1 / 11

Plumpton School

Plumpton School. Parents meeting 1 st March 2010. Why are we making changes?. Parents and pupils questionnaires October 2009 ‘Raised bar’ of government expectations. Aims of the meeting. Inform parents of the school’s revised assessment procedures

brasen
Télécharger la présentation

Plumpton School

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plumpton School Parents meeting 1st March 2010

  2. Why are we making changes? • Parents and pupils questionnaires October 2009 • ‘Raised bar’ of government expectations

  3. Aims of the meeting • Inform parents of the school’s revised assessment procedures • For parents to have understanding of National Curriculum levels, and expectations for each year group

  4. Revised procedures • Current assessments continue to be ongoing, but formal tracking has changed • Termly tracking (6 times a year) of all pupils from Year 1 onwards • Progress summary showing assessed levels to be sent to parents in terms 2 and 4, with term 6 information to be put on annual reports in July • Term 3 assessments will be shared at parent consultation meetings at start of term 4

  5. Foundation Stage • Ongoing assessments using Early Years Foundation Stage Profile.

  6. Key Stage 1 and 2 • Termly summative assessments in reading, writing and maths • Each level is sub divided into 3, named A,B and C. Each sub level is 2 ‘points’ progress • Expected progress is 1 level (3 sub levels) over 2 years, or 6 points progress • Good progress is 4 points over a year, i.e. 2 sub levels • Rates of progress can vary for each pupil

  7. National Curriculum Levels

  8. Individual Pupil Targets • All pupils from Y1 upwards will have an ‘I can’ book • Targets for reading, writing and maths and also personal targets • Pupils encouraged to self assess, and tick when they have demonstrated understanding of the target • Pupils will be encouraged to refer to ‘I can’ books across the whole curriculum, not just in literacy and maths • Targets will vary according to each pupil, some will take longer to achieve than others • New targets will be decided by teacher and pupil • Pupils in Y4 upwards will be encouraged to put their targets onto their VLP pages

  9. ‘I can’ books

  10. ‘I can’ statements Level 1 Reading: I know some words in books Writing: I can use a word bank Maths: I can read and write number up to 10 Level 2 Reading: I can talk about characters in a book Writing: I can use describing words to improve my writing Maths: I can use addition and subtraction for number bonds to 10 Level 3 Reading: I can identify themes in books Writing: I can use capital letters consistently Maths: I can add and subtract numbers with 2 digits mentally

  11. Level 4 Reading: I can find and use ideas and information Writing: I can choose adventurous words to create an effect Maths: I can check that my answers make sense Level 5 Reading: I can identify and select relevant information to support my views Writing: I can organise my ideas into paragraphs Maths: I can order positive and negative numbers

More Related