Example sentences of "go [adv prt] to [adj] education " in BNC.

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1 One in four young people goes on to higher education ; at the beginning of the 1980s , it was only one in eight .
2 The 18+ examinations were seen , as the Secretary of State himself recognized , again partly as another such certificate for those who had stayed the next voluntary two years at school , partly as an aptitude test for those who were to go on to higher education , partly as a still more specific entry requirement for admission to specified courses in institutions of higher education .
3 During the 1980s , there has been a marked decline in the proportion of secondary students who gain the Sudan School Certificate which enables them to go on to higher education or enter the civil service .
4 No longer did a sixth former of limited means need to win a scholarship to go on to higher education : admission secured a grant from the Local Authority .
5 And literacy is not the end of the road : there is the added incentive that those adults who can read and write now have the opportunity to go on to higher education through a special rural matriculation scheme .
6 They may not be sure exactly what career they want , or whether to go on to higher education .
7 Curing the deficiency in this area , thirdly , is the necessary base for a much larger proportion of our age groups than at present ( about 15% ) to go on to advanced education — in both academic and especially applied studies .
8 Should girls brought up in Britain be allowed to go on to further education ?
9 If we could be certain ( as we ought ) that every person of 16 had the opportunity to go on to further education or practical , examinable work , then we could drop the 16+ examination without loss , and with a possible simplification of the school curriculum up to that point .
10 The ratio of boys to girls going on to further education was 50 per cent in 1925 , and 63 per cent in 1978 .
11 They have then concluded that going on to further education or staying at school are better options .
12 The majority of our trainees are hoping for a career in care , and we hope that many will be going on to further education at the end of the year .
13 New College is proud of its academic record , with most students going on to further education .
14 Such a dramatic decline made possible an improvement in the opportunity index , the measure of the percentage of all eleven-year-old children going on to secondary education .
15 In particular the block examination at 16+ appears to have lost its justification , when almost all 16-year-olds will go on to further education of some sort , whether in a sixth form or elsewhere .
16 Out of seventy children in the village school only sixteen could go on to further education after the age of ten or eleven .
17 In 1979 , only one young person in eight went on to higher education .
18 A young person officially comes of age at eighteen but , when so many go on to higher education and training after leaving school , even that does not mark the end of dependence on parents or state .
19 A fast-growing proportion of young people go on to higher education ; and we want to see that proportion rise still further .
20 But about half of the 200,000 people who fall into either of those categories go on to full-time education and become entitled to student relief of the community charge .
21 Academic results are high and most go on to further education .
22 People who have gone on to higher education are less likely than others to have used HP or credit from fuel boards .
23 ‘ Seventy five per cent of our pupils have gone on to further education , mainly at Aquinas College , and we are delighted with their successes and commitment . ’
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