Post on 25-Dec-2015
What is Curriculum for Excellence?
• Scotland’s new curriculum
• What your child will be learning
• New ways of teaching and learning
• More emphasis on Skills for learning, work and life
• New exams
• But also much more…..
We are preparing young people for jobs
that don’t yet exist….. requiring
technologies that haven’t yet been
invented….. to solve problems of which
we are not yet aware.Shift Happens:www.fleming.myzen.co.uk/ShiftHappens-UK.wmv
Curriculum for Excellence
The future of education in ScotlandThe hope is that all Scottish children become confident individuals successful learners responsible citizens effective contributors to work and
society
Curriculum for Excellence
Design Principles
Challenge and Enjoyment Breadth
Progression Depth Relevance
Coherence Personalisation and Choice
Curriculum for Excellence
Curriculum Areas• Languages and Literacy• Mathematics and Numeracy• Sciences• Expressive Arts• Social Studies• Technologies• Health and Well Being• Religious and Moral Education
Curriculum for Excellence
• Experiences and Outcomes
• Experience: What a child is learning to do - the different experiences that make up that learning
• Outcome: What a child can do as a result
Curriculum for Excellence
Responsibility of all teachers
• Literacy
• Numeracy
• Aspects of Health and Well-being
• Four Capacities
Curriculum for Excellence
Senior Phase S4-S6• Study for qualifications• Challenge and Depth to learning• Wider Achievement• Planning beyond school• More formal assessment• Further development of 4 capacities• Promotion of active and healthy lifestyle
Curriculum for Excellence
New Qualifications• retention of National Qualifications at Access, Higher and
Advanced Higher, revised in line with Curriculum for Excellence;
• the new qualification to replace the present Standard Grade and Intermediate qualifications at SCQF levels 4 and 5 – National 4 and National 5; and
• the development of new qualifications in literacy and numeracy – National Literacy and National Numeracy – at SCQF levels 3, 4 and 5.
Curriculum for Excellence
Approaches to Learning and Teaching
• Allow for choice
• Encourage independence
• Give children ownership
• Encourage children to explain their thinking
• Help children to make connections
Curriculum for Excellence
Greater focus on Successful Learning
• Wanting to learn: seeing the point of it all• Learning by doing: practising, having a go,
making mistakes• Positive feelings: usually based on other people’s
reactions to what we do• Making sense: “digesting” what we learn, to gain
our own understandingWho Learns Wins by Phil Race
Curriculum for Excellence
Outside schoolMuch of Learning and Experience takes place
out with school at home and within the family at clubs and in community settings individually and with friendsAll of these experiences contribute to 4
capacities, and a young person’s broad education
Curriculum for Excellence
What is the role of parents in Curriculum for Excellence?
Education is changing…
Understanding the big picture -“Its about what you need to be a successful, contributing human being in the 21st century.”
“In a world of accelerating change, parents need to imagine the kind of education that will equip their children to lead fulfilled and successful lives.”
Curriculum for Excellence
Where do parents come in? Schools and nurseries must engage with
parents about the education of their children (Parental Involvement Act 2006)
Partnership working is key to Curriculum for Excellence
Parents have a responsibility to support their children and contribute to their learning and well being
Curriculum for Excellence
How can schools do it?
Working with you as partners – doing it together • Involving parents• Listening to parents• Sharing views and opinions• Valuing opinions• Trying to understanding each other• Providing information and support
Curriculum for Excellence
How can parents do it?
• Find out more about Curriculum for Excellence• Get involved in what is happening in your school
around Curriculum for Excellence• Support your school • Ask for information if you don’t think you have it• Work at that relationship
Curriculum for Excellence
All types of involvement make a difference!
Great deal of learning goes on outside school
Support at Secondary and beyond still makes a significant difference
=Where parents are involved children do better
Results in achievement, attitude and behaviour
Curriculum for Excellence
What can Parent Councils do?• Thinking about what type of information the Parent Forum
needs• Consider how best the information can be shared?• Identifying skills and expertise within the Parent Forum• Making connections with voluntary sector, community,
health and business• Feedback to Headteacher• Running Focus Groups with Headteacher on proposed
changes• Feeding back to Local Authority and Nationally • Talk to young people themselves…….
Curriculum for Excellence
A hundred years from now it will not matter what kind of car you drove, what kind of house you lived in, how much you had in your bank account, or what your clothes
looked like.
But the world may be a little better because you were important in the life of a child
Margaret Fishback Powers