Curriculum for Excellence (Scottish Gaelic: Curraicealam airson Sàr-mhathais) is the national curriculum in Scotland, used by Scottish schools for learners ages 3–18.[1] The implementation of Curriculum for Excellence is overseen by Education Scotland, the executive agency of the Scottish Government responsible for the education system in Scotland.[2]
History
editDevelopment
editIt was developed out of a 2002 consultation exercise – the National Debate on Education – undertaken by the-then First McConnell government of the Scottish Executive on the state of school education. In response to the National Debate, Ministers established a Curriculum Review Group in November 2003 to identify the purposes of education for the 3–18 age range and to determine key principles to be applied in a redesign of the curriculum. Its work resulted in the publication in November 2004 of the document A Curriculum for Excellence.[3] This document identified four key purposes of education; those that enable young people to become, "successful learners, confident individuals, responsible citizens and effective contributors."
The Curriculum for Excellence is described by Education Scotland as "placing learners at the heart of education".[4] It is underpinned by "four capacities" – Successful Learners, Confident Individuals, Responsible Citizens and Effective Contributors – which are designed to reflect and recognise the lifelong nature of education and learning.[4]
Education Scotland claims that as part of their learner journey, all "children and young people in Scotland are entitled to experience a coherent curriculum from 3 to 18, in order that they have opportunities to develop the knowledge, skills and attributes they need to adapt, think critically and flourish in today's world". The totality of the Curriculum for Excellence can be experienced through Curriculum areas and associated subjects, Interdisciplinary learning, Ethos and life of the school as well as wider Opportunities for personal achievement.[4]
Implementation
editThe Curriculum for Excellence was implemented in schools in 2010−11.[5] Its implementation is overseen by Education Scotland. In Scotland, councils and schools both have some responsibility for what is taught in schools and they must also take national guidelines and advice into account.[6]
A review was undertaken by the OECD, having been commissioned by the Scottish Government to look at the broad general education.[7] A refreshed narrative on the curriculum which establishes Curriculum for Excellence "within the current context" was published by Education Scotland in September 2019.[4]
Overview
editPurpose
editAs stated by Education Scotland, Curriculum for Excellence "is encapsulated in the four capacities - to enable each child or young person to be a successful learner, a confident individual, a responsible citizen and an effective contributor". It aims to establish skills in children and young people to "flourish in life" and in "learning and work, now and in the future, and to appreciate their place in the world".[8]
Curriculum areas
editThe areas of Curriculum for Excellence are:
- Expressive arts
- Health and wellbeing
- Languages (including English, Gàidhlig, Gaelic (Learners), modern languages and classical languages)
- Mathematics
- Religious and moral education (including Religious and moral education and Religious education in Roman Catholic schools)
- Sciences
- Social studies
- Technologies
The curriculum areas of literacy, numeracy and health and wellbeing are recognised by Education Scotland and the Scottish Government as being particularly important curricular areas, and as such, they are seen as "being the responsibility of all staff" in Scottish schools.[4]
Benchmarks
editIn August 2016, Education Scotland produced what is known as "benchmarks" in order to "provide clarity on the national standards expected within each curriculum area at each level". Education Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence (CfE) Statement for Practitioners document which was published in August 2016 stated that there was to be two new key resources which support practitioners to plan learning, teaching and assessment, one of which was Benchmarks, and the other focused on Experiences and Outcomes.[9] The established Benchmarks explain the lines of progression within learning in the curricular areas of literacy and English and numeracy and mathematics, as well as across all other curriculum areas from Early Level to Fourth Level (First to Fourth Levels in Modern Languages, as Early Level is not included). The purpose statement issued by Education Scotland claimed that the introduction of Benchmarks was required "to make clear what learners need to know and be able to do to progress through the levels, and to support consistency in teachers’ and other practitioners’ professional judgements".[9]
The Benchmarks issued for literacy and numeracy should "be used to support teachers’ professional judgement of achievement of a level". Education Scotland expects that within all other curriculum areas in Curriculum for Excellence, that Benchmarks will be used in order to support teachers and practitioners to "understand standards and identify children's and young people's next steps in learning". Education Scotland claim that teachers and practitioners much gather a range of information of children's progress in learning which they expect will come from a variety of sources including:[9]
- observing day-to-day learning within the classroom, playroom or working area; • observation and feedback from learning activities that takes place in other environments, for example, outdoors, on work placements; • coursework, including tests;
- learning conversations; and
- planned periodic holistic assessment
Achievement of a level within Curriculum for Excellence is expected to be based on teacher professional judgement which is well informed by a wide range of evidence. Benchmarks can be used by teachers and practitioners in order to "review the range of evidence gathered to determine if the expected standard has been achieved and the learner has":[9]
- achieved a breadth of learning across the knowledge, understanding and skills as set out in the experiences and outcomes for the level;
- responded consistently well to the level of challenge set out in the Experiences and Outcomes for the level and has moved forward to learning at the next level in some aspects; and
- demonstrated application of what they have learned in new and unfamiliar situations.
Qualifications
editNew qualifications were set out in 2014 by the Scottish Qualifications Authority to meet with the Curriculum for Excellence. The new qualifications were:[10]
- National 1
- National 2
- National 3 – Replaced the "Foundation"-level Standard Grade[10]
- National 4 – Replaced the "General"-level Standard Grade[10]
- National 5 – Replaced the "Credit"-level Standard Grade[10]
- Higher – Replaced older versions of the Higher Grade course[10]
- Advanced Higher – Replaced the Certificate of Sixth Year Studies[10]
National 1–4 qualifications are internally assessed by teachers, whereas National 5, Higher and Advanced Higher qualifications are externally assessed by the Scottish Qualifications Authority.[11]
Criticism
editBefore its introduction, many within the Scottish teaching profession, including the teachers' trade union The Educational Institute of Scotland (EIS) and its members,[12] believed that the Curriculum for Excellence was too vague, in particular regarding its supposed 'outcomes and experiences'. There existed a fear that this imprecision would result in a lack of clarity in what was expected of teachers in the classroom and in the assessment of pupils' progress and attainment.
The original concerns led East Renfrewshire, one of the most educationally successful local authorities, to delay implementation of the secondary school phase of the new curriculum by one year. Some Scottish independent schools, including St Aloysius' College, in Glasgow, chose to do the same.[13]
References
edit- ^ "Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence".
- ^ "Curriculum for Excellence". education.gov.scot. Retrieved 29 July 2024.
- ^ A Curriculum For Excellence by the Curriculum Review Group at the Wayback Machine (archived 13 August 2018)
- ^ a b c d e "What is Curriculum for Excellence?". education.gov.scot. Retrieved 3 August 2024.
- ^ Timeline - Process of change - The curriculum in Scotland Archived 26 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ McIvor, Jamie (10 July 2013). "Why Scotland doesn't have a national curriculum". Retrieved 26 July 2014.
- ^ "OECD passes judgement on Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence". BBC News. 15 December 2015.
- ^ "The purpose of the curriculum". education.gov.scot. Retrieved 29 July 2024.
- ^ a b c d "Benchmarks Early Level All Curriculum Areas" (PDF). Education Scotland. Scottish Government. Retrieved 3 August 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f "SCOTTISH NATIONAL QUALIFICATIONS - SCQF LEVELS AND TIMELINES" (PDF). sqcf.org.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 December 2023. Retrieved 22 May 2024.
- ^ "A guide to the new National 4 and 5 qualifications - BBC News". BBC News. 15 April 2014.
- ^ "Union concern at new curriculum". BBC News. 8 May 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
- ^ Denholm, Andrew (23 February 2012). "Leading private school to delay start of new exams". The Herald (Glasgow). Retrieved 27 January 2013.
See also
editOther national curriculums of the countries of the United Kingdom
- Education in the United Kingdom
- National Curriculum for England – England
- Northern Ireland Curriculum – Northern Ireland
- National Curriculum for Wales (2008 to 2026) – Wales (former)
- Curriculum for Wales (2022 to present) – Wales (current)
External links
edit- Curriculum for Excellence on Scottish Government website
- BBC guide
- Bright Red Publishing Digital Zone