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Welcome to Year 11 Revision and Support Information Evening

Welcome to Year 11 Revision and Support Information Evening. Aims. To learn about general and core subject specific revision skills and techniques How to create a revision timetable Point you to revision guides and other resources Provide information about the mock exams

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Welcome to Year 11 Revision and Support Information Evening

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  1. Welcome to Year 11 Revision and Support Information Evening

  2. Aims • To learn about general and core subject specific revision skills and techniques • How to create a revision timetable • Point you to revision guides and other resources • Provide information about the mock exams • Parental support and coping with pressure

  3. Introduction – Mrs Mansfield (Assistant Headteacher) • General Revision Skills – Mrs Daly (Senior Tutor) • Revising Maths – Mr Whitmore • Revising English – Mrs Martin • Revising Science – Mrs Corrie • Revision Timetable, Mock Exams and support – Mrs Daly • Final comments – Mrs Mansfield

  4. Support: Autumn Term • Interim Reports • “Revision Cracked” workshops after half-term • Home learning to be revision only in two weeks prior to mocks • Support from Form Tutors in setting up a revision timetable • One to one coaching with Form / Lead / Senior Tutor / Mentor

  5. Support: Spring Term • Progress of every student assessed after mock exams • Mock results day Friday January 9th • On-going monitoring throughout the term • Full reports issued • Y11 Review meetings (invitation only)

  6. Subject Specific Support • Rearrangement of teaching groups to target specific weaknesses / student needs • After school revision sessions on published topics • Past papers issued and integrated with revision and Home Learning • Opportunities for on-line revision provided, My Maths and use of the VLE.

  7. Subject Specific Support (cont) • Supervised workshop and ICT facilities at lunchtime and after school • Personalised after school support • Revision workshops during the Easter Holiday

  8. Support: Summer Term • As for Spring Term • Revision programme for Study Leave published • All pupils complete a final revision timetable • Attendance monitored and parents kept informed • August – happy, successful students and proud parents!

  9. A recipe for…..? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a2xERddKJvM

  10. General Revision Skills – getting started • Do an audit of where you are now in each subject • Plan ahead • Check the syllabus • Know how many questions you have to answer • Go over past papers • Try out sample questions under exam conditions • Ask teachers for examiner’s reports – they show what examiners are looking for and common mistakes made by students

  11. Identify Your Competence Level for each subject and topic

  12. Breaking it down…

  13. Active revision, not just reading • Revise, test, rest / Divide up revision time into blocks • Post it notes • Story method for key words • Make posters / index cards / flashcards of key points • Mind maps / Spider diagrams • Reading notes aloud • Rhythm and rhyme / Invent a rap, chant or song • Drawing pictures • Recording key notes onto IPOD / MP3 • Re-writing from memory / Brainstorming • Studying with friends • Use of text books • Past papers • Revision websites – a wealth of resources on-line - MEMRISE

  14. Tony Buzan “Mind Maps”….

  15. Ideas to Use…. Make your own Revision Cards

  16. Ideas to Use….

  17. Revise, test, rest (40 minsrevision, 10 minutes testing, 10 minutes resting)

  18. Reward Yourself

  19. Year 11 Revision - Tips & Techniques Six Golden Rules • Stick to fulfilling your potential, not other people's expectations • Ask for help if you need it • Take time out and relax, it will pay off • Focus on yourself, not on what anyone else thinks or does • Remember, this is not your only chance to prove yourself • Believe in yourself, you've got no reason not to

  20. However, don’t forget… • The odd hour here and there isn't enough • Know your strong and weak subjects • Set targets / reward yourself • Find somewhere quiet to revise – no distractions • Put your revision and exams into perspective – it’s not forever • Manage your stress, eat well and sleep well

  21. Maths Revision

  22. Maths revision = practice Completing revision on a little but often basis will be much more effective than cramming in the final couple of weeks! The best way to revise for Mathematics is to complete as many practice questions as possible

  23. A place to start: These will be available on the VLE Topic lists

  24. Practice resources available include: Past and exemplar papers These are readily available on the shared area of the school network or the VLE. Hard copies of past papers may be available for sale prior to the actual exams.

  25. Practice resources available include: Make sure it is written for the new specification Revision workbooks

  26. Practice resources available include: Mymaths

  27. Practice resources available include: Maths Watch

  28. Practice resources available include: “Zebra” homework book.

  29. Practice resources available include: BBC GCSE Bitesize

  30. Further resources available: Your Maths teacher Revision sessions (look out for and attend these!)

  31. New style of questions Instead of: Solve: 10x - 2 = 38

  32. New style of questions You might get:

  33. Success in Maths = Practice, Practice, Practice

  34. GCSE English /English Languageand English LiteratureExam revision

  35. GCSE English /English Language English Language Examination • Understanding and producing non-fiction texts = 60% of total • Section A: Reading and responding to texts • Section B: Two writing tasks • Your class revision notes include the details of each question (which are always the same!) • You will also have suggested structures for your answers which you should learn.

  36. GCSE English /English Language READING SECTION – 30% of total GCSE English marks Suggested revision techniques for reading questions: • read and annotate various newspaper and magazine articles as well as extracts from autobiographies and travel writing for ideas and techniques using the four questions: 1. Summarise understanding 2. Analyse the picture and headline 3. Infer thoughts and feelings 4. Compare language techniques • use highlighters as it helps to focus on key techniques • post-it notes are effective for adding annotations • answer the questions that you will be asked in the exam papers in timed conditions

  37. GCSE English /English language WRITING SECTION: 30% OF TOTAL GCSE MARKS How to achieve the higher bands for writing: • write, write, write all the time! • consider audience and purpose. • plan – this will allow you to make a range of points and techniques and help you to avoid repetition. • make sure you’re able to use time really well (25 minutes and 35 minutes) • be original • proof-read all work habitually • use the mark schemes when completing practise tasks at home.

  38. GCSE English Literature English Literature Exam Unit 1 Exploring Modern Texts = 40% Literature grade Pupils have studied ‘An Inspector Calls’ or ‘The Crucible’ and ‘Of Mice and Men’ for the first Literature paper Re-read texts Watching the film (be aware of differences) and using revision websites to check your understanding of the characters and structure is a back up.

  39. English Literature Exam Unit 2 Poetry Across Time =35% of total • Section A: One essay question on Conflict or Relationships Cluster • All students have been given their own anthology and have annotated copies of the poems and practice PEA • Section B: One essay question on an unseen poem.

  40. Poetry - Literature revision • Pupils will be tested on their ability to interpret, (AO1) analyse language and techniques (AO2) and compare (AO3) poetry • Read and Re-read the poems from your cluster • Make postcards of the key ideas from the poems • Practise essay plans comparing two poems • Complete practice essays in timed conditions • Read another poem and spend 25 minutes writing about it • Create revision flip cards or a booklet for the poems • Make a mind map of linked themes and ideas • Use the internet to research key poems • Read the rest of the poetry in the Anthology independently to practise skills for the unseen element.

  41. GCSE English /English languageand English Literature • How to help your child • Reading is vital – all key texts for Literature and a wide range of non-fiction texts for English / English Language • Discuss their ideas • Listen to their writing – reading aloud draws attention to style and structure • Revision website www.bbc.co.uk/skillswise and Bitesize • Study guides are a useful support • Spelling and grammar activities • Proof-reading all home learning with them. (Not just English!) • Focus on writing skills, planning and improving vocabulary – use a thesaurus

  42. GCSE SCIENCE AQA 3 Courses Core (Science A) = 1 GCSE Additional Science = 2 GCSEs Separate Science = 3 GCSEs

  43. GCSE SCIENCE Core Students only (Science A) Unit B1 25% Unit C1 25% Unit P1 25% Coursework – ISA (Lessons) 25% = 1 GCSE

  44. GCSE SCIENCE • Unit B2 25% • Unit C2 25% • Unit P2 25% • ISA 25% = 1 GCSE • Unit B1 25% • Unit C1 25% • Unit P1 25% • ISA 25% = 1 GCSE Additional Science

  45. GCSE SCIENCE Separate Science(For each Biology, Chemistry and Physics course. Total 9 exams.) Unit 1 25% Unit 2 25% Unit 3 25% ISA 25% = 1GCSE in each course.

  46. GCSE SCIENCE ISAs All students have done at least one ISA in each subject Retakes are available from January 2015 Students aiming for target grade or higher May be done outside lessons to allow for increased revision time Most students see improvement with practice of skills

  47. GCSE SCIENCE Course Specifications (Essential for revision) Science is information overload. The specification sets out all that information into a logical, organised, progression document AQA website Select science from the subject list and choose the GCSE option to go to all the AQA GCSE science courses. Select the course that you are studying. Ensure you access the specification for exams from 2014.

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