- First school
First school and lower school are terms used in some areas of the
United Kingdom to describe the first stage ofprimary education . Some English Local Education Authorities have introduced First Schools since the 1960s. The notion of First Schools was mooted by thePlowden Report of 1967 which proposed a change to a three tier model including First Schools for children aged between 5 and 8, Middle Schools for 8-12 year-olds, and then Upper or High Schools for 12-16 year-olds.In practice, two main models were used:
*5-8 First Schools, followed by 8-12 Middle Schools, as suggested by Plowden
*5-9 First Schools, followed by 9-13 Middle Schools, as implemented by theWest Riding of Yorkshire in the mid-1960s. These are sometimes known as Lower schools.although other options were implemented in different authorities.
Following the introduction of the
National Curriculum after theEducation Reform Act 1988 , the new curriculum's splits inKey Stage s at age 11 encouraged the majority of Local Education Authorities to return to a two-tier system of Primary andSecondary school s. However, some First Schools still exist in various areas, includingStaffordshire .In areas where the three-tier model has been replaced, first schools have been converted to infant or
primary school s in many cases, or closed in others. No authority has introduced three-tier education in any area since 1995, although some new first schools have opened in areas which already have three-tier systems in place.ee also
*
Education in the United Kingdom
*Primary education
*Primary school
*Junior school
*Infant school
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.