Title: Reconfiguring the curriculum
1- Reconfiguring the curriculum
Part of system redesign at Serlby Park
2CONTEXT
- Characteristics
- Ex-pit village
- Traditional low educational expectations
- Limited employment opportunities
- Curriculum Change rationale-post-14
- Results seem to have come up against a barrier
- Diploma and other initiatives need another
timetabled approach - The school is only large enough for year groups
of 130 max. - Previous KS4 offer was very limited (9 GCSE
subject choices, sometimes repeated across 4
option blocks) - Area was judged to be in need of a vocational
input - Broadening choice is expensive
- Broadening choice can lead to staffing imbalances
3The Next Five Years?
- Greater choice ie. Specialist Diplomas-51 new
lines of learning by 2013 - Much greater flexibility to use a thematic,
competence-based approach-new curriculum
orders-KS3, SATs. - Creation of foundation diplomas-modular and
varied ie. OCN, Pathways - Young Apprenticeships a much more viable feature
of provision - Less age-rigid organisation/structure.examinatio
ns when ready - Travel to other institutions much more common
- Outside providers much more common-place
- Extended schooling much expanded
- Collaborative QA Processes-more shared
responsibility for achievement - Electronic/multi-media approaches become the
norm, not the exception
4Structure
5Why redesign?Timetabling
- Research points to real advantages and is
supported by results (so far)! - Plenaries assume greater significance
- Broadening the curriculum is more cost-efficient
- Why 16?
- Structured G and T provision
- Year 11 is a coursework/revision log jam why
not spread the load? - Part-timers are easier to recruit
- Collaboration is on a surer foundation
- Individual subjects face much more competition
under present system- more students will ease
these problems - Staffing imbalance is not extreme
- Travel logistics are eased
- Timetable can roll forward with a real purpose
- The wider variety of experience cuts pressures on
school to provide everything-external
providers, other schools, work .
6Why redesign?Pupil outcomes
- Increase in examination performance
- Personalised learning through wider curriculum
choice - Learning needs reinforcement ideally within 24
hours-hence it is actually more beneficial to
cram more into a few days - Lower attainers spend 2 years in GCSE and our own
experiences show that they get the same grade (or
better) after 1 year (76 of cases) - We do not catch them at their most enthusiastic
- There is no extrinsic reward for GCSE work until
after they have left school - GCSE choices locks in a student for two years,
regardless of whether the course is the suitable
one - Gives wider exposure to different student
cohorts-more opportunity for role model
development
7Why not?
Difficulties in timetabling different age groups
together Individualising the learning
experience is expensive Broadening the options
choice could be a threat to traditional
subjects and certainly could lead to staffing
imbalances Pupils may not be ready for GCSEs at
an early age Different age groups may not work
well together
8Example-Option Block
- PE GCSE Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
YA Food Level 2 - French Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
Maths AS Level 3 - Food Tech. Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
Pathways Level 1 - Cake Decorating Levels 1 and 2 ABC
Individual Arrangements - Res. Materials Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
- Spanish Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
- Building Trades Level 1 City/G
- Construction Btec Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
- Hair and Beauty Levels 1 and 2 City/G
- (Cert./BTEC) Edexcel
- Horsecare Level 1 BHS
- Childcare Levels 1 and 2 AQA
- Art Levels 1 and 2 AQA
- Music Levels 1 and 2 AQA
- Drama Levels 1 and 2 AQA
- History Levels 1 and 2 AQA
- Geography Levels 1 and 2 Edexcel
- Business Levels 1 and 2 AQA 2 years
- YA Construction Level 2
9- Process
- Options Choices process begins one year earlier,
in Year 8 - It is repeated each year (2 choices)
- Students choose 1 from each block each year
(unless it is a two year course) - If course is full, they are first priority next
year - Languages are given first priority in Year 9
- Logistics
- 6 option qualifications-ongoing choice of what
to study and at what level (8 best GCSE
equivalents used for capped APS) - Level 3 is now much more viable (earlier, if
required) - Cores almost unaffected (for now!)-helps new
performance tables - Helps to greatly extend choice, both logistically
(little timetable disruption) and cost-wise (much
larger cohort)
10Obstacles
- the secondary blockings system remains the
greatest structural (and psychological) barrier
to change - the inclusion of maths and English in the league
tables may well lead to less willingness to
change - individualising the learning experience is
expensive - Broadening the options choice could be a threat
to traditional subjects and certainly could
lead to staffing imbalances - subject dominance/ fear continues to play a major
role in limiting changes to the timetable - Perception that more ICT-led learning cant give
students the experiences a teacher can
11Areas for concern Points raised by staff
- MFL development -Early AS level/more languages/
-
conversation classes/ video-conferencing - Break in option subject study -52 of students in
FE start - subjects they have never studied
- -Many HE courses are completely
new - YEAR 9- too early intellectually???
- PE-too weedy???
-
12Curriculum for 2008-9 Timetable plan for KS3 KS4
13Possible Y7 8 Core Day (Tues/Thurs)
Y7 8 Core Day (Tues/Thurs)
14Y7 8 Cross-Curricular days (Mon, Wed, Fri)
15Foundation Learning Tier (Years 9,10,11-lower 10
of attainers and offered in addition to the
option blocks)
- BTEC Introductory Vocational Certificate and NOCN
Qualifications (points?) - Trowel skills
- Looking after children
- Healthy bodies
- Horse riding
- Introduction to ICT
- Leading to Construction Level 1, Health and
Social Care Level 1 - Performing Arts
- Motorbike maintenance
- Art
- Leisure and Tourism
- Certificate of Personal Effectiveness (25 points)
- Work placement (half day or full day)
- Princes Trust Excel
- Functional skills pilot (both entry level 3 and
level 1) - 3 wider key skills (51 points)
- Improving own learning
16Aims and Objectives of our KS3 curriculum
- To ease transition in terms of the social and
emotional aspects of learning (SEAL) - To provide a Primary based cross curricular
approach to learning. - To learn how to learn and how to think
- To develop soft skills
- Ultimately helping pupils to settle more
quickly and so reduce the learning loss / dip in
attainment
17THE NEW QCA CURRICULUM SERLBY PARK COMPETENCIES
18Department Physical Education 2007 Year 11 GCSE
A-C rate 57 2008 Year 11 GCSE
66 2008 Year 9/10 GCSE 74
History 2007 Year 11 GCSE A-C rate 49 2008
Year 11 GCSE 51 2008 Year
9/10 GCSE 67 (Yr9
72) French 2007 Year 11 GCSE A-C rate
52 2008 Year 11 GCSE
56 2008 Year 9/10 GCSE 74 (Yr
9 79)
19Timeline for redesign
- Presentation to staff October INSET day
- Written proposal to all staff November requesting
feedback - Repeat written proposal to all staff January
requesting feedback - Evaluation forms to departments January-all
returned bar 1 - Full governors meeting January-proposal adopted
- Student assembly January (Year 8)
- Parent Information letter/booklet January (Year
9) - Discussion relevant TLR1s/TLR2s February/March
- Research and timetable questions February/March
- Parent Information Evening/Student options day
March (Year 9) - Parental information letter/booklet March (Year
8) - Parent Information Evening Year 8 April (Year 8)
20Evaluating redesign
- Pupil survey
- 100 of Year 9 consider it a positive move
- 54 of Year 10 consider it a positive move
- 95 of Year 10 would have opted for the change if
the opportunity had been given to them last year - Staff survey
- 95 of affected staff rated the move positive,
or very positive in informal survey March 08