Education in Great Nortend: Difference between revisions
Line 109: | Line 109: | ||
==Tertiary education== | ==Tertiary education== | ||
[[File: | [[File:Oxford_-_Brasenose_College_-_East_facade.jpg|thumb|The University of Limmes is the main university for Lower Erbonia.]]Recognised formal tertiary education in Great Nortend is predominantly in the form of university education, professional pupillage, clerkships and trade apprenticeships. | ||
===Universities=== | ===Universities=== |
Revision as of 03:55, 7 November 2020
Board of Schooling | |
---|---|
Master of the Board of Education | Dr. Thomas Welfuller Henry Gust |
General details | |
Primary languages | English |
System type | National |
Literacy (2016) | |
Total | 99% |
Attainment | |
Secondary diploma | 63% |
Post-secondary diploma | 3% |
Education in Great Nortend is overseen by the Board of Education, a ministerial level board subordinate to H. M. Clerk's Office. It is highly structured and centrally administered. An approved national curriculum is published by the Board which outlines the required content of education.
Overview
The Schooling Act prescribe the five stages of formal schooling, being infant (3–6), junior (7–10), lower senior (11–14) and upper senior (15–18). Compulsory education in Great Nortend lasts for eight years and starts at the age of seven for both boys and girls in junior schooling, ending at the age of 14 at the end of the lower senior schooling.
Public state schooling is administered directly by the Board of Education and consists of both junior parish schools as well as senior high schools. Private independent schooling is provided principally by endowed schools, as well as tutors for junior schooling, although both are still regulated by the Board of Education. Universities as well as other professional or vocational colleges provide college schooling after senior years.
At the end of the Fifth Form, many pupils undertake the Grammatical Examinations as the ordinary school-leaving examinations. Pupils who wish to continue onto university must be in a grammar school and continue for another two years before undertaking the Matriculation Examinations at the end of the Sixth Form. In addition to their annual school reports, receive a Top Junior Report, Fourth Form Report, Fifth Form Report and Sixth Form Report upon the completion of the respective grades and examinations.
The very limited number of students matriculating at a university generally study for a Bachelor of Arts. The Bachelor of Arts consists of three years' of study, and may be followed by another bachelor degree of a different faculty, after which the Master of Arts is awarded.
Academic year
The academic year used by schools and colleges corresponds to the civil year used in Great Nortend. To wit, the year begins on Michaelmas. Though there are four terms in a civil year, the academic year generally treats Marymas term as a summer holiday or 'Long Vacation'.
Schooling
Independent schools
The independent schools are schools which not operated as part of the state system, and are not established under the Schooling Acts of the 20th century. Many are many centuries old. The term 'independent school' includes a wide range of schools such as cathedral, monastic, common and charity schools. Both junior and senior independent schools exist, although not all fit neatly into the Schooling Act categorisation. Many aristocratic families, for instance, still choose to educate their girls during their junior schooling at home under a tutor or governess.
Most independent senior schools are considered grammar schools, insofar as they teach up to the Sixth Form in preparation for matriculation at university. Poorer pupils who would not otherwise be able to matriculate may win Senior Bursaries from the Board of Schooling to enable them to transfer to an independent grammar school. Most schools are additionally endowed for the education of a specified number of poorer pupils on foundation, often known as scholars.
Though such schools are termed independent, they are still bound by the ordinances of the Board of Education which are explicitly extended to independent schools. Furthermore, some schools were and are founded by the Crown, which retains powers of direction over them, usually via the Board of Education. As they are not, however, board schools under the Schooling Act, they are nonetheless considered independent schools.
State schools
State schools are known as board schools, or as parish schools (junior) and high schools (senior). They are regulated by the Board of Schooling under the terms of the Schooling Acts of 1902 and 1945. They are free of charge to attend, being funded by the Treasury. Parish schools are often located adjacent to the parish church, and there is usually one in every parish. High schools generally serve the local borough or market town, and are single sex. Thus, there is normally a a boys' "Smitton High School" and a girls' "Smitton Girls' High School".
State high schools as a rule only offer schooling until the Fifth Form. They do not offer Sixth Form education and as such, high school pupils are unable to matriculate at university unless they transfer to an independent school for their Sixth Form, which is quite uncommon. Most pupils intending to matriculate transfer at the end of their junior schooling.
Board schools are bound by the ordinances of the Board of Education. In the case of a parish school, ordinances give powers to the local authority (whether it be the parish vestry or borough council) which may control the appointment of the headmaster, admissions and finances inter alia. For high schools, a governing body is appointed by the Board, which includes members of the local authorities, local dignitaries, and other personages, as well as official visitors. Otherwise, like most independent schools, they are operated on a day-to-day basis by the headmaster and usher, who generally have a high degree of freedom.
Infants
Especially in urban areas, some children attend an infants school from the age of three, in an Infants school, although it is not compulsory. It is not designed as a child-minding service, or to take over the care of children from their mothers. Rather, infants schooling is mainly for social interaction with other children, and thus is only for few hours on a few days a week.
Junior
There are five compulsory grades during junior schooling known as juniors :— Bottom Junior (or sometimes First Junior), Second Junior, Third Junior, and Top Junior (or sometimes called Fourth Junior). Junior schools generally only have classes until noon, pupils returning home thereabouts for luncheon.
At the end of Top Junior, pupils in parish schools are assessed and advised as to whether the Board of Education will provide a Senior Bursary for the subsidisation of senior schooling at an independent grammar school. This is generally limited to the most promising pupils.
Senior
Senior schooling begins at the age of eleven and consists of eight forms :— First Form, Second Form, Third Form, Fourth Form, Lower and Upper Fifth Forms, and Lower and Upper Sixth Forms. A sizeable proportion of pupils only complete up to the Fourth Form, and leave school as manual workers. The majority of pupils only complete up to Upper Fifth Form, leaving to pursue apprenticeships or professional or vocational colleges. The remaining minority of pupils, all grammar school pupils, complete up to the Upper Sixth Form which is dedicated to preparation for the matriculation examinations for university entrance.
A notable feature of Erbonian senior schooling for boys is service in the Cadet Corps company. Over 90 per cent of boys' senior board schools are affiliated with a cadet company, and over three quarters have compulsory membership in at least the First Form.
Grammatical Examinations
At the start of the Lower Fifth Form, most pupils begin study for the Grammatical Examinations, or 'Grammaticals' as they are commonly known. The examinations derive from the mediæval origins of grammar schools as a place to learn Latin grammar. The exams historically were set by the schools themselves, and to this day, some schools, particularly independent schools, choose to set their own examinations. Most schools, however, use the examination papers provided by the Board of Schooling. There are three or four compulsory “full papers” — English, Mathematics, History, and Latin. Latin is only studied by boys. Pupils are also permitted to choose as many supplementary “short papers” as they desire, although many schools require a natural science paper and a humanities paper as a minimum.
As of 2020, there are fourteen short papers offered, excluding modern foreign languages :—
- Arts (Philosophy)
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Economics
- English II (Language)
- English II (Literature)
- Geography
- Greek (Classical)
- History II
- Housewifery (girls only)
- Latin II
- Mathematics II
- Music
- Physics
- Theology
A variety of modern foreign language papers are also offered, including Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Greek (Modern), Italian, Mazurian, Spanish and Russian. These include oral examination.
In the last term of the Upper Fifth Form, pupils are examined and receive a letter grade :— O for Outstanding (95%); E for Excellent (90%); G for Good (80%); A for Acceptable (65%); P for Passing (50%); S for Substandard. The results are listed on the pupil's Firth Form Report, a nationally recognised qualification.
Matriculation Examinations
Pupils who stay on after the Grammatical Examinations generally take the Matriculation Examinations for admission into university. This takes an extra two years, known as the Lower and Upper Sixth Forms. Generally speaking, the subjects which may be taken are the same as those for the Grammatical Examinations, albeit more difficult. Furthermore, an oral viva voce examination in added.
Curriculum
Incomplete. In junior schooling, pupils are instructed principally in English, mathematics, religion, arts, physical education and civics. English education is wide-ranging and covers reading, writing and speaking. Mathematics covers arithmetic, geometry and other basic concepts, including use of an abacus. Religious instruction is grounded in the Catechism of the Church of Nortend including scriptural and moral study. Art includes music, drawing, painting and other crafts. Physical education involves both games as well as gymnastics, boxing, running and other sports. Civics education is embedded through the curriculum of other classes, and includes the teaching of manners, patriotic songs,
Education in Great Nortend is influenced by the doctrines and teachings of the Church of Nortend, which is the state church of Great Nortend. This is evident through both primary and secondary schooling as well as university and apprenticeships where chapel services are commonly compulsory, along with scriptural and theological studies as well as a general culture of religiosity in academia.
At senior schools, which are mostly single-sex , pupils are taught more advanced subjects such as algebra, trigonometry, calculus, ancient and modern history, world geography, literature analysis, exegesis and rhetoric. In Third Junior, Latin is begun. This starts with memorisation of grammar and vocabulary, then turning to translation of texts and construction of Latin prose. Pupils are generally required to learn the top 100 Latin words by the end of junior schooling. Skills in Latin construction, translation and debating are developed. For boys, an introduction to Greek is common.
Religious instruction includes continued analysis of scripture, as well as the history of the Church, theological topics such as that of the basis for doctrines and dogma. Both the Old Testament and the New Testament are read through. Chapel services are usually three times a week joined with assemblies, as in junior schools, along with additional classroom lessons.
Equalisation
Equalisation is the process where a pupil's final subject grades are altered from their nominal numerical value. This involves consideration of the pupil's social and moral development, to ensure that the final grades given are coherent with the pupil's “worth” in society. Thus, even if a pupil receives straight Os, his final grade for his lowest scoring subject may be reduced to an E if the pupil is lazy, is disruptive, is insubordinate, or has other “undesirable” traits. Conversely, pupils with lower grades may have their grade for one or two subjects increased if they are otherwise conscientious, diligent and upstanding pupils.
The equalisation of grades is very controversial, as it is subjective. Some people claim that it is used to punish pupils with “alternative” views or is discriminatory to minority groups such as Catholics or persons of other ethnicities. It may also result in grades being inflated for friends or favoured pupils. Steps have been taken by the Board of Schooling to reduce this, however, and equalisation is considered an essential component of Erbonian school marking in general.
Tertiary education
Recognised formal tertiary education in Great Nortend is predominantly in the form of university education, professional pupillage, clerkships and trade apprenticeships.
Universities
There are only three universities in Great Nortend, each dating back to the mediæval period :— Aldesey, Limmes and Rhise. University education is focussed mainly on academic and scholastic teaching, rather than research, although there is some emphasis on the latter. University students must attain a generalist Bachelor of Arts degree and then read for a specialised Master of Arts first, before they can study in the higher faculties to obtain a specialised Bachelor of Letters, Philosophy, Medicine (Physic), Laws or Divinity.
For most of the upper class, a university degree is only a status symbol of learnedness. Whilst there are some occupations which one can proceed to directly upon graduating with a degree (such as a clergyman or scientist), most professional occupations require a period of pupillage or clerkship, in addition to any required or recommended university training, before one is qualified to practise (e.g. as a physician, surgeon, apothecary, barrister).
Pupillage is undertaken under a pupilmaster who is a fellow of one of the professional colleges or cloisters. It is very similar to an apprenticeship; however, there is no formal journeyman rank and upon finishing the one to three year pupillage, the pupil may apply to become a fellow of the college. Pupillage exists for the solitary professions of physician, surgeon and barrister, who are not permitted to employ other fellows, enter into partnerships, or be employed himself in his profession. Pupils are almost always graduates.
Colleges
A clerkship is training undertaken by an articled clerk, usually under a master or within a firm in the "clerical" professions such as solicitors, architects, draughtsmen, engineers, accountants, bankers, insurance clerks, public servants, and company offices. Articled clerks usually must have at least a Fifth Form Report with good results in the Grammatical Examinations. Articled clerkships are nationally recognised and lead to formal qualifications issued by the Board of Schooling in their respective fields. In order to qualify as a clerk, an articled clerk often must study an accredited curriculum during their clerkship and pass examinations. This often involves attending lectures, undertaking professional courses and practical training.
Apprenticeships
Great Nortend has a very highly developed system of apprenticeships for boys and young men in most trades regulated by the Board of Trade. 234 trades are regulated nationwide by chartered trade guilds, variously known as compagnies or guilds, according to the Apprentices Acts. Most trade guilds are based in Lendert-with-Cadell. Before 1880, most cities and towns had their own guilds controlling and regulating certain trades, although certain Lendert guilds had already been empowered to act beyond the city. The Apprentices Act, 12 Hen. VI p. 439 formally established most of the chartered Lendert guilds as the regulating guilds for the trades nationwide, with the provincial guilds affiliated with their respective national guilds.
Most trades take apprentices at the age of fourteen, with a Third Form Report. Premiums are paid to the master in return for instruction, and often for board and lodging if in a different town. Most apprenticeships last around seven years, after which the apprentice becomes a journeyman upon attaining the age of 21. After a sufficient period of practice in the trade, often “wandering” the country, a journeyman may seek to incorporate as a master by application to their guild, and if in a guild town, to become a freeman of the local guild.
This page is written in Erbonian English, which has its own spelling conventions (colour, travelled, centre, realise, instal, sobre, shew, artefact), and some terms that are used in it may be different or absent from other varieties of English. |