Title: Curriculum for Excellence
1Curriculum for Excellence Experiences and
Outcomes the curriculum for all learners from
3 to 15 Support for Reflection and Engagement
2Overview of Curriculum for Excellence
Why does Scotland need Curriculum for Excellence?
What is Curriculum for Excellence?
How did we reach this point?
Look across and within curriculum areas
Next steps?
3Overview of Curriculum for Excellence
Why does Scotland need Curriculum for Excellence?
What is Curriculum for Excellence?
How did we reach this point?
Next steps?
4Why does Scotland need Curriculum for Excellence?
Future economy and society each individual
needs the skills and attributes for life, work
and learning
To ensure the highest standards of attainment and
achievement
5Overview of Curriculum for Excellence
Why does Scotland need Curriculum for Excellence?
What is Curriculum for Excellence?
How did we reach this point?
Look across and within curriculum areas
Next steps?
6(No Transcript)
7Entitlements
- A coherent curriculum from 3 to 18
- A broad general education from age 3 to the end
of S3 or equivalent - A senior phase opportunities for qualifications
and other planned opportunities to develop the
four capacities - Learning through the experiences and outcomes
across all curriculum areas - - Breadth achieved through learning across all
the experiences and outcomes in the eight
curriculum areas up to the third curriculum
level - - Most learners will progress towards fourth
level in chosen areas at appropriate points
during S1 to S3 - Opportunities to develop skills for learning,
skills for life and skills for work, literacy,
numeracy and health and wellbeing - The best personal support to allow high levels
of achievement - Opportunities and support to move into positive
and sustained destinations post school
8The curriculum all that we plan for children
and young peoples learning
Values wisdom, justice, compassion, integrity
Effective teaching and active, sustained learning
Entitlements
Experiences and outcomes from early to fourth
levels in eight curriculum areas
Alignment of assessment, qualifications self-evalu
ation and accountability, professional
development with purposes
Principles challenge and enjoyment breadth,
progression, depth personalisation and
choice coherence, relevance
Personal support for learning through choices and
changes into positive and sustained destinations
9The curriculum frameworkwhat are the
experiences and outcomes for?
- They describe national expectations for learning
from the early years to the end of S3 (age 3-15). - Together, they embody the attributes and
capabilities of the four capacities. - They apply to the totality of experiences which
are planned for during a childs education. - All the experiences and outcomes to the third
level and those selected for study at the fourth
make up the broad general education to which all
children are entitled.
10How is the guidance structured?
The curriculum areas
Literacy across learning
Health and wellbeing across learning
Numeracy across learning
Expressive arts
Health and wellbeing
Languages Literacy and English Literacy and
Gàidhlig Modern languages Gaelic
(learners) Classical languages
Mathematics
Religious and moral education Religious education
in Roman Catholic schools
Sciences
Social studies
Technologies
11What does the guidance include?
- Principles and practice section for each
curriculum area - Experiences and outcomes for each curriculum area
to the third level and those selected for study
at the fourth - The broad general education to which all children
are entitled from pre-school to S3 - The exceptions to this statement are where
specific sets of experiences and outcomes are
specialised Gàidhlig, Gaelic (learners) and
classical languages and religious education in
Roman Catholic schools.
12How are the experiences and outcomes structured?
- Principles and practice sections essential
information - Introductory statements
- Presented across early, first, second, third and
fourth levels to indicate progression - Organised into lines of development
- Some explanations
13How can you see progression in the structure of
the curriculum framework?
14What do the codes mean?
LIT 1-01a
Curriculum area code LIT literacy Level code Line of development code Code denoting number of outcomes within line of development at that level
The codes are purely for ease of reference
15The experiences and outcomes how did we move
from the drafts to the published versions?
1475 questionnaires 937 from groups
241 trialling reports
University of Glasgow analysis
20 focus groups
2012 other submissions
Plans to address issues raised edit - explain -
exemplify - CPD
Further consultation with teachers and others
Published version
16What happened in response to feedback?
- Editing and sometimes restructuring of the sets
of experiences and outcomes - Provision of further explanations where needed
- Plans for exemplification of how the experiences
and outcomes can work in practice this will be
published over the coming months - Specific technical and other points addressed
17Next steps?
- Teachers can usefully
- look across the entire set to see where their
contributions will be - understand their responsibilities within health
and wellbeing literacy numeracy - familiarise themselves with the framework which
relates to a particular stage/subject.
18 Now find out about a particular curriculum
area.