Secondary School Selection

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Age Allowance
attainment measurement
Attainments Tests
Category=JMA
Category=JMBT
Category=JNC
class structure impact
Cumulative Record Card
Direct Grant Schools
Duller Pupils
educational psychology
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Essay Type Examinations
grammar
Grammar School Head
Grammar School Place
Grammar School Sixth Forms
Grammar School Success
Grammar School Work
Grammar Schools
Independent Schools
intelligence assessment
Inter-school Variation
Modern School Pupils
Moray House
Moray House Tests
objective
Objective Attainments Tests
psychological effects of academic selection
School Certificate
School Certificate Subjects
Selection Examinations
Standardized Attainment Tests
streaming in schools
teacher evaluation methods
Unreorganized Schools
Vice Versa
War Time

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138637061
  • Weight: 400g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Selection for secondary education at 11-plus still arouses widespread controversy; and the psychological techniques which are employed, such as intelligence and attainments tests, are often criticised. Originally published in 1957, under the auspices of the British Psychological Society, a group of psychologists, experienced in this field, tried to present a balanced survey of the situation at the time. They show that the real problems of secondary schooling cannot be solved by simple administrative changes; they arise from historical causes, from the class structure of English society and the educational and vocational ambitions of parents. Psychology has studied the development and differentiation of children’s abilities and interests with age, and thus throws light on the need for, and the consequences of, streaming children in different classes or schools, and the value of alternative systems such as the comprehensive school. Selection at 11-plus, it is admitted, does have harmful effects on teaching in the junior school and produces much emotional strain, though these effects are often exaggerated. It was, in fact, accurate for some ninety per cent of children; yet the implications of its inevitable inaccuracy for some pupils cannot be ignored. The functions, and the value, of intelligence and attainments tests and the essay are examined, and full consideration given to the use of teachers’ estimates of suitability and other techniques. The Report is addressed primarily to teachers, educational administrator, and psychologists – that is people with some background knowledge of the problems involved; but it should also be intelligible and helpful to the educated layman, since the more technical details are confined to Appendices.