A series on decimal money for people who handle cash at work
Helping customers to use old and new money together, with more exercises in change-giving.
Coins needed: as for yesterday, plus 6 x 1d and 4 x 3d-bits.
Presented by Robert Dougall
Discover 11,128,835 listings and 279,933 playable programmes from the BBC
A series on decimal money for people who handle cash at work
Helping customers to use old and new money together, with more exercises in change-giving.
Coins needed: as for yesterday, plus 6 x 1d and 4 x 3d-bits.
Presented by Robert Dougall
9.16 Mathematics in Action: Binary Information
Introduced by Frank Lovis
9.38 Maths Today: Year 2: Combined Operations
Introduced by Derick Last
10.0 Maths Workshop: Stage 2: The Place that Counts
10.25-10.45 Twentieth-Century Focus: Television - Medium or Message?: 3: The Electronic Village
11.0 Watch!: Communications: 2: The Post Office
Introduced by Rosanne Harvey
11.18 Going to Work: Animal Technician
11.40 Making Music
Introduced by Julian Smith
12.5 Engineering Craft and Science: Unit 4: Metal Cutting: 4
(Colour)
The Methodist Revival
Tog finds a musical instrument and learns what fun it is to blow a tune.
by John Tully
with the Preston Youth Band
Conducted by T. Mitchell
A series of ten programmes designed for student nurses.
Introduced by Christine Pickard
With Roy Dotrice
Today: The Dark King of the Underworld
Introduced by Johnny Morris
The World of Animals
In the wild, in the zoo, at home - a magazine of stories about animals constantly illustrating their own kind of magic.
(from Bristol)
with Patrick Moore
In the last programme of the series, Patrick Moore talks about the possibility of life elsewhere in the universe, and describes some of the constellations you will be able to see later this year.
Written and told by Eric Thompson.
The news, features, opinions of the country at large, and Your Region Tonight in particular (including Regional Weather) co-ordinated by Michael Barratt
by William Emms
Starring James Ellis, Derek Waring, with Ian Cullen
Skinner gets extra duty... to pursue... a woman...
Tonight's British comedy film stars Anton Rodgers, Eric Sykes, Charlotte Rampling
Despite protests from some of his old-fashioned henchmen, 'The Duke' decides to introduce automation into his next master-minded robbery - and finds science has its limitations.
A story of bumbling crooks which inevitably ends in total disaster, with Eric Sykes on the side of the cops and Anton Rodgers leading the robbers.
(This Week's Films: page 11)
Robert Robinson dips into the BBC's mailbag and adds a few comments of his own.
Presented this week by Kenneth Kendall with the BBC's reporters and correspondents around the world
Weather
Do our children get a fair deal from their examiners?
Part of school and university life is a hurdle race, run, so the theory goes, to sort the excellent from the middling from the failures. It is called the examination system and it is used to label young people for life.
Most parents accept without question that sometimes at 11, then at 15 or 16, maybe at 18, 21, 22 or even beyond, their sons and daughters should be put on trial by examination. Some will Pass: more will fail - affecting family and careers. A fair-sized minority of results will be unfair: marking errors, health, nerves and other factors will distort them.
Is this a fair and accurate way of judging human beings and should parents and employers put such faith in paper results?
With teachers and educationists we follow a group of young people aged between 15 and 22 through their exams over one year to look for the answers.
(The man who failed the School Cert: p9)
Conceived, written and performed by Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin
Also appearing Carol Cleveland
with the latest news in pictures
The essence of spiritual healing is to be a channel for energies that I would regard as divine.
The Rev Dr Kenneth Cuming, Hon Religious Adviser to the Churches' Fellowship for Psychical and Spiritual Studies, talks to Geoffrey Moorhouse about spiritual healing.
followed by Regional News and Weather (all except London and Wales)
Closedown