Secondary Curriculum
Handout
version [word doc.]
Presentation
version [powerpoint doc.]
Regional
Subject Briefing presentation- PSHE Education
(powerpoint)
The new secondary curriculum, being phased in from Sept. 2008,
is aims led, flexible and coherent. For the first time the
curriculum definition includes all the planned learning experiences
in the school and beyond so that learning outside the classroom
takes on a new importance.
The aims place personal development and the acquisition of
personal, learning and thinking skills at the heart of the
curriculum and reflect the Every Child Matters (ECM) outcomes
stating that the curriculum should enable all young people to
become:
- successful learners who enjoy learning, make progress and
achieve
- confident individuals who are able to live safe, healthy and
fulfilling lives
- responsible citizens who make a positive contribution to
society
Increased personalisation and scope for local determination
enables schools to develop their curriculum to meet the needs of
their pupils and in response to local priorities and circumstances.
Whole curriculum design should link learning to life outside school
and make connections between subjects and cross-curricular themes
and dimensions.
Three questions are used for curriculum design, development and
implementation:
- what are we trying to achieve?
- how do we organise learning?
- how well are we achieving our aims?
The cross curricular dimensions reflect some
of the major ideas and challenges that face society and have
significance for individuals in the 21st century. These
can provide unifying themes to give learning relevance and help
young people make sense of the world.
- identity and cultural diversity
- healthy lifestyles
- community participation
- enterprise
- sustainable futures and the global dimension
- technology and the media
- creativity and critical thinking
In the new curriculum PSHE assumes greater importance and
prominence than previously. PSHE (personal, social, health and
economic) education is described in two new programmes of
study:
- personal wellbeing
- economic wellbeing and financial capability
These programmes of study make a draw together, in a coherent
way, personal, social and health education, including sex
education, the social and emotional aspects of learning, careers
education, enterprise, financial capability and work-related
learning. PSHE education makes a significant contribution to
pupils’ personal development alongside the contribution of all
other subjects and curriculum experiences. PSHE education is
essential to achieving the curriculum aims and makes an explicit
contribution to all seven of the cross curricular dimensions.
The programmes of study for PSHE education are designed in
exactly the same way as those for other subjects all of which have
as their main focus key concepts and processes rather than content.
Each programme of study includes:
- an importance statement describing why the subject matters and
how it contributes to the aims
- key concepts that define the big ideas that underpin the
subject
- key processes - the essential skills of the subject
- range and content setting out the breadth of subject matter
from which teachers should draw to develop the key concepts and
skills
- curriculum opportunities that enhance and enrich learning,
increasing its relevance and making links to the wider
curriculum.
The key concepts for PSHE education in
personal wellbeing are:
- personal identities
- healthy lifestyles
- risk
- relationships
- diversity
and in economic wellbeing and financial capability are:
- career
- capability
- risk
- economic understanding.
The key processes for PSHE education in
personal wellbeing are:
- critical reflection
- decision-making and managing risk
- developing relationships and working with others
and in economic wellbeing and financial capability
- self-development
- exploration
- enterprise
- financial capability.
The two programmes of study can support each
other not only through the common concept of risk but also through
further exploration of the concepts and processes.
Understanding risk in both positive and negative terms and the
ability to manage risk in relation to relationships, health,
finance, enterprise and career choices requires planning across the
two programmes of study. However other links are important, for
example, between the concept of personal identities and that of
career in which developing a sense of personal identity is
essential for career progression. Both require an understanding of
personal qualities, attitudes and skills will help to create the
coherent and relevant learning experiences for which the curriculum
has been designed.
However, it is by making links right across
the curriculum that true coherence will be achieved. Identity and
cultural diversity – an essential theme for 21st century
living – is a recurring theme in a range of subjects. Healthy
lifestyles, traditionally addressed mainly through PSHE and
physical education requires a whole curriculum approach to
adequately achieve the curriculum aims.
It will be as schools develop their own
responses to the new curriculum that examples of really rich
learning experiences will emerge. PSHE education, with its history
of whole school planning, cross curricular approaches and learning
beyond the classroom has an enormous contribution to make.
The PSHE Subject Association will develop support materials to help
with the process and will also collect from its members examples of
effective practice that will support the whole school community as
well as developing the subject as one of high status and
significance.
Information for primary
schools
What has changed and why? Link to
National Curriculum website on the new secondary curriulum
Last Updated Date :
7/3/2008