School Certificate - instituted in 1958\nSchool Commercial Certificate - instituted in 1927\nSchool Technical Certificate - instituted in 1957 (extended in 1958 to include some 'domestic' subjects)\n\nThe groupings of the subjects offered for the School Commercial Certificate and the School Technical Certificate are prescribed in the regulations. For the School Certificate the selection of the subjects (except English Language) is left to the discretion of the school.\n\nThe certificates awarded did not provide any sort of vocational qualification. In 1970 the School Certificate was replaced by the Secretarial/Clerical Examinations Stage 1, which sought to offer a more vocational qualification. In recent years prior to this decision the numbers of candidates for the School Certificate Examinations saw a decline due to the introduction of the Certificate for secondary Education.
School Commercial Certificate - instituted in 1927\nSchool Technical Certificate - instituted in 1957 (extended in 1958 to include some 'domestic' subjects)\n\nThe groupings of the subjects offered for the School Commercial Certificate and the School Technical Certificate are prescribed in the regulations. For the School Certificate the selection of the subjects (except English Language) is left to the discretion of the school.\n\nThe certificates awarded did not provide any sort of vocational qualification. In 1970 the School Certificate was replaced by the Secretarial/Clerical Examinations Stage 1, which sought to offer a more vocational qualification. In recent years prior to this decision the numbers of candidates for the School Certificate Examinations saw a decline due to the introduction of the Certificate for secondary Education.
33 000 people registered for the Certificate in Business Language Competence between May 1994 and April 1996. In light of growing business communications with France, Germany and Japan a survey was conducted by the RSA on 355 of the largest 1000 companies (by sales turnover) in Britain. It found that 44% of organisations employed staff who could speak at least one of the three languages, but only 19% were able to deal with simple telephone enquiries.
33 000 people registered for the Certificate in Business Language Competence between May 1994 and April 1996. In light of growing business communications with France, Germany and Japan a survey was conducted by the RSA on 355 of the largest 1000 companies (by sales turnover) in Britain. It found that 44% of organisations employed staff who could speak at least one of the three languages, but only 19% were able to deal with simple telephone enquiries.
33 000 people registered for the Certificate in Business Language Competence between May 1994 and April 1996. In light of growing business communications with France, Germany and Japan a survey was conducted by the RSA on 355 of the largest 1000 companies (by sales turnover) in Britain. It found that 44% of organisations employed staff who could speak at least one of the three languages, but only 19% were able to deal with simple telephone enquiries.
33 000 people registered for the Certificate in Business Language Competence between May 1994 and April 1996. In light of growing business communications with France, Germany and Japan a survey was conducted by the RSA on 355 of the largest 1000 companies (by sales turnover) in Britain. It found that 44% of organisations employed staff who could speak at least one of the three languages, but only 19% were able to deal with simple telephone enquiries.