Assesing someone's potential as a humanities student seems to rely a lot more on intangible impressions, though, which makes the process more susceptible to favouring people who know how to talk the talk. Whereas afaik Cambridge still base a lot of their maths interview process on 'give them some hard elementary problems, see how they get on with them / give them an exam full of hard elementary problems, see how they get on with that.'
i was actually going to make this point to you when you brought up step papers.
however, step papers in themselves can be taught can't they? i mean, they require astounding cognitive ability, but you can still teach them. so those schools who can provide will stand a better chance of successful candidates.
maths is really tough to feign understanding in though, which is probably why a lot of students find it their least favourite subject.
right, on grammar schools;
differentiation; are you KIDDING?? and the idea that broad ability comprehensives only cater for those in the middle is utterly crazy. have you ever been into a school?
i admit i have never been into a grammar school or know what they do there which is so amazing, so i'm coming in as blind as you seem to be about the comprehensive system or whatever it's called nowadays. coming from leicestershire there's just schools and that's it.
but to me it just seems to be a system that perpetuates the myth that there's successful people in life and failures, and marks them down into their respective roles at the age of 11. why not ship them off to the factories then? it also seems to disregard the fact that kids can excel in one subject and not in another and further it just causes divides across families and communities.
that's not differentiation. differentiation is about success but individual success. it shouldn't put the students on a pedestal of 'intelligence'. it should be about individual effort and achievement and doing the best that you can and that ain't what grammar schools say to me.