I have been informed by people who attended primary school during the early 1980s that they were barely any different from primary schools in the 1970s. The major reforms to primary school education didn't take place until the late 1980s. The most prominent differences was the introduction of new technology – video recorders, photocopiers, computers – that took place during the early 1980s although plenty of primary schools didn't have any of them until after 1985.
1. There was no standard year group system for primary schools. The names of years varied between local authorities and even individual schools. There were some strange names such as Rising Fives for reception class.
2. School term dates were not standardised across England. Some local authorities observed Wakes Week instead of the May half term.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...-may-half-term
3. No national curriculum. Some local authorities had their own curricula, to a varying degree, but others were light touch and allowed individual schools to set their own curriculum.
4. The lack of a national curriculum resulted in significant variations in the quality of teaching; the academic standards; the diversity and choice of subjects taught; and the style of teaching and assessment on a school by school basis. Some schools taught particular subjects – like music with proper instruments or D&T with proper tools, but others didn't. Some schools had lessons in geography, history, science, whereas others confined it to themes. Some schools had teachers that actually taught lessons whereas others just gave students worksheets with the teacher effectively being a classroom supervisor. Some schools had textbooks whereas other schools the teacher taught everything without any textbooks. Some schools had tests and exams whereas other schools operated a continuous assessment model.
5. A potentially narrower curriculum than primary schools taught in the 1990s through to today.
6. The teaching of science in primary schools was highly inconsistent and could vary dramatically from school to school due to the lack of a standard curriculum. Some primary schools taught science as a subject, others only taught it as part of a theme, others didn't even teach science at all. Some primary schools would teach physics and chemistry whereas others confined science to nature study.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...e-in-the-1980s
7. Many primary schools did not teach non-Christian religions unless the school was in an area with a high proportion of non-Christian immigrants. It was commonplace for primary schools to teach about religion in the assembly hall through hymn singing, Bible readings, plays etc. rather than through RS lessons in the classroom.
8. It was common for schools to teach ball and stick handwriting (teachers called it printing at the time) in reception class, and students would only start writing cursive around the age of 8 or 9. This had a result of screwing up handwriting for many children as they never managed to transition to cursive.
9. Themes were quite a popular concept and were often used to teach most of the science, history, and geography rather than official timetabled lessons.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...312#post197312
10. It was the heyday of BBC and ITV schools programmes. In the absence of a national curriculum then teachers would cherry pick whatever programmes they found interesting for their class. Quite often schools would teach themes based around a particular series of programmes being broadcast that term.
11. Many schools did not set regular homework apart from reading (fiction), a spelling test, things to do with the theme of the term.
12. Many parents had no idea what their children were learning, or supposed to be learning due to the absence of a national curriculum and homework. Even the students often had no idea themselves.
13. In the absence of a national curriculum, school report were highly opinionated as there was no national benchmark to compare the academic performance of students with. Teachers could easily say bad things about students they didn't like even if they were very good academically.
14. There were no SATS exams. Students would finish primary school without taking any tests of exams.
15. Teachers were not keen on students who were too clever. The prevailing culture was that teachers preferred students who just muddled along and went with the flow. Most teachers also preferred students who worked hard and behaved well, even if they were only average intelligence, than students which were above average intelligence.
1. There was no standard year group system for primary schools. The names of years varied between local authorities and even individual schools. There were some strange names such as Rising Fives for reception class.
2. School term dates were not standardised across England. Some local authorities observed Wakes Week instead of the May half term.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...-may-half-term
3. No national curriculum. Some local authorities had their own curricula, to a varying degree, but others were light touch and allowed individual schools to set their own curriculum.
4. The lack of a national curriculum resulted in significant variations in the quality of teaching; the academic standards; the diversity and choice of subjects taught; and the style of teaching and assessment on a school by school basis. Some schools taught particular subjects – like music with proper instruments or D&T with proper tools, but others didn't. Some schools had lessons in geography, history, science, whereas others confined it to themes. Some schools had teachers that actually taught lessons whereas others just gave students worksheets with the teacher effectively being a classroom supervisor. Some schools had textbooks whereas other schools the teacher taught everything without any textbooks. Some schools had tests and exams whereas other schools operated a continuous assessment model.
5. A potentially narrower curriculum than primary schools taught in the 1990s through to today.
6. The teaching of science in primary schools was highly inconsistent and could vary dramatically from school to school due to the lack of a standard curriculum. Some primary schools taught science as a subject, others only taught it as part of a theme, others didn't even teach science at all. Some primary schools would teach physics and chemistry whereas others confined science to nature study.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...e-in-the-1980s
7. Many primary schools did not teach non-Christian religions unless the school was in an area with a high proportion of non-Christian immigrants. It was commonplace for primary schools to teach about religion in the assembly hall through hymn singing, Bible readings, plays etc. rather than through RS lessons in the classroom.
8. It was common for schools to teach ball and stick handwriting (teachers called it printing at the time) in reception class, and students would only start writing cursive around the age of 8 or 9. This had a result of screwing up handwriting for many children as they never managed to transition to cursive.
9. Themes were quite a popular concept and were often used to teach most of the science, history, and geography rather than official timetabled lessons.
https://forums.doyouremember.co.uk/f...312#post197312
10. It was the heyday of BBC and ITV schools programmes. In the absence of a national curriculum then teachers would cherry pick whatever programmes they found interesting for their class. Quite often schools would teach themes based around a particular series of programmes being broadcast that term.
11. Many schools did not set regular homework apart from reading (fiction), a spelling test, things to do with the theme of the term.
12. Many parents had no idea what their children were learning, or supposed to be learning due to the absence of a national curriculum and homework. Even the students often had no idea themselves.
13. In the absence of a national curriculum, school report were highly opinionated as there was no national benchmark to compare the academic performance of students with. Teachers could easily say bad things about students they didn't like even if they were very good academically.
14. There were no SATS exams. Students would finish primary school without taking any tests of exams.
15. Teachers were not keen on students who were too clever. The prevailing culture was that teachers preferred students who just muddled along and went with the flow. Most teachers also preferred students who worked hard and behaved well, even if they were only average intelligence, than students which were above average intelligence.
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