вторник, 15 января 2013 г.
вторник, 1 января 2013 г.
4 Form: Topic "Primary Schools in England"
In England school begins at the age of 4 or 5 and
children leave school at the age of 16. School begins in September, but it
rarely begins on the 1st of September. The English think that Monday
is not a good day to start school. So they start on the first Tuesday of
September. The weather is usually fine and warm on that day. The children must
look very neat. They don’t take any books with them; they will get
exercise-books, pens, pencils, rulers and rubbers later. They go to school with
their parents.
English pupils work five days a week. Saturdays
and Sundays are their days off. Classes begin at 9. The children have a break
at 10.30 (half past ten). At 1 o’clock they have lunch. They play outdoors
after classes.
First children go to infant schools. There they
spend 3 years. The children don’t always sit at their desks. They sit on the
floor or on the carpet, too. And they listen to their teacher. The children
learn how to read, count, write. They learn how to spend money and use it. They
learn how to get on well with other children. They look at the pictures and
draw them, too. They look at the animals (hamsters, rabbits, hares). They run, jump, sing songs, play games.
Then children go to junior schools. The
atmosphere is more formal in junior classes than in infant classes. People sit
in rows and follow a regular timetable. Their subjects are English, Maths,
History, Nature Study, Geography, Art, Music, Swimming, PE, and Religion. They
go to museums and other interesting places with their teachers. And their
teachers take them to big cities, too.
Schools in England have names, not numbers (after the place where they
are or after famous or important people). In many primary schools children wear
uniforms but in some primary schools they don’t. That’s what I wanted to tell
you about primary schools in Britain.
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