 16,500 full-time students.
There have been many famous people who have studied at Oxford University and they include Lord Byron, Charles Darwin, Vladimir Nabokov. The great Russian scientist Pavlov came to Cambridge to receive the degree of the Honorary Doctor of Cambridge. All in all, Cambridge has produced 80 Nobel-prize winners (33 more than Oxford and the highest number of any university worldwide), 13 British Prime Ministers.