What
has changed and why?
- Coherence
and flexibility - go
- Focus
on Aims - go
- Focus
on personal development - go
- Greater
Personalisation - go
Coherence
and flexibility
Greater
coherence and more flexibility
To
give schools greater flexibility to tailor learning to their learners’
needs, there is less prescribed subject content in the new programmes
of study. Pupils will still be taught essential subject knowledge.
The new curriculum introduces the learner to the key concepts and
processes that underpin the discipline of each subject and enables
learners to deepen their knowledge, skills and understanding.
The
revised programmes of study share a common format:
- Importance
statement – why the subject matters and how it can contribute
to the aims
- Key
concepts – identifies the big ideas that underpin the
subject
- Key
processes – identifies the essential skills of the subject
- Range
and content – outlines the breadth of subject matter
from which teachers should draw to develop knowledge, skills and
understanding
- Curriculum
opportunities – identifies opportunities to enhance
and enrich learning, including making links to the wider curriculum.
- This
common format contributes to greater coherence, making it easier
to see links between subjects. Several subjects share key concepts
and processes; curriculum opportunities highlight the potential
for links between subjects; and dimensions such as enterprise,
creativity, and cultural understanding and diversity can be used
to create a more coherent curriculum.
Focus
on aims
A
clear focus on aims. The aims for the curriculum are statutory and
schools can use them as the basis for building a more coherent 11–19
curriculum. They also provide a clear link with the primary curriculum
and should enable more effective transition from key stage 2 and
on through the 11–19 curriculum.
The
curriculum should enable all young people to become:
These
aims, which incorporate the five outcomes of Every
Child Matters, have been the starting point for all the changes
to the secondary curriculum.
The
new curriculum continues to recognise the importance of subjects
while at the same time it places emphasis on the development of
skills for life and work.
The
framework for personal, learning and thinking skills (PLTS)
was developed in consultation with employers, parents, schools,
students and the wider public – captures these skills and
competencies. It provides a national framework which schools can
build on in order to meet the needs of their young people and broader
communities. They are embedded in the new subject programmes of
study and are an essential part of the Diploma qualifications
Functional
skills of English, mathematics and ICT have been built into the
curriculum, and the key processes sections in the programmes of
study highlight the essential skills that learners need in order
to make progress and achieve in each subject.
The
new framework presents the curriculum as much more than a set of
content to cover. It maintains the best of the past while offering
increased opportunity to design learning that develops the wider
skills for life and learning as well as making links to the major
ideas and challenges that face society and have significance for
individuals.
It
is a framework that recognises the school curriculum as the entire
planned learning experience. This includes lessons, but also the
events, routines, visits and activities that take place out of the
classroom and beyond the school.
Focus
on personal development
A
stronger focus on personal development
New
guidance materials have been written to show how the whole curriculum
contributes to learners' personal development and the achievement
of the Every Child Matters agenda. There are also two non-statutory
programmes of study for personal wellbeing, and economic wellbeing
and financial capability. These draw together personal, social,
health and economic education, sex education, careers education,
enterprise, financial capability and work-related learning.
Greater
personalisation
Greater
personalisation through assessment and qualifications
To
ensure that assessment supports teaching and learning, the new curriculum
encourages a range of approaches to assessing learners’ knowledge,
skills and understanding. The increased flexibility will give teachers
more opportunities to focus on assessment for learning and to provide
greater support and increased challenge for those who need it.
The
level descriptions for national curriculum subjects have been modified
so that they complement the revised programmes of study and maintain
standards. New level descriptions for citizenship have been developed;
the non-statutory level descriptions for RE are unchanged.
Greater
personalisation of assessment will increase learners’ engagement,
enabling them to show what they can do, and open doors to higher
achievement.
With
more ways to demonstrate progress and more pathways to choose from
at key stage 4, including the new diplomas, learners are likely
to find something that motivates them, continue learning for longer,
and gain the qualifications they need to progress into further and
higher education and secure employment.
Developing
more effective assessment
Assessing
pupils’ progress (APP) is a new national approach to assessment
that puts the learner at the heart of the assessment process.
Curriculum
reform and renewal depends on quality evidence of learner progress
and achievement built on a foundation of sound principles. Effective
assessment:
-
is integral to teaching and learning
- puts
the learner at the heart of assessment
- provides
a view of the whole learner
- involves
reliable judgements about how learners are doing, related, where
appropriate, to national standards.
Effective
assessment needs to be timely, focused and use appropriate techniques,
so your assessment and information system is clear about:
-
who is collecting evidence
- who
is acting on it so additional support is provided when needed
-
how learners are involved.
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