News1 min ago
Dunces all of a sudden
So is this years crop of students sitting GCSE not as bright as those previously
or has political pressure being put on examining boards to ' halt ' the previous upward trend
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-19349444
or has political pressure being put on examining boards to ' halt ' the previous upward trend
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-19349444
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.And whilst I agree with most of flipflop's comments i don't agree that Media Studies and Psychology are easy options- certainly not if you aim for an A or A*
The subject that worries me is English. I have seen students who are classed as grade B material who cannot write a sentence or spell common words. I have mentioned before I think that I was covering grade B English class and a student asked me how to spell a common word- I recall it was something like "'used'. So I passed her a dictionary but after a few minutes she gave up saying she couldn't find it. I then pointed out that she needed to look under U not Y.
The subject that worries me is English. I have seen students who are classed as grade B material who cannot write a sentence or spell common words. I have mentioned before I think that I was covering grade B English class and a student asked me how to spell a common word- I recall it was something like "'used'. So I passed her a dictionary but after a few minutes she gave up saying she couldn't find it. I then pointed out that she needed to look under U not Y.
Media Studies and psychology are softer options, compared to Maths/Chemistry and Physics.
We should concentrate less on quantity and more on quality. Vocational training from 14 (ie actually leave school and do an apprenticeship paid for with the money that would have been used for the schooling) should also be a valued option. I know this is not in keeping with your trendy liberals but we need to get real. Degrees are not the be all and end all, definitely required in some cases but three are many where getting out and doing it would be far more beneficial.
I don't have one [degree] but I earn a big salary and have worked in other countries including getting a H21B for the US.
We should concentrate less on quantity and more on quality. Vocational training from 14 (ie actually leave school and do an apprenticeship paid for with the money that would have been used for the schooling) should also be a valued option. I know this is not in keeping with your trendy liberals but we need to get real. Degrees are not the be all and end all, definitely required in some cases but three are many where getting out and doing it would be far more beneficial.
I don't have one [degree] but I earn a big salary and have worked in other countries including getting a H21B for the US.
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