Teacher and student

Traditionally, the term "student" is reserved for people studying at university level in the United Kingdom. Children studying at school are called "pupils or schoolchildren or schoolboys or schoolgirls.
However, the American English use of the word student to include pupils of all ages, even at elementary level, is now spreading to other countries, and is occasionally found in the UK particularly in the state sector as well as Australia and Singapore. In South Africa, the term learner"is also used.
In England and Wales, teenagers who attend a college or secondary school for further education are typically called "sixth formers". If pupils follow the average pattern of school attendance, pupils will be in "year 12" between the ages of 16 and 17, and "year 13" between 17 and 18, however many schools still refer to them as the "lower sixth" and upper sixth. The successful completion of VI Form and the acquisition of A Level qualifications is the traditional path to university education.In Scotland, pupils sit Highers at the end of fifth year after which it is possible for them to gain entry to university. Many pupils, however, choose to remain at school for a sixth year to grow in maturity and to gain extra qualifications.

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