Wednesday, 30 December 2009
Which quals are the most valuable?
Friday, 18 December 2009
Ofqual stating the obvious
Tuesday, 15 December 2009
Guroo Functional Skills Newsletter 15/12/09
Our bi-weekly look at the world of functional skills.
New Delivering Diploma conference announced for March, a sneak look at the Guroo stand for BETT, how much do you know about Foundation Learning and the latest content bulletin from the basement in Guroo Towers.
Delivering Diplomas Conference, March 18 @ Aston University. Our friends at sec-ed have told us the next Delivering Diploma conference will feature Iain Wright, Secretary of State for 14-19 Reform and Apprenticeships along with Teresa Bergin, Head of Diploma at QCDA. Click here for a special offer saving of 20% for "guroo friends" on the delegate fee. Please be aware it's a big file to download - we can email or post you a copy if you'd prefer just let me know at jwells@guroo.co.uk
Sneak preview of Guroo's BETT stand. the picture below is a sneak preview of our main stand backdrop for BETT, stand N48. Click on the picture to link to the latest Guroo Content Bulletin detailing all the updates, additions and changes to the Guroo service in the last few weeks.
The official line. There's been nothing from DCFS, no new videos on Teachers TV, the FSSP support section is "still under construction", even Teachernet's last update was 30th October. Still, it's good to know we can all have a few days without worrying we're missing something.
What do you know about Foundation Learning? Functional Skills is a key element of Foundation Learning at all levels. We noticed this diagram on the Excellence Gateway. We've linked it to some more key documents about Foundation Learning, some new, some old.
Jonathan's Functional Skills blog - 159 entries and counting.......
Click here for the new website for functional skills support from National Strategies and LSIS
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Sunday, 13 December 2009
Safeguarding children
Since when was an increase a decrease?
Sunday, 6 December 2009
Science getting the once over now
Report from Ofqual
These latest changes to secondary school science follow an Ofqual report that was critical of the way standards had fallen.
Ofqual made exam boards take immediate action after finding there was "clearly a cause for concern" in science GCSEs.
Among the criticisms of the current content, the Royal Society of Chemistry said entire exam papers contained no maths and some questions no science.
It said a new, more independent regulator with more clout was needed to prevent standards from such "dumbing down".
The assistant director of the lobby group the Campaign for Science and Engineering (Case), Dr Hilary Leevers, said: "Awarding bodies compete for custom among schools, and the schools, in turn, compete in the league tables, so there has been a driving down of standards.
We agree, we all use functional maths every day and it should be part of all curriculum. Jonathan Wells of www.guroo.info leaders in developing functional skills resources for the 14-19 curriculum.
Utter failure and still they complain
Monday, 30 November 2009
Independent schools not doing Diplomas
Number 1 of 734
No more fiddling with values?
Sunday, 22 November 2009
Guroo Functional Skills Newsletter 17/11/09
Our bi-weekly look at the world of functional skills.
Ofqual publish new Functional Skills criteria, a new DCSF publication about Functional Skills in Diplomas, another chance to get your hands on the Guroo posters and intriguing thoughts about GNVQ, BTEC and OCR Nationals.
Ofqual publish Functional Skills criteria. Last week, Ofqual published the Functional Skills qualifications criteria and the specific criteria for the individual Functional Skills in English, mathematics and ICT. These are the criteria against which all exam bodies will be expected to assess. A link to the download page is here.
Nuts and Bolts from DCSF. A new publication in the "nuts and bolts" series has hit the streets aimed at Functional Skills in Diplomas. 20 pages long, it reprises the main elements of Functional Skills and features case studies from Stoke, Dudley and Wolverhampton college. Click on the pic below to get to the right page in Teachernet.
Functional Skills standards mapping posters from Guroo. We had an astonishing level of requests for the poster as a result of this announcement two weeks ago. All our subscribers should have received copies by now but if you're not a customer, here's a another chance to request a pdf copy. Drop me an email at jwells@guroo.co.uk and I'll send you a pdf copy by return.
And finally, thoughts about unintended consequences. One of our customers asked us whether Functional Skills would be introduced to BTEC qualifications and this led us down a most revealing route which we think has big consequences. It appears that there will only be four funded qualifications routes from September 2010:
-
GCSE/A Level
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Diplomas
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Apprenticeships
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Foundation Learning
That means OCR, BTEC, GNVQ qualifications WILL ONLY be funded as part of additional learning in Diplomas IF they are part of the QCF. Click here to read the latest on the QCDA website.
Jonathan's Functional Skills blog - 135 entries and counting.......
Click here for the new website for functional skills support from National Strategies and LSIS
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Wednesday, 18 November 2009
We're up for an award
Time to start learning again
Sunday, 15 November 2009
You can't defend the undefendable
Friday, 6 November 2009
The Tipping point?
Saturday, 31 October 2009
Wednesday, 28 October 2009
Too easy or too hard?
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
Opportunities
Monday, 19 October 2009
What is real life Maths?
Wednesday, 14 October 2009
1 million unemployed youngsters
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
Colleges recruiting at age 14?
Thursday, 8 October 2009
Vocational Schools - old or new thinking
Sunday, 4 October 2009
Less is more?
Wednesday, 30 September 2009
Spending doom and gloom
Friday, 25 September 2009
UKCES Skills analysis
Monday, 21 September 2009
Dame Tanni Greay Thomson
Friday, 18 September 2009
Dull and uninspiring exam text books
Thursday, 10 September 2009
exelearning
Tuesday, 1 September 2009
D DAY
Sunday, 30 August 2009
Universities do as they said they would
Diplomas seen as excellent preparation for higher education - DCSF new report 24/8/09
The research, published today (24.08.09) by the National Foundation for Educational Research, found that all universities questioned would welcome applications from the first Diploma cohort in 2010.The NFER report also found that:• Russell Group universities (20 major research-intensive universities) are strongly supportive of the breadth of learning and range of skills that Diploma students develop.• University Vice Chancellors are confident that Diplomas will deliver the qualities they want in undergraduate students: flexible, independent working and experience of a work placement.
• Universities are enthusiastic about the Extended Project – a crucial component of the Diploma – and felt it developed the learning skills universities look for: critical thinking; analysis; and research skills.
• Universities welcome the opportunity to widen participation to higher education, commenting that Diplomas will bring new types of student and new styles of learning into higher education
Diploma success means early focus on on FS and Secondary Learning
Tuesday, 25 August 2009
Functuional Skills the key to GCSE success?
NEET
Rightly, a lot of attention to the ever increasing and if I may personally add, embarassing problem of NEETs. I've written before about the lost generation, I was a child of the 60's, looking for my first job in the mid 80's when jobs were rarer than soberly dressed young ladies having a glass of Perrier in the Newcastle Bigg Market on a Friday night.
Monday, 17 August 2009
Michael gove on Sunday AM
his second point was that the raw 5+A*-C GCSE pass tables were not representative as they allowed too much focus on C/D borderline and not enough on "good" and "poor" academic ability students. Again, we know this happens but we already have the value added measure and points measures and so on. The difficulty is coming up with something that is understandable and acceptable to the general public.
Good ideas, but not that much which is new?
Friday, 14 August 2009
"I will help my pupils maximise their coursework marks"
Thursday, 13 August 2009
Quangos
Tuesday, 28 July 2009
Summer weather
Sunday, 26 July 2009
A week off!
Wednesday, 22 July 2009
End of term - end of work?
Friday, 17 July 2009
Another career door closed
Monday, 13 July 2009
Level 3 Functional Maths
Monday, 6 July 2009
Getting it right
Tuesday, 30 June 2009
Sunday, 28 June 2009
DCFS Conference
Sorry for the break in service - back again now
Sunday, 7 June 2009
Hard to engage kids
Friday, 29 May 2009
Consistency is needed
Tuesday, 26 May 2009
The Magic Bullet?
- Feed kids the right food to make their brain work.
- Re-educate the way they think
- Keep repeating year 6 until they can read and write
- Have more assessments (and indeed other reports suggest less assessments).
- Introduce new performance tables, or do away with all performance tables.
Tuesday, 19 May 2009
£300K a year job in DCFS?
Wednesday, 13 May 2009
Foundation Learning Tier
Saturday, 9 May 2009
Diploma promotional Materilas
Thursday, 7 May 2009
PM's speech
Monday, 4 May 2009
Big News - The School Report Card
Thursday, 30 April 2009
Budgets and funding
Sunday, 26 April 2009
Budget funding
Friday, 17 April 2009
LSC deciding on the answer before it asks the question
Thursday, 16 April 2009
The Apprentice - functional maths got her!
Tuesday, 14 April 2009
Scare stories from LSC
Tuesday, 7 April 2009
Responses from the announcement last week
These are a selection of quotes from the responses to the change to de-link Functional Skills from GCSE
does this mean i have to enter pupils for the ict functional skills,
is it now just an extra and we don't if we wish not to have to enter pupils at all even in 2010 Louise
I think that the latest announcement will be the kiss of death for functional skills and will totally vindicate those
…. The point regarding the report card is pertinent as it will very much depend on how this is structured ……
….. Ten years or so ago when Key Skills were introduced in Further Education, the rationale for their introduction was that employers when employing school leavers discovered a severe lack of basic skills, especially with numeracy, literacy and IT. When attending the first Functional Skills seminar six months ago, exactly the same words were used to explain the introduction of Functional Skills; presumably the last ten years has been a complete waste of time. It never ceases to amaze me that after eleven years in compulsory education and not grasping the basics; yet when they arrive in Further Education, “vocational” tutors are somehow expected to overcome all barriers and “cure” them of this unfortunate malady and in one or two years. Is it any wonder that that national success rates for Key Skills are so poor?
So does this mean that the results of the whatsit report (the one from 2004 that found that passing GCSEs was too easy and that learners could effectively guess their way through it and pass with out the requisite skills) have now been kicked into the long grass for another year? What does that say for the skills base of our workforce and the economic future of this country, especially in these hard times? Another influx of suitably skilled foreign workers? :-( !
Jim Knight - good to see that Mr M'Choakumchild has been thwarted in his gradgrindian ambitions
.... The Govt hasn’t yet got its act together on FS and is sending out confused messages. ...
Thanks for the update – extremely useful.
Friday, 3 April 2009
Changes to GCSE Accreditation from 2010
Most of you have by now read the announcement today that Functional Skills will no longer be tied to GCSE passes. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/7979267.stm )
1) The government is still committed to FS
2) They have accepted the OfQual advice “for now”
3) They are going to find other incentives that will encourage FS as a separate qualification – including tying it to the new School Report Card
Diplomas continue to be a major driver for FS adoption as will the Foundation Learning Tier, indeed the FLT could be a very big influence indeed as students on the FLT are not expected to be getting grade C+ at GCSE.
And most importantly of all FS is a good stand-alone qualification (without GCSEs or Diplomas as a driver). There is going to be tons of pressure on schools to do FS as a separate subject and there’s support from many sides (inc CBI etc) to say that they will be looking for FS passes as a measure of functionality in addition to GCSE passes.
So maybe the message from the top changes from “Functional Skills will be a must-pass element of GCSEs from 2010” to “Functional Skills are built into the new GCSE specs from 2010”.
Thursday, 2 April 2009
Uplifting days
Monday, 30 March 2009
Employability Skills
Wednesday, 25 March 2009
Past Papers from AQA?
This made me smile
His lawyer said her client’s outburst and actions happened because of the Magpies’ plight. And in what I think is a very funny quote said
“I don’t know very much about football but I understand he isn’t alone in that feeling at the moment"
I guess you would therefore say that being made to go is more of a punishment that being kept away!
Wednesday, 11 March 2009
Shocking stats - one quarter of one percent!
Thursday, 5 March 2009
The Game Show Quiz
Monday, 2 March 2009
Teachers lack of awareness
Thursday, 26 February 2009
Apprenticeships - Big News
Friday, 20 February 2009
Primary School Curriculum
Wednesday, 11 February 2009
A quiz for you
Monday, 9 February 2009
That sounds like a good idea
Tuesday, 3 February 2009
BTW - The just giving gadget is for my daughter Abigail
Confusing Diplomas Part 2
Now I'm quite a big believer in workplace experience, I did a sandwich course and it meant that when I graduated I started work the next day because of that experience.
But from a professional marketing point of view I'm still really worried about mixed messages and the Apprentice ads following the Diploma ads so closely.
The older generation (I count myself in there) are still the gateway to employment and I do believe that this generation definitely knows about A levels, certainly knows about apprenticeships and still is finding it difficult to categorise Diplomas and by categorise, I mean build a perception with the employers.
They should ask me to help them!