The Eleven Plus - Beginning of the End

Started by pintsofguinness, November 23, 2007, 09:38:48 PM

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Do you approve of the Eleven Plus being abolished?

Yes
No

pintsofguinness

Quote from: tram on March 04, 2008, 06:28:35 PM
Quote from: pintsofguinness on March 04, 2008, 12:32:23 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/7275879.stm

Typical Grammar schools!
This proposal is no surprise. The general falling off of the population at school-age compared to 10-15 years ago means that if Grammar Schools are to accept that they are to exist in the form the have been running over the last few decades, they will have to be smaller enrolment numbers for them otherwise they will become for all intents and purposes comprehensives with a heavy bias towards academic achievement to the point where they would have to deal with a range of abilities that would be alien to a grammar school but found in every non-grammar school; they would basically enrol themselves out of existence.

Good!
Pack of snobs
Which one of you bitches wants to dance?

Stanley

Quote from: pintsofguinness on March 04, 2008, 12:32:23 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/7275879.stm

Typical Grammar schools!

Unbelievable idea, the 11+ is better than this, can you imagine the bias that this can be opened to, the golfing mate "make sure Johnny gets a good profile", shite idea to say the least.

ziggysego

Parents should have the option of academic selection, the principal of one of Northern Ireland's leading grammar school has said.

Lumen Christi College in Londonderry will introduce its own academic aptitude test when the 11-plus comes to an end in 2008.

Education Minister Caitriona Ruane said she was disappointed and had concerns about the legal implications.

School principal Pat O'Doherty said his school's arrangements "were interim".

"There has to be a compromise, in terms of academic selection," he said.

"The legal position is that academic selection will remain, subject to a vote by the assembly and obviously all the arrangements we have put out are interim arrangements in the expectation that there will be some form of academic selection accepted by the department.

"If that is the case, obviously we will fall in line with whatever academic selection process they advise."

However, the minister said: "The board of governors of Lumen Christi should be in no doubt, the Department of Education will not fund, facilitate or in any way support a breakaway entrance exam.

"Any school opting for this route should have full knowledge of the risks involved, including the potential for multiple appeals and litigation aimed at overturning what are bound to be highly contentious admission decisions."

Ms Ruane has faced criticism in the assembly over her plans to reform the way children transfer from primary school in Northern Ireland.

She said last year that the 11-plus would end this year with pupils deciding their next move at the age of 14.

Sourced BBCi: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/7304758.stm
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