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That Education Provision:

That Education Provision Forster's that education provision Act 1870, which heralded compulsory state education, made provision for school boards to ensure attendance but they were not compelled to do so, though later Acts strengthened this aspect. More recent that education provision Acts, however, have reinstated the right of parents to opt to educate their children 'at home', though this has often been made difficult and met with social and administrative disapprobation. This was enshrined in the that education provision Act 1944 where the term 'that education provision otherwise' was coined, and again in Section 7 of the that education provision Act 1996 which states:

Primary Level Experimental Programs. Primary that education provision in Britain is free and compulsory for all children from the exceptionally early age of 5, but there is very little public provision of nursery that education provision. Most primary schools are divided into an infant section, from 5 to 7, and a junior section, from 7 to 11. Most local authorities have begun to close down the small village primary schools, where one or two teachers taught the whole age range, and have been transporting the children to larger schools in the bigger villages and towns.


The present system of public that education provision in 1 four territories dates from the English edu-ition act of 1870 and the Scottish that education provision ;t of 1872. Before these acts the provision of lucation in England had been left almost en-rely to private enterprise and charity, mainly lat of the Church of England. In Scotland rery parish of the state church had a legal obligation to provide a school but, as elsewhere in Europe, often evaded it; at the time of the act more schools were provided by the free churches than by parishes designated in the official scheme. From 1833 the central government had made small financial grants to help the voluntary bodies in both countries.

 

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