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About 14-19 | Glossary | Publications | Links | What's new? | Site map |
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The contribution of guidance and support to student success is indicated by action research projects on improving retention and/or achievement rates. Following such projects, 43 out of 87 colleges adopted strategies focused on student support, while a further 17 made changes to both support systems and curriculum design.
Those giving guidance to applicants to HE should consult the UCAS and HEI websites to keep abreast of developments in admissions criteria and policies. Schools and colleges can also inform local HEIs about the implications of the changes. UCAS recommends to HEIs that they enter into discussions with schools and colleges to develop agreed progression routes.
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Guidance and support for 16-19 students |
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Providing guidance and support for students has become increasingly important in the context of the:
Schools and colleges stress the importance of providing appropriate advice and guidance early enough to give students a secure start to their post-16 learning. Ofsted reports that, in the first year of Curriculum 2000, retention rates in schools were similar to previous years. Where retention rates were close to 100 per cent, the schools had:
An important aspect of guidance and support is providing advice in August, when the examination results are published. One college achieves this by having a staggered end to the summer term, which means that some staff start their summer holiday early in return for attending college in mid-August to provide advice. In other institutions, managers (such as heads of sixth form and personal tutors) provide advice on results day, a role that is included in their job description. Devising strategies for student support Using Progress File to support learning and progression Matching students to programmes Managing transition and progression Devising strategies for student supportSchools and colleges are putting in place guidance and support systems that go beyond high-quality support from a tutor. They include pastoral management structures that have access to up-to-date information on each student and additional support for those who need it, whether continuously or occasionally. Recent national initiatives have encouraged, and sometimes funded, institutions to use staff other than teachers to support and supervise students in different contexts. These include mentors, key skills supervisors, technicians and staff from a learning or resource centre. QCA is carrying out research into approaches that provide students with strategies to cope with advanced level study and the other demands of their lives. Guidance resulting from this will be available on the website before the 2003/4 academic year begins. Using Progress File to support learning and progressionProgress File encourages individuals to develop a working file to support their reviewing, target-setting, planning and reflection activities. This file also provides a resource the individual can draw on when selecting information to back-up statements about progress, skill development and achievements (eg during reviews with tutors or subject teachers, and when making applications and transitions). The Widening horizons guide, developed for 16- to 19-year-olds, contains sections on induction, reviews and progress checking, skill development, planning how to move on and making applications. Many schools and colleges make Progress File materials available on their website or intranet, so that everyone can access them. Word versions can be downloaded for use in developing personal statements and job applications. Student decision-makingStudents require clear and comprehensive information, advice and guidance prior to starting a Curriculum 2000 programme. For clarity and consistency, schools and colleges should use standard terminology to describe their provision. Information about the nature of qualifications, specifications, workload expectations and the distinct features of an institution will help students in making choices. Some schools include the development of decision-making skills in their pre-16 programmes to ensure that students are equipped to make judgements. In the light of their prior attainment, personal interests, preferred learning and assessment styles, and intended progression, students make decisions on the:
They should be aware of the demands of their chosen programme, including workload and any financial commitments, for example textbooks or field trips. One college that devotes a considerable amount of time to in-depth student interviews both before and at enrolment finds that student retention is excellent and there are very few changes of programme. The college ascribes this to the success of the interview process. The more investment made in supporting students to make realistic yet challenging decisions prior to building a Curriculum 2000 programme, the more effective the learning from the first day of their studies. Matching students to programmesThe outcome of the decision-making process is an individual programme incorporating qualifications of an appropriate volume, level and type, as well as enrichment activities. Schools and colleges are developing a range of recommended programmes for students with different prior attainment. GCSE/GNVQ grades, total points scores and average points scores can all be used to measure the prior attainment. Much depends on the expectations of the institution. For example, students with a wide range of prior attainment are accepted on four AS programmes with different providers. Making changes to programmesThere will inevitably be some changes of programme early in the first term and institutions need to have procedures to enable and manage this change, and to make sure that it is properly considered. One college has supported this process by a five-step 'right on course' checklist.
One school has defined the periods during which students can change subjects. No-one can change during the first two weeks, although they can register a desire to do so. From two weeks into term until half-term they can change out of and into subjects. After half-term they can drop subjects but not take up others. Managing transition and progressionA significant change associated with Curriculum 2000 is the flexibility and options that it offers at the end of the first year of advanced level study. Schools and colleges will be supporting students in the transition from year 12 to 13, which may involve leaving a subject or qualification or starting a new one. Students and their advisers need to consider:
For planning purposes, some institutions ask students to indicate, when choosing their programme, which subjects they intend to take to A2. Most ask students to make at least a provisional decision (pending their AS results) during the second term of year 12. The point at which the students make their final decision often follows a progress review. One college has moved a progress review to the end of the June examination period in year 12, and asks students to commit themselves then to their A2 subjects. Teaching for the A2 starts immediately. For some students, the AS results will be an important factor in confirming their A2 choices. Schools and colleges need to make sure that staff are available to offer the necessary guidance when the AS results are published, and when the key skills and January assessment results come out. TutoringThe role of the tutor is changing, and being more closely defined, in response to Curriculum 2000 and other influences. Many colleges now have specialist tutors with more than one tutor group and a reduced teaching load. In one sixth-form college, for example, 17 members of staff out of 119 are group tutors. They apply for the post, which carries an allowance that recognises commitments beyond the normal day and term. There are no mixed-year groups and tutors take their groups through both years. The advantages of specialist tutors are:
Some schools are also considering using specialist tutors. Where registration takes place in lessons or by means of a swipe card, there is arguably no need for the traditional morning and afternoon form period, freeing this time to be used differently. For example, a sixth form might allocate 32 hours 30 minutes weekly for registration, assembly and tutorial programme: 10 groups with 30 minutes per day and one 45-minute lesson weekly. If 30 hours were deployed across five option blocks, six hours would be available per option block. If, for example, tutors were allocated two hours per week for their new role, decreasing the total time required for tutorial activity to 20 hours, the school could choose to:
Putting tutorial sessions into option blocks could result in tutor groups of students with subjects in common; some colleges make an effort to assign tutors who teach a subject that is studied by all the students in the group. Tutorial sessions can involve the whole group, a small group or an individual. Many institutions employ a pattern that can accommodate each of these over a specified time period. Student workloadStudent workload resulting from high-volume programmes means less free time during the working day, with fewer opportunities to build independent learning skills. This is compounded by the number of hours worked by those students who have part-time jobs. On the other hand, many teachers say that year 12 students are now more focused on their studies and clearer about the objectives of that study than their predecessors. Some of these aspects of student workload will be a continuing feature of the 16-19 curriculum, so it is important that schools and colleges match students to programmes that are challenging yet achievable for individuals. It is important that staff are aware of the totality of a student's commitments when discussing priorities and giving guidance. Institutions have developed a range of strategies to reduce students' workload and to give them the skills needed to manage their commitments. Managing student workloadTo design programmes with a reasonable workload, teachers and managers can:
To use aspects of the curriculum to develop key skills evidence, teachers and managers can:
To anticipate pressure points, teachers and managers can:
To increase students' capacity to cope, teachers and managers can:
A number of schools and colleges are developing the use of IT for flexible and independent learning. They are investing in facilities to provide easy and constant access to IT and are increasing the use of distance learning. Part-time workMany 16- to 19-year-olds have part-time jobs and some find juggling the demands of work and study problematic. Schools and colleges can help in a number of ways. They can:
Some large FE colleges can organise the timetable so students who rely on paid employment have whole or half-days during the week to work. Also see Case studies Other web links |
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curriculum: 11-16 schools | 6th
form schools | colleges
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