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The Tripartite System was the selective school system of state-funded secondary education between 1945 and the 1970s in England and Wales, and from 1947 to 2009 in Northern Ireland. It was an administrative implementation of the Education Act 1944 [1] and the Education Act (Northern Ireland) 1947.
The Education Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 introduced a school system which included a government-run eleven-plus post-primary transfer test as an entrance exam for grammar schools; this had previously been introduced in England and Wales in 1944. The test, a form of academic selection, was retained in Northern Ireland whereas England and Wales ...
Frustrated Contracts Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 c. 2 (N.I.) Education Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 c. 3 (N.I.) Small Dwellings Acquisition Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 c. 8 (N.I.) Drainage Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 c. 9 (N.I.) Emergency Laws (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 c. 10 (N.I.) Finance Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 ...
An Act to reform the law relating to education in Northern Ireland and for purposes connected with the said matter. Citation: 1947 c. 3 (N.I.) Dates; Royal assent: 27 March 1947: Text of the Education Act (Northern Ireland) 1947 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.
The Tillage General Order (Northern Ireland) 1947 No. 178: The Public Health and Local Government (Transfer of Functions) (No. 9) Order (Northern Ireland) 1947 No. 179: The Housing Subsidy Order (Northern Ireland) 1947 No. 180: No. 181: The Bacon Industry (Pig Nutrition) Research Grant) Order (Northern Ireland) 1947 No. 182 & 183: No. 184
An Act to enlarge the legislative power of the Parliament of Northern Ireland in respect of certain matters and, in connection therewith, to remove doubts regarding the validity of certain laws made by that Parliament; to validate the Fire Services (Emergency Provisions) Act (Northern Ireland), 1942; to apply Part III of the Requisitioned Land ...
Forcing the Irish education system’s “equality of opportunity” on Northern Ireland’s middle class nationalists and unionists in a united Ireland would be “very unpopular”, an economist ...
37) whereby the Scottish Office, under the Secretary of State for Scotland, undertook similar responsibilities to the Ministry of Education but for Scotland. [2] Northern Irish education was subject to the Education Act (Northern Ireland) 1947, passed by the Northern Ireland parliament at Stormont, which provided powers to the Minister of ...