
I can only imagine what wonderful places the person who books Hotels for our company gets offered. Milton Keynes, Burton, etc. How lovely!
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Indeed, but in eastern Europe it's some fuss about the quality of the products: the products in the West are better than those in the East. And under the same brand, same package. And some prices of the products in East are bigger than those sold in West... Well, the comparison was made especially to Germany and it was explained that a product sold in Romania is sold in UK too (I meant only a product, not the usual activity)...Pilot wrote:Much richer maybe, however, products are far more expensive!
Really ? I thought that a lot of the (infra, obviously) works everywhere round EU has some "EU "improvement" " things on it or is it just some standard sign ? Or are we talking about import/exports (trade economy)... not really interested in the politics, more interested in various views (as long as not a wall of text !).Gwyd wrote:Yes, I mean you can see how much the EU held back Wales...
Well, perhaps the torries gov't could throw another " *insert-things-here* for prosperity" or something while it's their shine-timeGwyd wrote:It was sarcasm: without the EU, Wales would be serverly impoverished.
ALEXbr wrote:This is all my homework for maths...
1496154707157-426261783.jpg
Those are geometry ? Those are not numbers, those are shapes !Pilot wrote:Letters and Numbers... Don't worry, it doesn't change, that's all my job is!
What I saw in the picture was just a "bunch of numbers"YNM wrote:ALEXbr wrote:This is all my homework for maths...
1496154707157-426261783.jpgThose are geometry ? Those are not numbers, those are shapes !Pilot wrote:Letters and Numbers... Don't worry, it doesn't change, that's all my job is!
to anyone calling geometry "bunch of numbers", you deserve to be beheadeduntil we're talking about statistics, probability or calculus there are no numbers whatsoever !
Fair enough...Pilot wrote: What I saw in the picture was just a "bunch of numbers"At the end of the day, all it is IS a bunch of numbers, just a certain combination of numbers (along with letters and symbols) to make Geometry
I don't remember so I looked it up, apparently we teach that in 9th year of regular elementary schools and 7th or 8th year in gymnasiums, but in the UK they do in Key Stage 3 which is between 7th and 9th year and I have no idea how that system works.ALEXbr wrote:BTW, when you studied those cartesian coordinate systems at school, which grade? I studied them at the end of 7th grade. But I b I heard that things in Romania are learnt in lower grades than in other countries.
Years 7-9 in the UK are the first years of High School, then Years 10-11 are the years that one would study for our GCSEs (Key Stage 4). High School in the UK covers ages 11-16, hope that helps explain it to youDrury wrote:but in the UK they do in Key Stage 3 which is between 7th and 9th year and I have no idea how that system works
I don't remember doing them, but it may have been called something different, or I may have just completely forgotten about it.ALEXbr wrote:BTW, when you studied those cartesian coordinate systems at school, which grade? I studied them at the end of 7th grade. But I b I heard that things in Romania are learnt in lower grades than in other countries
We do indeed in the UK, not sure about other countries entirely, though I think the majority (if not all) of others do.ALEXbr wrote:No link to these: I heard you allow gay marriages (West-Europeans)
Except Scotland. They don't do that.Pilot wrote:Years 7-9 in the UK are the first years of High School, then Years 10-11 are the years that one would study for our GCSEs (Key Stage 4). High School in the UK covers ages 11-16, hope that helps explain it to youDrury wrote:but in the UK they do in Key Stage 3 which is between 7th and 9th year and I have no idea how that system works
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8:36 PM - 2 Jun 2017
And they've now changed the exam system in Scotland, so I'm now officially an old fart when I talk about my Standard Grades (like people talking about their O-levels, who evidently are now even older farts).Ameecher wrote:Except Scotland. They don't do that.
So they finally left the Hogwarts system for something else? About time that happened.orudge wrote:And they've now changed the exam system in Scotland, so I'm now officially an old fart when I talk about my Standard Grades (like people talking about their O-levels, who evidently are now even older farts).Ameecher wrote:Except Scotland. They don't do that.
Highers and Advanced Highers, for the moment, are still the same, I think.
And of course, the years (P1-7, S1-6) remain the same, and to my mind seem more logical (as you have a distinction between primary and secondary).
As I understand it, universal education in Scotland predates that in England, so maybe it's a "We're English, we like to do things differently" situation.Pilot wrote:Silly Scots with their silly education systemIs there any particular reason why the system is different there, or is just a "We're Scottish, we like to do things differently" situation?
It seems you have 7 years in England though?Pilot wrote:Also, 6 years of secondary education north of the border? I find that rather interesting.
Do we? I always thought it was 5 years of secondary education that's mandatory (Years 7-11), then you have 2 years of further education, which is College or Sixth Form (where it is referred to as Years 12-13). I actually think that remaining in some form of education until you were 18 became a mandatory thing for the year group after mine, before that, you could leave at the end of Year 11, now you either have to go to college, or join an Apprenticeship or similar.orudge wrote:It seems you have 7 years in England though?Pilot wrote:Also, 6 years of secondary education north of the border? I find that rather interesting.
No thanks! I fail to understand how you can have 3 different types of schools for the same year, but that's America for you I guessorudge wrote:Could be worse though, could be the arguably more confusing American system!
And that's why direct entry into 2nd year for English students to Scottish unis is quite common because the first year of university is very much like doing A2s or year 13 in that specific subject.orudge wrote:As I understand it, universal education in Scotland predates that in England, so maybe it's a "We're English, we like to do things differently" situation.Pilot wrote:Silly Scots with their silly education systemIs there any particular reason why the system is different there, or is just a "We're Scottish, we like to do things differently" situation?
Effectively though, the two systems (I believe Wales and Northern Ireland more or less follow the English system) simply developed differently.
It seems you have 7 years in England though?Pilot wrote:Also, 6 years of secondary education north of the border? I find that rather interesting.
Wikipedia has a handy comparative table. England has something called "reception" (why isn't that just "year 1"?) when we have P1, so then our P2 is your Year 1, and so on, up to P7/Year 6. Then our S1-S6 are your Years 7-12. But you apparently have an extra Year 13.
When I was at school, only S1-S4 were mandatory, you could then choose to go to college or get a job instead of staying on for S5 (and optionally S6).
And looking at that table, Northern Ireland uses the sensible Scottish system for P1-7, but then uses "years" for secondary.
Could be worse though, could be the arguably more confusing American system!
We also have 4 years of university instead of 3, although in theory you can do direct entry to second year if your grades are good enough and you want to do so.
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