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The Children's Plan: raising emotional literacy
Tags: Assistant Head | Deputy Head | Emotional Literacy | Headteacher | Parent | Raising Achievement | School Governor | School Leadership & Management | SEAL - Social Emotional Aspects of Learning | SEAL Coordinator | Well-being
What does the Children's Plan have to say about shaping up a more emotionally literate education system? The Children’s Plan lays out the government’s strategy for ensuring that ‘all children have access to a world-class education which supports their cognitive, social and emotional skills development so that no child is left to fall behind.’ Principles The five principles underpinning this strategy are that:
The strategy is organised around six strategic objectives: 1. Happy and healthy Key elements in the government’s strategy for ensuring young people develop the full range of skills that they need to thrive are:
The government is looking for ways to get the balance right between keeping children safe and allowing them the freedom they need to learn, have new experiences and enjoy their childhoods. To achieve this, it intends to:
The government is seeking to overcome barriers to learning through ‘a more sophisticated approach to personalisation, making it standard practice across the system.’ In this way it wants to achieve faster rises in standards, and to close the gaps in achievement that exist for disadvantaged and vulnerable children. The government hopes to develop ‘a new relationship between parents and school. As part of this, every secondary student is to have a personal tutor who ‘knows them in the round, and acts as a main contact for parents’. The tutor will also:
The government intends to move rapidly forward with the Making Good Progress tests, based on stage rather than age. It believes that these will make the experience feel less ‘high stages’ for pupils, as well as contributing to better teaching and learning. The tests will be used in the same way as the current tests ‘to hold schools accountable for the performance of children by the end of key stages and to ensure that parents can see the performance of their children’s schools in the performance tables.’ The plan argues that these tests will enable each child to benefit from an approach that is ‘tailored to their needs’ because it takes into account children’s different rates of progress and their different backgrounds and life experiences. ‘All children,’ the plan says, ‘will then be motivated to learn in school by highly structured and responsive teaching, based on a detailed understanding of where pupils are in their learning, where they need to go and how they will get there.’ Teachers will be expected to use sophisticated tracking and assessment for learning tools to:
5. Leadership and collaboration The plan recognises that the key to delivering the government’s objectives is a ‘world-class workforce’, which it hopes to further develop by:
The government wants all young people to develop the skills that employers and higher education institutions say they need. ‘A changing economy,’ the plan observes, ‘means we need to ensure our children and young people have the right skills as they become adults and move into further or higher education, or into work.’ Download The Children’s Plan This article first appeared in Raising Achievement Update - Feb 2008 What is this? What is this? These icons allow you to do one of the following: You can 'socially bookmark' this page. If you like this article and think others will be interested in it, you can add it to one of the sites on which web users share links. These are Digg, del.icio.us, Reddit, ma.gnolia, Newsvine or Furl. Add a link to your Google homepage or 'My Yahoo!' page. Search Technorati, Ice Rocket or PubSub to see if any bloggers have linked to this article. | | | | | | | | | |
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