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WELCOME TO ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING. SEPTEMBER 14, 2010 ASHBY SCHOOL LECTURE THEATRE P.M.O’Brien I.Gibson.

WELCOME TO ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

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WELCOME TO ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING. SEPTEMBER 14, 2010 ASHBY SCHOOL LECTURE THEATRE P.M.O’Brien I.Gibson. AIMS OF THIS EVENING. To explain our aims for your children To introduce our tracking and monitoring systems including My Child at School - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

WELCOME TO ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING.

SEPTEMBER 14, 2010ASHBY SCHOOL LECTURE THEATRE

P.M.O’BrienI.Gibson.

Page 2: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

AIMS OF THIS EVENING

To explain our aims for your children To introduce our tracking and monitoring systems

including My Child at School To introduce the Parental Consultation System To show the relevance of good attendance to high

achievement To explain the changes to GCSE coursework and

introduce our coursework and examination calendar. To show you where school information can be found on

our school website and MCAS web browser.

Page 3: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Our Aims for you and your child

The highest possible achievement for every individual by fostering a sense of individual responsibility in students

To be at a school with a good reputation both locally and nationally

To develop academically, socially and personally To enjoy learning experiences at Ashby

becoming a successful learner To offer parents high quality information about

the progress of their child at all times

Page 4: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

The science behind increasing your chances in life

Page 5: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Look into my eyes, the eyes, the eyes, look into my eyes not around the eyes, the eyes... the eyes... the eyes... into the eyes, 3.2.1 you're under.............

Page 6: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Think of a numberbetween 2 and 9

Take that numberand multiply it by

9

You should nowhave a 2 digit

number

Take the twodigits and addthem together

Take that numberand subtract

5 from it

Take that numberand correspond itto a letter in the

alphabet (eg. A=1)

Take that letterand think of acountry thatbegins with it

Take the secondletter in the

country and thinkof an animal that

begins with it

Hold the countryand animal in your

head....

Page 7: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING
Page 8: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

How is it done?1. It’s a maths trick... Everyone gets an answer of

four after the first bit.2. Then that always equals a D! How many countries begin with a D? Can you think of any?3. Denmark is the most probable. The second letter is then E. How many animals can you think of?4. Elephant is the most probable! We think the same!5. This is how most mind tricks work.6. It’s all about increasing my chances...

Page 9: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Gambling is for mugs.... (famous saying by me!)

The probability (chance) of winning the Lotto draw is 1 in 13,983,816 (14 million).Which of these sets of numbers is likely to come up in the Lotto?

Page 10: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

For all sets there is a 1 in 14 million chance that you will pick the six numbers!That’s why it’s called a Lottery

Page 11: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Here is a chance graph for ‘winning’ a grade at GCSE (or equivalent) in English:

Results in GCSE English for students with average SATs results

1 1 312 9

1 1

3736

010203040

U G F E D C B A A*GCSE Grades

Page 12: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Results in GCSE English for students with average SATs results

1 1 312 9

1 1

3736

010203040

U G F E D C B A A*GCSE Grades

These people came in with average SATs and got an F, G or U!

Some people came in with average SATs and got an A*, A or B!

Page 13: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

What did the winners do that the losers did not?How did the winners increase their chances of gaining a good GCSE?

Be in the classroom

when lessons are being

taught

Do all coursework

and hand it in

Be responsible for your own

behaviour

Not blame other

people for failure

Use learning as much as you can in

the real world

GCSE

Turn upfor

Exams!

Page 14: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

• Most people are happy with 80% or above.

• 90% sounds even better…• How often do we get 90% in a test

or exam?• Percentages lie to us!

Page 15: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

90% attendance is half a day off every week

In a year that is 20 days off (nearly 4 weeks)

In secondary school (Yr 7-11) that is half a year off!

38 school weeks

Page 16: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

92%

60%

46%

35% 27%

20%

GCSE/GNVQ achievements for year 11 2007 by total absence

5+ A*-C grades (including English and Maths)

Total absence

% w

ho a

chie

ved

>15 days

15-19 days

20-24 days

25-29 days

30-34 days

35+ days

The minimum qualification for a service industry job will soon be this…

Taking time off and its impact on your future!

90%

80%

Page 17: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

QualificationsPote

ntia

l Ear

ning

s av

erag

e pe

r ho

ur

no qualifications no qualifications £8.14 per £8.14 per hourhour..

GCSE’s/GCSE’s/Equivalent Equivalent £9.85 £9.85 per per hour.hour.

A A levels/Equivalenlevels/Equivalent t £11.16 £11.16 per hourper hour

Graduate Graduate degree degree £17.44 £17.44 per hourper hour

Didn’t get5 A*-C grades or equivalent including maths

Did get 5 A*-C including maths GCSE at grade C or above

Page 18: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Gets 5 A*-C and goes onto college/university/FE/work

Leaves school with 2 GCSE grades/equivalent

Earns on average = £17.44hr Earns on average = £8.14hr

Wayne earns £9.30 an hour more than Shanika

In his lifetime (8 hours a day, 5 days a week, 46 weeks a year for 40 years), he would earn £684,480 more than Shanika in a lifetime! That’s two thirds of a million pounds!

Wayne Shanika

A hypothetical situation using raw data

Each day he takes off costs him: £17,000

Page 19: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

How will we monitor your child’s progress in Year 10? Individual subject tutors monitor through

assessment of classwork, coursework and homework

Faculty Heads monitor by reviewing these assessments

Personal Tutors and myself monitor progress by using our student progress data base called ‘TRACKER’ which is informed by the grades you see on the MCAS system

Page 20: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

What information will you receive from the school? Each term we take a set of progress grades for each

student from all full GCSE subjects Each student has two grades from each subject The ‘Target’ grade represents the teacher’s assessment

of the highest possible grade the student could achieve based upon available evidence of prior achievement at KeyStage 2 and 3 matched against FFT data. We try to make these grades as positive as possible to motivate our students

The ‘Current’ grade is the level the student is working at when the grades are collected. At the start of Year 10, in November, this will inevitably be lower than the Target in most cases but we would expect it to improve during Years 10 and 11

Page 21: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

From SAT KS2 and KS3 Teacher assessment grades to GCSE grades The FFT indicator is based on the performance of

students across the country who achieved a similar average points score at the end of Key Stage 3 (the average points score is the average, decimalised, of the English Science and Mathematics SAT scores)

We aim to improve on this indicator wherever possible by at least 2 grades.

That means we aim to convert a level 5 in English at KS3 to at leastat least a ‘C’ at GCSE

Page 22: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

How do we use this data

We report it to you termly on MCAS. The report will contain not just data about grades but also attendance, behaviour and effort

We analyse the data and use it to identify potential underachievement and high achievement

We may interview students who appear to be underachieving and offer them a range of support

We monitor coursework and offer support to those who are not completing pieces successfully

But at any time if you are worried please contact us.

Page 23: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Part of this support may include the provision of catch-up sessions after school with late buses provided on Monday, Wednesday and Thursdays

We offer advice regarding study-skills and effective techniques for revision. (www.ashbyschool.org.uk)

We keep you informed of any concerns regarding your child’s progress in order that we can work in partnership to help them to achieve positively

Page 24: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

School communication.

The school website: www.ashbyschool.org.uk We use e-mail/text messaging as much as

possible to e-mail all communications to parents. Our reasons are immediacy, cost and ease of

contact Please ensure at all times that we have up to

date e-mail addresses/mobile phone numbers for you and that the addresses are appropriate for confidential information

Page 25: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Controlled Conditions Coursework.

What is Controlled Assessment? It is a form of internal assessment where the control levels for

each assessment stage (task setting, task taking and task marking) have been defined by the Qualifications and Curriculum Development Agency(QCDA) for all awarding bodies.

What is the Controlled Assessment process? There are three stages to Controlled Assessment: task setting task taking task marking. Each stage has a level of control (high, medium or low) to

ensure reliability and authenticity and to make assessments more manageable for teachers and students.

Page 26: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

What this means for our students.

Task taking Task taking outlines how students go about taking the task and

can be split into stages eg Research, Analysis and Writeup. Each stage can have different controls eg: Research Low Control – students can work unsupervised outside the

classroom Analysis Medium Control – students do their analysis and selection under

informal supervision Write-up High Control – students write up their task in a supervised,

classroom environment.

Page 27: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

What if a task is missed through absence or not done well Can a student who feels that s/he has

underperformed in their initial attempt make another attempt at the same task (ie before submission to the awarding body)?

A student is not allowed to make another attempt at the same task, although the student may attempt a different task if the centre is willingwilling to supervise it. Means the same time for research analysis and writing up. Meanwhile the course goes on?!

In the case of absence the key issue is the research, analysis and teaching of the unit. As ever for absent students we will do our utmost to help BUT cannot BUT cannot guarantee the same teaching experience.guarantee the same teaching experience.

Page 28: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Academic Calendar. 2010/2011

We are teaching new syllabuses in a variety of subjects

They are, therefore, ‘a work in progress’ What appears on the calendar is as accurate as

it can be but dates may have to be modified as the course progresses

It is on the school website and, although I have some paper copies here would only like you to take one if you don’t have internet access as it will be updated whenever necessary

Page 29: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING
Page 30: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

MY Child At School.

Page 31: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING
Page 32: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Home Page

Page 33: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Settings To Change Contact Details

Page 34: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Contact School

Page 35: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Detailed Attendance

Page 36: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

School Reports

Page 37: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Detailed Behaviour and Rewards

Page 38: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Detailed Behaviour and Rewards

Page 39: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Detailed Homework or Coursework

Page 40: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Student Timetable

Page 41: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Fundraising

Page 42: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

The School website

The website is updated dailyCurricular informationSchool Shop – Parent pay (soon to

become Wise Pay from 1st November)Upcoming eventsSchool newsSchool policies

Page 43: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING
Page 44: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING
Page 45: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

PARENTAL CONSULTATION

There will be a Form Tutor based Parent’s Evening on November the 29th in the evening starting at 5.30 p.m.

In November all subject tutors will negotiate Targets for improvement with Year 10 and 11 students

Parents will have these grades and targets before the day in order to discuss them with their child

Year 10 students with their parents will have a 15 minute appointment with their Personal Tutor to discuss progress in all subject areas and to raise any issues

The major aim of the evening is to ensure that students are responsible for their own progress and understand this

Page 46: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

This offers parents an overview of their child’s progress across the curriculum

It is early to allow time for significant improvement

Personal tutors and subject tutors will monitor and review these targets throughout the year and negotiate new ones when appropriate

In Y11 parental consultation is by individual appointments with subject staff during the evening.

Page 47: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

In Conclusion

If we act in partnership our students / your children will benefit

If we trust each other to have the best interests of the child at heart then progress, both academic and personal will be made

Ashe, Erdington – Mr Willoughby Bullen, Crewe . Mrs Lane Gylby, Loudoun – Mrs Womersley. Hastings, Ferrers – Mr Demetriou .But you can also contact your child’s Form Tutor and

myself at any time if you have academic concerns.

Page 48: WELCOME TO  ASHBY SCHOOL YEAR 10 INFORMATION EVENING

Thank – you for attending the Year 10 Information Evening.