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We Live and Learn - Schools and Learning Terms
We live and learn!

We Live and Learn - Schools and Learning Terms

Quiz playing is a wonderful way to increase your knowledge of English as a Second Language. Remember that all of our ESL quizzes have titles that are both friendly and technical at the same time… In the case of this quiz you might like to tell your friends about “We Live and Learn” but no doubt your teachers will talk about the “Confidence Words and Terms quiz”! If you hear a technical term and you want to find a quiz about the subject then just look through the list of quiz titles until you find what you need.

It is an English proverb to say - especially if we have just dealt with some difficult experience - 'We live and learn'! This quiz will teach you all about the terms used in schools and learning.

Here are some questions on some words and terms to check how confident you are with the language we use to describe schools and the learning process.

1 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
It is accepted as a practical tradition by most people, that children who go to most schools in Britain ... ... wear a uniform.
... do ...
... must ...
... have to ...
... are expected to ...
Answers 3 & 4 are actually fine, but Answer 2 is the simplest and most direct way of saying this.
2 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
The four main skills in using a language (your own, or anyone else's) are listening, ... ... , ... ... and ... ... .
... watching, writing and looking.
... speaking, writing and remembering.
... speaking, writing and reading.
... speeking, writting and reeding.
As an active language learner, you probably knew this!
All the verbs in Answer 4 are spelt wrong.
3 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
Most teachers these days are aware that students are most likely to remember things when they have been ... ...
... reading them recently.
... listening in silence to the teacher.
... doing practical activities in order to gain direct experience.
... playing games and filling in worksheets.
Different people learn in different ways, but generally this is true!
4 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
Learning about language is usually known as ... ... , and learning about numbers is called ... ... .
... writing ... / ... sums ...
... numeracy ... / ... literacy ...
... literacy ... / ... numeracy ...
... linguistics ... / ... mathematics ...
When talking about school-level studies, these are the words used by the British Government.
5 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
The techniques and discipline of putting full-stops, question marks, speech marks etc. correctly into your text are known as ... ... .
... points.
... accuracy.
... punctuation.
... grammar.
No further comment ... except to say that it can be very hard to make sense of a list without any punctuation!
6 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
Traditionally, a high-school student should arrive for the day with a minimum set of equipment including: ...
... a pen, pencil and sharpener; a set of coloured crayons or pens; a calculator, and a set of mathematical instruments including a ruler.
... pencil and sharpener; a series of coloured crayons or pens; a calculater, and a group of mathemetical instruments including a ruller.
... pencil sharpener; a load of coloured crayons or pens; a calculater, and a grup of mathemetical istruments included a ruller.
... loads of coloured pens a calculater and a grup of mathemetical istruments include a ruller.
Answer 1 is fine. The later versions have more and more mistakes in the wording, spelling and punctuation.
7 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
Many secondary schools ~ and employers ~ expect students in their 'mid-teens' to achieve good grades in five subjects at the GCSE exams.
The usual subjects in which this level should be reached are: ... ...
... the 'core' subjects (English and Maths), a modern language and one from the Humanities (History / Geography) or a creative subject (such as Drama, or Design and Technology).
... the 'core' subjects (English, Maths and Science), a modern language and one from the Humanities (History / Geography / Religious Education) or a creative subject (such as Drama, or Design and Technology); and probably Information Technology.
... the 'core' subjects (Maths and Science), a modern language or a creative subject (such as Drama, or Design and Technology); and probably Information Technology.
... the 'core' subjects (English, Maths and Science), a creative subject (such as Drama, or Design and Technology); and probably Information Technology.
This would be a typical scheme. If you don't know the English name for any of these subjects, make sure you check it soon!
8 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
Most students at a college or university ~ when they are aged about 20 ~ are probably ... ... who are 'reading' (or studying) for ... ... .
... undergraduates ... / ... a diploma.
... undergraduates ... / ... a degree.
... freshmen ... / ... a doctorate.
... dropouts ... / ... a licence.
A student in the first cycle at a 'uni' will be an undergraduate, working towards a first degree. Once they have reached that level they may continue with 'post-doctorate' research for a higher degree, such as a Master's or Doctorate.
9 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
The type of school where most children start their education is called a ... ... School.
... Little ...
... Primary ...
... Preparatory ...
...High ...
'Primary' as in 'first' ~ similar to 'Prime Minister' and 'prime numbers' (you might check these phrases in your dictionary, too).
10 .
Pick the word/s which fill the gap/s to make the best sensible English.
In mathematics, sometimes we just have to guess a number and see if it works out right in the calculation. If it isn't right, we try again with a slightly different number (bigger or smaller) until we find the right one.
Back in the 'bad old days' this method was called ' ... ... ', but now we call it ' ... ... ' !
... 'try it and see' ... / ... 'getting it right'.
... 'trial with mistakes' ... / ... 'trial until it's perfect'.
... 'keep on trying' ... / ... 'find it in the end'.
... 'trial and error' ... / ... 'trial and improvement'.
Yes: you had to work your way through 4 possible answers ~ just like in the Method itself!
'Trial and error' was a perfectly good description, because anyone is likely to make some mistakes on the way to reaching the right answer. As long as you were sensible enough to recognise the mistakes, and move onwards the right way from them, there was nothing deeply 'wrong' about this method ... apart (of course) from a few well-intentioned wrong number-values as you followed the process.
But then the educationalists felt that it was also wrong (!) to suggest that children 'ought' to make mistakes, even if this was part of the very way to progress towards the right answer. So we can't call the method 'trial and error' any more; nowadays it's 'trial and improvement', which sounds a lot more positive. Yet there wouldn't be any 'improvement' ... unless there were a less-than-perfect earlier guess, to be improved upon!
In a much broader sense, this is an interesting example of how language changes, and how tastes and public opinions and use of language can change. A language is a living thing, used every day by human beings, and we human beings can be 'a funny lot' ... the English just as much as anyone else! It can do you no harm to be aware that language is changing and developing, in little and other ways, as time goes by. Let's hope that more-than-not of that is 'improvement'!
Author:  Ian Miles

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