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Overview of the education system in England

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Title: Overview of the education system in England


1
Overview of the education system in England
  • Eurydice at NFER, the Eurydice Unit for England,
    Wales and Northern Ireland

2
United Kingdom
  • England
  • pop 49.9 million
  • Scotland
  • pop 5 million
  • Wales
  • pop 2.9 million
  • Northern Ireland
  • pop 1.7 million

3
England
  • No separate government of its own
  • Primary legislation on education made by UK
    Parliament at Westminster

4
Scotland
  • Has always had a separate system of education
  • Devolution Scottish Parliament established 1999
  • Limited tax-raising powers and able to pass laws
    on education and health.

5
Wales
  • Devolution - National Assembly for Wales
    established 1999
  • Powers to make secondary legislation
  • Primary legislation on Welsh affairs currently
    made by UK Parliament at Westminster


6
Northern Ireland
  • Northern Ireland Assembly established 1998
  • Suspended 2002 NI departments were again under
    direction of Secretary of State for Northern
    Ireland
  • Northern Ireland Assembly restored in May 2007


7
School educationshared responsibilities
  • Government departments (DCSF DIUS, SEED,
    DCELLS, DE, DEL) associated non-departmental
    public bodies e.g. QCA, TDA
  • Local authorities (England, Wales and Scotland)
    and Education and Library Boards (Northern
    Ireland)
  • Schools (headteachers and governing bodies)

8
School governing bodies
represent stakeholders (parents, school staff,
the LA, the community etc). Specifically
responsible for
  • setting strategic direction
  • approving school budget
  • reviewing progress
  • appointing headteacher
  • challenging and supporting headteacher

9
Early years education
  • all 3- and 4-year-olds entitled to 2.5 hours a
    day
  • foundation stage curriculum
  • Providers include
  • maintained (state) nursery schools
  • maintained (state) primary schools in nursery
    (3) and reception (4) classes
  • private and voluntary providers who receive
    government subsidies

10
Compulsory education
  • Age 5-16
  • Divided into 4 Key Stages
  • KS1 5-7 years
  • KS2 7-11 years
  • KS3 11-14 years
  • KS4 14-16 years
  • But most children start school between the ages
    of four and five (in the reception class).

11
Maintained (state) schools
  • receive funding from the local authority
  • are required to deliver National Curriculum
  • are subject to the same system of inspection
  • manage their own budgets
  • select and manage their own staff (including
    support staff and headteacher).

12
  • But there are differences between them relating
    to ownership of land and buildings, the
    constitution of the governing body, whether they
    are responsible for deciding admissions policy
    and whether they are the legal employer of their
    staff. Schools fall into the following legal
    categories
  • community schools
  • voluntary aided (VA) and voluntary controlled
    (VC) schools - typically faith schools
  • foundation schools

13
  • Faith schools
  • Around 1/3 of primaries but fewer secondaries
  • Mainly Church of England or Catholic but also
    some other faiths
  • Fully funded for running costs
  • RE and daily collective worship (assembly)
    delivered according to religious character
  • Often give preference for admission to members of
    a particular faith or denomination

14
Independent schools
  • Attended by around 7 of children
  • Funded mainly by parental fees
  • Dont have to follow National Curriculum

15
Schools by age range
  • Primary schools
  • (as well as all-through primary schools,
    there are also some infant schools, first
    schools, junior schools and middle schools)
  • Secondary schools
  • KS 3 age 11-14 (Y7, Y8, Y9)
  • KS 4 age 14-16 (Y10, Y11)
  • and often also
  • KS 5 / sixth form age 16-18 (Y12, Y13)
  • -

16
Types of secondary school
  • comprehensive schools the great majority of
    schools do not select on academic ability but
    there are some that do, known as grammar schools
  • specialist schools the majority of secondary
    schools now have a curriculum specialism
  • academies independent state schools

17
Compulsory education National Curriculum
  • Originally established in 1988
  • A framework which defines the minimum entitlement
    and the starting point for planning a school
    curriculum that meets the needs of individuals
    and groups of pupils
  • Defined by programmes of study, attainment
    targets and level descriptions, and assessment
    arrangements, not hours of study

18
National Curriculum Assessment (SATs or end of
Key Stage assessment)
  • End of KS1 (age 7) English and maths
  • End of KS2 (age 11) English, maths, science
  • End of KS3 (age 14) English, maths, science

19
Qualifications at 16
  • GCSEs are single subject exams
  • students typically take 7 to 10 subjects
  • externally regulated, set and marked with some
    internally assessed coursework
  • graded A-G
  • 5 A-Cs (five good GCSEs) is a key benchmark
  • School level results published including
    contextual value added
  • Some qualifications for lower attainers e.g.
    Entry Levels

20
Post-compulsory education
  • Provided in
  • schools (sixth forms)
  • sixth form colleges
  • further education colleges
  • Currently only 75 of young people stay in
    full-time education at 17.

21
Post-16 qualifications
  • No compulsory core curriculum
  • GCE A levels AS at 17 A2s at 18
  • Single subject qualifications students study 3
    or more subjects in depth
  • Passes graded A to E
  • Externally regulated, set and marked with some
    internally assessed coursework
  • Also vast range of vocational qualifications

22
Higher education
  • Very diverse in terms of size, mission, subject
    mix and history
  • 130 HEIs (86 universities and 44 HE colleges)
  • Single sector all are independent
    self-governing bodies subject to same QA and
    funding arrangements
  • Structure of UK degrees already conforms to the
    Bologna model
  • Variable tuition fees introduced 2006, typically
    3,070 per annum in 2007/08
  • Government committed to widening access

23
School workforce
  • Includes leadership group (eg heads and
    deputies), other qualified schoolteachers,
    teaching assistants and administrative staff
  • Each school decides its own staffing complement
    in terms of numbers and type, recruits staff and
    makes appointment decisions
  • Schoolteachers are employees of local authority
    (LA) or school, not civil servants
  • National framework for schoolteachers pay and
    conditions

24
Initial Teacher Training (ITT)
  • 3- or 4-year Bachelor of Education (BEd), or
    1-year Postgraduate Certificate of Education
    (PGCE)
  • Also School Centred Initial Teacher Training
    SCITT and employment-based options, such as the
    Graduate Teacher Programme (GTP)
  • All training routes lead to Qualified Teacher
    Status (QTS)
  • ITT is followed by an induction year

25
Further informationQualifications and
curriculum authorities
  • QCA Qualifications and Curriculum Authority
    (England)
  • CCEA Northern Ireland Council for the
    Curriculum, Examinations and Assessment
  • Both advise on school and early years curriculum,
    examinations and assessment approve and regulate
    external qualifications. Remit excludes higher
    education
  • DCELLS Department for Children, Education,
    Lifelong Learning and Skills (Wales) took over
    the functions of the former Qualifications,
    Curriculum and Assessment Authority (ACCAC)
    in April 2006.

26
Further informationInspection and quality
assurance
  • Ofsted The inspectorate for children and
    learners in England, a non-ministerial
    government department accountable to
    Parliament
  • Estyn Her Majestys Inspectorate for
    Education and Training in Wales
  • ETI Education and Training Inspectorate (Northe
    rn Ireland)
  • QAA Quality Assurance Agency for Higher
    Education (UK-wide)

27
Further informationbodies involved in further
and higher education
  • LSC Learning and Skills Council (England) plans
    and funds all full- and part-time post-16
    education and training with the exception of
    higher education.
  • The Department for Children, Education, Lifelong
    Learning and Skills (DCELLS) and DEL (Department
    for Employment and Learning) undertake this role
    in Wales and Northern Ireland respectively.
  • The HEFCE and HEFCW are the funding bodies for
    higher education in England and Wales
    respectively DEL performs this role in Northern
    Ireland.

28
Further informationTeacher training (including
CPD)
  • TDA Training and Development Agency for Schools.
    Responsible for the training and development of
    the whole school workforce, including initial
    teacher training, continuing professional
    development and training for the wider school
    workforce. England.
  • GTC General Teaching Councils (E) (W) (NI) are
    professional bodies for teachers with which
    teachers must register
  • NCSL National College for School Leadership

29
Further informationGovernment departments and
related agencies in England
30
Further informationDCSF key policies and
strategies
31
Further informationGovernment departments
Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
32
Further informationEducation in the UK
elsewhere - international perspectives
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