The 11+ was scrapped in Cumberland in 1967, but a new system of secondary education was introduced where every pupil had to spend two years in a secondary modern and was then assessed whether or not they would go to the grammar school. What happened was half way through the second year, a head of house would meet up with the teachers and decide from your three school reports if you were suitable for the grammar school ot would stay in the secondary modern. You would then get a letter sent home in the February of the second year which would state grammar school, borderline( you could go to the grammar school, but stay in the secondary modern if you wanted) or secondary, which meant you had to stay in the secondary moden. I got the words " grammar school" on mine and my mother bought me a Monty Python LP for passing.
The system was more equitable as it removed the them and us situation of the 11+, but there were big differences once you changed schools at the start of the third form. The 25% who went to the grammar school took O and A levels, studied subjects like German and music that weren't taken in the secondary modetns, and had better qualified teachers. For the 75% stuck in the secondary moderns, subjects could only be taken as CSEs to age 16, and there was a heavy emphasis on craft subjects for boys and home economics for girls, with academuc subjects being less important.
This system, which was probably unique, ended in 1984 when all the local schools merged into 11-18 comprehensives and the 13+ was abolished. It was interesting that many of the secondary modern teachers who were over 50 that had basic teaching qualifications took early retirement, and the ex grammar teachers now had to teach a wider range of pupils( some retired early as well after a year or two). Also while the rigid distinctions with subjects and qualifications was phased out by 1986, the school did have streaming for various subjects.