Clever kids
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midget
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Clever kids
My sister has just booked the guest room at a retirement block of flats in Horsham. The Manager asked if she knew anything about the town, so she mentioned CH and was told "You have to be ever so clever to get in there". My sister didn't disillusion her, but doesn't it just make you feel good? (After you,ve stopped laughing of course). She also said that quite a lot of local families apply.
Thou shalt not sit with statisticians nor commit a social science.
- gemmygemmerson
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- Great Plum
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- blondie95
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there were a lot of people cleverer than me at CH-Hannah you were one! But there were also a lot of people who werent cleverer but could perform well in exams therefore making themselves look cleverer. Then there was me who is not clever and cant really make myself look clever!
But then what do you deam as clever?
But then what do you deam as clever?
- 99yorkpj
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hehehe..... clever? clever? hmmm.... maybe just to the outside world, although CH does get pretty high exam results. I never really understood as in my whole 2 years as a dep and a grecian no-one seemed to do any work. The pained expressions on peoples faces before going into big school on exam day was a pretty good indicator of that too. Yet they usually came out smiling. Maybe just good at cramming? Possibly. Who knows.
My personal belief is there is a cheating poltergeist who glides round whispering answers in the ears of people it likes- the ones who didnt work, while cackling at the ones who did.

My personal belief is there is a cheating poltergeist who glides round whispering answers in the ears of people it likes- the ones who didnt work, while cackling at the ones who did.
2004-2006, Leigh Hunt B & Grecians' East.
- icomefromalanddownunder
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Some time ago I threatened to post some questions from the 1965 entrance exam that applicants for LCC places were subjected too, and here they are:
from the Arithmetic paper - time allowed, 45 minutes (for 10 questions):
Question 4
A box measuring 18cm x 38cm x 39cm is to be packed with books 19cm long, 13cm wide, and 3cm thick. Descirbe how the books should be placed in the box so that no space is wasted, and calculate how many books can be fitted in in this way.
Question 7
In a class of 40 children, 19 of them have brothers, 23 have sisters, and 8 have both. How many have brothers but no sisters? How many have neither?
Question 9
Do the following calculations in the binary scale:-
(i) 101 + 1011
(ii) 1001 - 111
(iii) 110 x 11
Blimey! I must have been smart! No calculators for us then, and I'm not sure that I could manage to get the right answer even with Excel to help.
The binary question reminds me that we used to write notes in binary code. Then trinary, etc. So many brain cells sacrificed to the grape
Moving along to the English paper. Time allowed, one hour for 4 questions:
Question 2
(a) write down fifteen things which can depend on electricity. (Example: a cooking stove).
(b) Explain why three of these are particularly useful when run by electricity. You need write only one sentence about each.
(10 minutes)
Question 4
Write a conversation between either a bus-conductor and a deaf old lady, or a shop-assistant and a lady choosing a hat.
(20 minutes)
General Paper
Question 2a
Describe how any two of the following work:-
a roundabout
a level crossing
a zebra crossing
2b
Explain as carefully as you can why man has invented the following:-
telephone, refrigerator, omnibus, blocks of flats.
Question 3
Name any other country you would like to live in. Give five reasons for your choice, and then write down five things you enjoy in England.
Question 4
Name 5 books you have read recently with their authors.
Describe in about half a page the plot of any one of them, and say why you enjoyed it.
So I reckon the LCC kids (Munch, Juliane, myself. Any others in the forum) were pretty smart. Well, definitely smarter than I am now
Caroline
from the Arithmetic paper - time allowed, 45 minutes (for 10 questions):
Question 4
A box measuring 18cm x 38cm x 39cm is to be packed with books 19cm long, 13cm wide, and 3cm thick. Descirbe how the books should be placed in the box so that no space is wasted, and calculate how many books can be fitted in in this way.
Question 7
In a class of 40 children, 19 of them have brothers, 23 have sisters, and 8 have both. How many have brothers but no sisters? How many have neither?
Question 9
Do the following calculations in the binary scale:-
(i) 101 + 1011
(ii) 1001 - 111
(iii) 110 x 11
Blimey! I must have been smart! No calculators for us then, and I'm not sure that I could manage to get the right answer even with Excel to help.
The binary question reminds me that we used to write notes in binary code. Then trinary, etc. So many brain cells sacrificed to the grape
Moving along to the English paper. Time allowed, one hour for 4 questions:
Question 2
(a) write down fifteen things which can depend on electricity. (Example: a cooking stove).
(b) Explain why three of these are particularly useful when run by electricity. You need write only one sentence about each.
(10 minutes)
Question 4
Write a conversation between either a bus-conductor and a deaf old lady, or a shop-assistant and a lady choosing a hat.
(20 minutes)
General Paper
Question 2a
Describe how any two of the following work:-
a roundabout
a level crossing
a zebra crossing
2b
Explain as carefully as you can why man has invented the following:-
telephone, refrigerator, omnibus, blocks of flats.
Question 3
Name any other country you would like to live in. Give five reasons for your choice, and then write down five things you enjoy in England.
Question 4
Name 5 books you have read recently with their authors.
Describe in about half a page the plot of any one of them, and say why you enjoyed it.
So I reckon the LCC kids (Munch, Juliane, myself. Any others in the forum) were pretty smart. Well, definitely smarter than I am now
Caroline
- englishangel
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- Mid A 15
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I was an LCC entrant in 1965. I assume boys and girls would have done the same paper if they were the same age.?icomefromalanddownunder wrote:Some time ago I threatened to post some questions from the 1965 entrance exam that applicants for LCC places were subjected too, and here they are:
from the Arithmetic paper - time allowed, 45 minutes (for 10 questions):
Question 4
A box measuring 18cm x 38cm x 39cm is to be packed with books 19cm long, 13cm wide, and 3cm thick. Descirbe how the books should be placed in the box so that no space is wasted, and calculate how many books can be fitted in in this way.
Question 7
In a class of 40 children, 19 of them have brothers, 23 have sisters, and 8 have both. How many have brothers but no sisters? How many have neither?
Question 9
Do the following calculations in the binary scale:-
(i) 101 + 1011
(ii) 1001 - 111
(iii) 110 x 11
Blimey! I must have been smart! No calculators for us then, and I'm not sure that I could manage to get the right answer even with Excel to help.
The binary question reminds me that we used to write notes in binary code. Then trinary, etc. So many brain cells sacrificed to the grape![]()
Moving along to the English paper. Time allowed, one hour for 4 questions:
Question 2
(a) write down fifteen things which can depend on electricity. (Example: a cooking stove).
(b) Explain why three of these are particularly useful when run by electricity. You need write only one sentence about each.
(10 minutes)
Question 4
Write a conversation between either a bus-conductor and a deaf old lady, or a shop-assistant and a lady choosing a hat.
(20 minutes)
General Paper
Question 2a
Describe how any two of the following work:-
a roundabout
a level crossing
a zebra crossing
2b
Explain as carefully as you can why man has invented the following:-
telephone, refrigerator, omnibus, blocks of flats.
Question 3
Name any other country you would like to live in. Give five reasons for your choice, and then write down five things you enjoy in England.
Question 4
Name 5 books you have read recently with their authors.
Describe in about half a page the plot of any one of them, and say why you enjoyed it.
So I reckon the LCC kids (Munch, Juliane, myself. Any others in the forum) were pretty smart. Well, definitely smarter than I am now![]()
Caroline
Those questions don't ring any (even distant) bells though.
Ma A, Mid A 65 -72
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Katharine
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Did CH or LCC set those exams? My brother and I both sat the Almoner's Nominees Exam (set by CH) at the same time and we did sit the same papers.Mid A 15 wrote:I was an LCC entrant in 1965. I assume boys and girls would have done the same paper if they were the same age.?
Katharine Dobson (Hills) 6.14, 1959 - 1965
- Mid A 15
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I THINK the way it worked was that CH set the papers but the LCC had a number of places available.Katharine wrote:Did CH or LCC set those exams? My brother and I both sat the Almoner's Nominees Exam (set by CH) at the same time and we did sit the same papers.Mid A 15 wrote:I was an LCC entrant in 1965. I assume boys and girls would have done the same paper if they were the same age.?
AKAP was another LCC boy from 1965 but hasn't posted for a while. The LCC became the GLC in 1965 so I think we were probably the last to get in by that particular route.
Ma A, Mid A 65 -72