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Institution: Education Hampshire
Context
Education in Hampshire for 14-19 year olds is very largely provided
in 11-16 schools, 6th Forms and FE colleges. The aim of
establishing a 14-19 Learning Network in Hampshire was, therefore,
to address the issue of transition in the context of language study
and so promote high-quality and appropriately varied provision
across the county. Three networks are already established and a
fourth is about to begin.
How the programme is organised
The network is
currently comprised of 3 Language Colleges, 17 secondary schools, 4
FE / Sixth Form Colleges, 1 Local Authority and one university.
Initial meetings were held to raise awareness of the 14-19 agenda
and of the role language learning can and should play for students
across the range of ability and interest. These were chaired by the
Local Authority’s adviser for languages.
In subsequent meetings each area network chose to focus on an
element of particular interest to its members such as:
i) early entry to GCSE (in years 9 or 10)
and how this can lead to the development of appropriate courses run
jointly between schools and colleges;
ii) ways in which Asset Languages can be
useful as an alternative;
iii) the development of languages in the 14-19 Diplomas. Ways of using NVQ
within the Additional and Specialist section of the Diploma and as
stand-alone are being investigated with particular reference to the
Creative and Media Diploma.
Specialist Language Colleges are contributing with both
expertise and finance to this project.
Results / effect
One Language College,
Brookfield Language College, is planning to introduce a new
language course at Level 1/ 2 NVQ in September 2009 with three Year
10 classes (two French and one German), with Spanish following
later. Resources are being developed in association with
BECTA. The course will focus on
functional language skills for work and will be an alternative to
GCSE. In the future it could be offered within Diplomas across the consortium thereby offering
meaningful language learning for a wide range of KS4
learners.
One Sixth Form College, Alton College, has developed a network to
promote continuity of learning with its partner schools. It has
used Asset Languages as its focus and the
subject leader in the college has become the regional co-ordinator
for Asset developments
Another College, Barton Peveril, is working closely with a number
of its partner schools to promote effective continuity from early
GCSE entry (year 9). A shared teaching programme may develop from
this collaboration.
Future developments
The work of the group
will be disseminated widely across the region and has great
potential to inform curriculum decisions in other areas.
Development meetings in the three established networks have
continued until March 2008 although the fourth network is further
behind.
Subject to funding opportunities, the preferred options would be
to develop the following:
- teaching plans, resources and appropriate accreditation to
support the additional and specialist element of the Creative and
Media Diploma
- methodology for supporting continuous learning from 14-19
following successful early entry to GCSE or its equivalent
- facilitation of shared teaching programmes between schools and
college.
Download the replication
toolkit (doc 49KB).