secondary modern school
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A type of secondary school that formerly existed in the British education system, designed for children who did not pass the eleven-plus examination. Its curriculum focused on practical and vocational skills rather than academic or theoretical studies, preparing students for skilled trades or clerical work.
Usage
This term refers specifically to a historical institution within the UK's tripartite system of secondary education (circa 1940s-1970s), which also included grammar schools and technical schools. It is used when discussing historical educational policy, social class, or the history of the British school system.
Examples
- After failing the eleven-plus, he was sent to a secondary modern school.
- The study compared the career outcomes of grammar school pupils with those from secondary modern schools.
- Secondary modern schools were often criticized for offering a limited curriculum.
Advanced Usage
- The term is often used in sociological and historical analyses to discuss educational inequality and social mobility in post-war Britain.
- It can carry connotations of a perceived second-class education within a selective system.
Variants and Related Words
- Grammar School (noun): The academically selective secondary school in the same historical system, for which the eleven-plus exam was the entrance test.
- Technical School (noun): The less common third branch of the tripartite system, focusing on technical and scientific education.
- Comprehensive School (noun): The type of non-selective secondary school that largely replaced secondary modern and grammar schools in most of the UK.
Synonyms
- (Historical context) Non-selective secondary school (under the tripartite system).
- (In a broad, non-historical sense) Vocational school.
Antonyms
- Grammar school (within the same historical system).
Noun
- a former British secondary school emphasizing practical rather than academic education