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Aberdeen Consortium Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Aberdeen Consortium Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

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Aberdeen Consortium Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006. What has been happening?. Engagement Early review groups Skills for Work Courses Progress and Proposals – March 2006 Register of Interest. Proposals: Looking at the curriculum differently. Single framework 3 – 18 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Aberdeen Consortium

Pam Slater:ACfE Team4 October 2006

Page 2: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

What has been happening?• Engagement• Early review groups• Skills for Work

Courses• Progress and

Proposals – March 2006

• Register of Interest

Page 3: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Proposals: Looking at the curriculumdifferently

• Single framework 3 – 18• Promote learning across a wide range of contexts and well

planned experiences• More than curriculum areas and subjects, also

– Ethos and life of the school– Interdisciplinary projects and studies– Opportunities for personal achievement

• Equip young people with high level of literacy and numeracy skills

Page 4: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Contexts for Learning• The ethos and life of the

school as a community• Curriculum areas and

subjects• Interdisciplinary projects

and studies• Opportunities for personal

achievement

Page 5: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Interdisciplinary projects and studies

“The curriculum needs to include space for learning beyond subject boundaries, so that learners can make connections between different areas of learning. …..To be successful, these activities need to be well planned with a clear purpose and outcomes in mind.”

(Progress and Proposals 2006)

Page 6: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Opportunities for personal achievement

“ ..activities such as performances, community or enterprise activities and trips. … Many of these activities are voluntary for learners and have traditionally been organised as ‘extra-curricular’ opportunities. However, they play a major part in creating opportunities for individual growth , progress and achievement and we need to consider how they can be made available for all learners.”

Page 7: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

“To ensure that young people develop the literacy, numeracy and other essential skills and knowledge they will need for life and work.”

Page 4 A Curriculum for Excellence

Page 8: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Proposals: Levels of achievementACfE levels of achievement will • replace 5-14 levels• extend from 3-18• describe both outcomes and experiences• “I can…” and “I have…” statements• Provide scope for challenge and depth

(no need to speed through levels but no ceilings either)

Page 9: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Proposals: Progression and Levels of Achievement

Level Experiences and outcomes for most children or young people

Early In pre-school and in Primary 1

First By end of P4, but earlier for some

Second By end of P7, but earlier for some

Third In S1- S3 but earlier for someFourth level broadly equates to SCQF level 4Fourth

Senior In S4 – S6, but earlier for some

Page 10: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Proposals: Organising LearningOrganising learning through curriculum areas - to provide

breadth– Health and well being– Languages – Mathematics– Sciences– Social studies– Expressive arts– Technologies– Religious and moral education

Page 11: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

“The curriculum areas should provide a basis for learning and the development of skills across a broad range of contexts. They offer opportunities for citizenship, sustainable development, enterprise, creativity and cultural aspects. …..It will be open to schools to organise the outcomes and experiences differently (for example by designing challenging interdisciplinary projects), …to plan for progression, breadth and depth of learning.”

p15, Progress and Proposals 2006

Page 12: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Making Choices in learning“The proposed changes to the structure of the curriculum

give us an opportunity to look differently at choices in learning at all stages. … We would like to work with schools to explore possibilities for different approaches to personalisation and choice. ..e.g., whether it would be desirable and possible for choices to take place over a more extended period across S1-S3, ….approaches to subject choice which are not based on the current modal structure ..”

p15-16, Progress and Proposals 2006

Page 13: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Recognition of Achievement• How do we recognise

broader skills and achievements more explicitly?

• Robust, convincing and highly valued

• Must not become a new bureaucratic burden for schools

Page 14: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Implications• Role of the teacher

– Shift from prescription about detail of the curriculum towards more scope for professional judgement and creativity

– Enhancing both initial teacher education and CPD

Page 15: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Implications• Leadership

– Increased expectations – Support professional dialogue and debate– Opportunities to be creative in curriculum

design

Page 16: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

2006-07?• Rationales on website • Writing of outcomes and

experiences• Further engagement• Inter-authority collaboration• Involvement of schools and

other stakeholders through Register of Interest

• Examples of changing practice in response to ACfE on website

Page 17: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

Challenges• Management of change• Varying levels of awareness • Understanding of purposes

and principles• Readiness of staff to interpret

and use simplified guidance• Focus on literacy and

numeracy• Cross-curricular issues• Staff focus on external

accountability and qualifications

• Nature of CPD

Page 18: Aberdeen Consortium  Pam Slater:ACfE Team 4 October 2006

A Curriculum for Excellence 2006