Title: Year 12 Induction Evening for Parents and Students
1 Year 12 Induction Evening for Parents and
Students
Little Heath School
2The Curriculum
- A broader curriculum
- 4 AS in Year 12 instead of 3 A Levels
- 3 (or 4) A Levels in Year 13
- Much more opportunity for mix-and-match between
academic and applied (more vocational) AS / A
Levels - Intermediate GNVQ and re-sit English
Mathematics for those who need to top-up GCSE
qualifications
3APPLIED A LEVELS
- Were called AVCEs until August 2005- more
vocational than traditional A Level subjects - Advanced Double Award 12 units
- (Equivalent to 2 A Levels)
- Advanced Single Award 6 units
- (Equivalent to 1 A Level)
- Grading is identical to A Level A - E, and U
(but in double award you can get split grades
such as AB) - Some units assessed by coursework (66), others
by tests.
Subjects Business Studies, Health and Social
Care, Leisure Studies and I.C.T.
4How are AS / A Levels assessed?
A Level
- 6 units, each weighted at between 15 - 20
- Advanced Subsidiary (AS) 3 units
- AS is a separate qualification, but its also
the first half of A Level. -
- A2 3 units
- AS A2 A Level
- AS A2 are weighted equally (50 each) when
awarding overall A Level qualification. - Some units assessed by examinations, others by
coursework. - Subjects either have 1 or 2 coursework units
(maximum 30).
5Coursework Dates
- Dates in tonights booklet
- Crucial not to fall behind!!
- Check Department handouts for further
information. - These are available in the Small Hall and at the
back of this hall after this session.
6Examination Entries
- Assessment seasons in January June.
- All individual units may be retaken
- Private entry c.10
- Best result stands
-
- L6 Jan A few examination entries permitted
- L6 June All Units 1 - 3
Whole AS - U6 Jan Any Unit 4 - 6 (A2)
- any re-sit AS unit
- U6 June All remaining Units 4 - 6 Whole A2
- any re-sit unit
7Key Dates 2005 - 2007
- September 2005
- AS courses begun by your sons and daughters
- Summer 2006
- Your sons and daughters gain AS qualifications
- RESULTS DAY Thursday 17 August 2005
- June 2006
- A2 courses begun by your sons and daughters
- Summer 2007
- Your sons and daughters gain A Level
qualifications - RESULTS DAY Provisional Thur. 16 Aug. 06
8School Calendar 2005 - 2007
- Year 12 2005/06
- October
- 13 Introductory Evening
- 17 - 4 Nov. Target Setting
- November
- 14 Progress Review issued
- 17 Academic Review Day
- January
- Some AS, Applied AS GNVQ exams
- 20 February / 3 March
- AS Mock Examinations
- March
- 16 Results Day (January)
- 31 Progress Review
- April
- 25 Parents Evening
- c.15 May - c.16June
- AS Examinations
- June
- Year 13 2006/07
- September
- 5 Term starts
- October
- UCAS applications
- November
- Progress Review
- December
- Parents Evening
- January
- AS Resits / A2 Examinations
- March
- January Results Day
- Progress Review
- c.21 May - 1 July
- A2 Examinations / Resits
- August
- 16 A Level Results Day (Provisional)
9Be Professional Students
- Hard work
- Study Skills
- Deadlines
- Time management
- Effective use of free periods
10Focus on long-term goals
- Priorities
- Social life
- Part-time jobs
- Schoolwork 16 hours per week outside school
- 4 hrs. per subject
- Sixth Form block open from 8.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
11Take Responsibility for your own learning
- Ask for help
- subject teachers
- form tutor
- us
- Reading and research
- the library
- the Internet - use Little Heath website
- newspapers
- Make good use of the school website
- www.littleheath.org.uk
- Set yourself targets for improvement and work
towards achieving them.
12Home Study Arrangements
- All Sixth Form students will be permitted to
study at home during free lessons in the
afternoon at times agreed with their tutor.
Consequently, if you are free during period 5
you may leave school at 1.20p.m. with your
tutors permission. - However students must attend afternoon
registrations on Mondays, and Tuesdays for
important tutorial work and assemblies. - Tutors may need to see students on Wednesdays,
Thursdays and Fridays occasionally, for
target-setting for example. On those days
students may go home at 2.25p.m.
13Target Setting
- The aim of this is to improve student achievement
by raising expectations. - GCSE performance is used by national
organisations to predict AS and A Level outcomes.
- We will be asking your sons and daughters to add
appropriate challenge to these predictions. - We have shown everyone how to access the UCAS
website, to research available courses and entry
requirements. - This month Year 12 all sat ALIS tests. This was
to help establish these targets. This was an
adult CAT test, assessing natural potential.
14Plan Your Future
- Consider your ambitions
- What careers interest you?
- Do you want to go to University?
- What courses would you like or need to study?
How would I find out about that?
Ask UCAS http//www.ucas.ac.uk/
15Aimhigher Partnerships for Progression
- Aimhigher is a national initiative, jointly
funded by the LSC and the Higher Education
Funding Council. - Its aim is to widen and increase participation in
Higher Education. - Little Heath is actively involved in this
project. - Potential areas for development
- Master classes to introduce students to study at
undergraduate level - Aspiration raising
- Residential and national summer schools
- e.g. University of Reading offers a specialist
Science summer school for students in Year 12 on
AS or AVCE Science courses.
16LEARNING IS REWARDING (Its a nice little
earner) 400 - 500 000!
CHALLENGE YOURSELF
By 2010 the Government has set a target that 50
of young people will have degrees. Which half
will you be in?
IMPROVE YOUR CHOICES AND CAREER PROSPECTS
17Academic Review Day
- Thursday 17 November 2005
- 15 minute appointments made with your son /
daughters form tutor. - Opportunity to discuss settling in and to
consider the academic targets he or she has set. - A chance to discuss possible career pathways.
18Monitoring Support
- Targets reviewed regularly by subject teachers.
- Student performance discussed with form tutor.
- Early intervention by us if necessary.
Regular feedback to parents.
19Community Service
- All students in Year 12 are expected to
contribute to Community Service. - A wide range of different activities are
available - working in a local primary school
- helping with a younger tutor group
- working in Student Support or SuccessPlus
- helping a younger student with reading skills
- helping in a subject area
- helping run a club or activity
This is a win / win situation. Younger students
gain invaluable help. Year 12 students gain
leadership skills and experience, good for c.v.s
and UCAS applications.
20Helping a younger student
You gain new skills and confidence
They gain improved skills and meet an outstanding
role model
21A Level Performance Tables Local schools
A 120 B 100 C 80 D 60 E 40
The 2004 Performance Tables will be published in
November.
22Results and Value-Added
- Excellent results Examination results have
consistently placed the school at the top of the
league tables in West Berkshire. OFSTED - Excellent progress National analysts have
described the value-added progress made by
Sixth Form students at Little Heath as
outstanding, placing Little Heath towards the
very top nationally in terms of value-added. - They attribute this to our top class teaching
and our lack of poor teaching which are
outstanding in national terms. Kevin Conway,
Director of the A Level Performance System (ALPS)
23The Student View
- Mark Way
- Geography
- Physics
- Mathematics
- Wants to be a civil engineer
- Jo Madzelewski
- Biology
- Business Studies
- PE
- Wants to be a physiotherapist