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Education System
“Welsh not”
Type of Schools
Types of School (Pupils)
School Organisation
Organisation of School Year
Curriculum and Assessment
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Key Stage Description
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Early Years
Key Stage 1 (5- 7 year olds)
Key Stage 2 (7- 11 year olds)
Key Stage 3 (11- 14 year olds)
Key Stage 4 (14- 16 year olds)
GCSE
Key Stage 5 (16- 18 year olds) Six Form
A levels
University Education
Becoming a Teacher in Wales
Management and Funding Schools
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Teachers’ salaries 2016/17
Sources
Welsh Traditions
Welsh Language
Welsh Alphabet
Eisteddfod
Cymanfa Ganu
Male Voice Choirs
Lovespoons
Rugby Union
Famous Welshmen and Women
Welsh Tradition Sources
Welsh History
The Earliest Farming in Wales
Bronze Age
Iron Age Hill Forts
Celtic Tribes in Wales before Romans
Roman Wales
The Romans and Isca (Caerleon)
The Age of the Saints
Early Medieval Wales
Normans in Wales
Edward I and his Conquest of Wales
Owain Glyndwr’s Rebellion
Union with England
Religion in Wales
Religion in Wales - Non-Conformists
Wales in the Industrial Age- Iron
Wales in the Industrial Age- coal
Slate Industry
Riots and Risings
Importance of Cardiff since 1839
Twentieth Century Decline
Devolution
Welsh History Sources
Educational Visits
Landaff Cathedral
Cardiff Bay
Gower Peninsula
St Fagans
Welsh Recipes
Welsh Cake
Bara Brith
Teisen Lap
Welsh Rarebit
Welsh Cawl
Glamorgan Sausage
Welsh Recipes Sources
Slate Industry
Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the slate industry in north-west Wales was the equivalent to the iron and coal industries of south Wales. Penrhyn quarry near Bethesda, was the largest slate mine in the world in 1900.