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Intelligence tests

Intelligence tests. Could you have passed the eleven plus examination?. Arithmetic.

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Intelligence tests

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  1. Intelligence tests Could you have passed the eleven plus examination?

  2. Arithmetic • 1 A man left home at 11.30 a.m. and cycled 5 miles to a railway station at the rate of 12 miles an hour. He waited 10 minutes at the station and then travelled by train a distance of 36 miles at the rate of 24 miles an hour. At what time did he reach his destination? • 2 There were 9,975 spectators at a football match. This is 5 per cent more than were present at the preceding match. How many attended the previous match?

  3. Arithmetic answers • 1. 1.35 p.m. • 2. 9,500 spectators

  4. English • Write out the following passage again, including only the one correct word from each bracket: The boy (who, whom, what) we met at the baths and (who, whom, what) spoke to (you, I, me) and (you, I, me) is Harry Baines; he (use, used) to live near me and he often (come, came, went) to my house to play with me. He had a good stamp collection; the total number of his stamps (are, was, were) more than three thousand. (He, Him, Me) and (I, him, me) (was, am, were) great friends. • 2 Make adjectives from these nouns: beauty, slope, glass, friend, doubt, expense, delight, sleep, danger, sport.

  5. English answers • 1. The boy whom we met at the baths and who spoke to you and me is Harry Baines; he used to live near me and he often came to my house to play with me. He had a good stamp collection; the total number of his stamps was more than three thousand. He and I were great friends. • 2. beautiful, sloping, glassy, friendly, doubting, expensive, delightful, sleeping, dangerous, sporting/sporty

  6. General intelligence • The leader of a Guide patrol is named Mary Jenkins; so her surname is Jenkins, her Christian name is Mary, and her initials are M.J. There are 6 other girls in her patrol; each has 2 initials. Surnames: Brown, Smith, Evans, Clark, Jones. Christian names: Molly, Celia, Gwen, Ruth, Sally. Two girls have surname and Christian names beginning with the same letter; two others are named Ruth. One of the twins has the same initials as the leader, and the other has the same Christian name as Evans. Write down each girl's full name.

  7. General intelligence answer • Celia Clark • Sally Smith • Molly Jones • Ruth Jones • Ruth Evans • Gwen Brown

  8. Is the education system meritocratic? Evaluating the extent to which children have equality of opportunity in British schools PowerPoint 1

  9. Sociological Targets • To understand that children have very different experiences of education. • To understand that many factors can affect how well children do in school; many of these are social and not intellectual. • To identify some of the social characteristics that predispose children to failure or success.

  10. Personal targets • To write a short examination style answer • To contribute to whole class discussion in an orderly fashion • To think critically about social issues

  11. What is meritocracy? • One of the main understandings of the functionalist view of the education system is that it acts as a ladder of opportunity for people to achieve the best that they can, according to their ability. • The best people will then go on to gain the best jobs and become the leaders of their society. • This belief is known as meritocracy.

  12. Current social debate The education system in Britain since World War 2 has operated under the principle of providing equal opportunity for all pupils. • Do all children in Britain have an equal chance to do well? • Is Britain a meritocracy?

  13. New learning • All schools have equality policy • Governors must discuss the policy • Teachers must apply the policy • Equality policy applies to all government departments • Examination systems are expected to be equally fair to all candidates • Ofsted and Estyn will inspect how well schools apply their equality policy

  14. Thinking for yourself • What is meritocracy? • What is the purpose of school policy? • How aware are you of your school's Equality Policy? • How aware are teachers of the schools Equality Policy?

  15. Defining Equality • How would you define equality? 2 minutes on your own, 2 minutes to discuss with your neighbour.

  16. A H Halsey Equality of Opportunity Every one has equal access to the institutions of society Equality of Outcome People appear in social institutions in the proportions in which they appear in our society

  17. Attainment of five or more GCSE grades A* to C: by parental NS-SEC, 2002, England & Wales

  18. Understanding • What is the relationship between social class and educational attainment? Does this inequality of educational attainment really matter? Look at the next slide for an answer

  19. Employment rates and gross weekly earnings for full-time employees of working age: by highest qualification, spring 2003, UK

  20. Who is unequal? • Social class • Gender • Ethnicity • Locality and type of school attended.

  21. Summary of key points • Equality of opportunity is when people have the same rights and opportunities. • British society does offer equality of opportunity, with some exceptions. • Equality of outcome is when people actually do as well or as badly in the proportion in which they appear in the population. • British society does not have equality of outcome, and in many cases, inequalities are widening. • The main areas of inequality are social class, gender, ethnicity and locality.

  22. Assessment • You have 10 minutes to answer the following examination style question. Is the British education system meritocratic? • You will need to summarise the key points of the lesson, briefly and succinctly. • Show AO1 skills of knowledge.

  23. Independent study Look at the following BBC News pages http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/4185697.stm http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/3148375.stm Add good notes to your folder on these stories

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