PS. Anybody who still believes in British Education, stop it. It's just an empty glossy package that we're selling to the rest of the world, because we haven't got anything else to sell. I am only half joking.
As an American, I am intrigued by British Education, the O levels and A levels and whatnot.
It sounds as if a British kid can take exams on his own schedule and leave school as young as 15 or 16?
Maybe I'm missing something. In the U.S., we have to attend four years of high school in order to
graduate, though a very few manage to finish a little early. British education seems more flexible.
I belong to the last generation to take "O" levels. They've been replaced by GCSE, which is a whole lot easier to pass. These are usually taken at age 16, which is the standard school leaving age. After that, staying on at school to take "A" levels is optional, assuming you got decent grades at GCSE. Most kids sit 3 "A "level subjects. Some of the "A" level curriculi have also ben dumbed-down, since I was at at school. The science textbooks in particular read more like coffee-table books, because they tried to make the science more accessible to kids who are not so good at maths. To my surprise, Maths "A" level is still just as challenging, as before , IMO. Perhaps more so, because it squeezes in all the stuff that used to be in the "o" level syllabus, but got dropped in the switch to GCSE.
Anyways, the kids sit "A" levels at 18, normally. So I guess that's equivalent to your "High school" education? Good grades at "A" level will get usually get you an automatic place at Uni. Bare passes at "A" level will work for some Unis. Probably a letter of recommendation scribbled on a bit of spare toilet paper will work with my local Uni.
But that's where our free education.ends, these days. English kiids no longer get maintainence grants for Uni , no longer get their fees paid by the state, they need wealthy parents or else a bloody great loan (I hear it's different in Scotland, which is why I said English, specifically). This frees up more places for fee-paying foregn students, i suppose, and helps the Economy. (All hail!) . British Universities continue to expand exponentially. At least, the local one does. (Grrrrrr)
Enough?