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Sylvia Young Theatre School

Full Time School

Curriculum


The Sylvia Young Theatre School seeks to create a happy working environment where students can enjoy learning, staff
can enjoy teaching and students can achieve their potential academically, vocationally, socially, morally and creatively.

Assessment & Reporting

Assessment at the Sylvia Young Theatre School supports individual students in the achievement of his or her full learning potential and fosters the development of self-esteem and personal responsibility.

This takes place with the involvement of staff, students and parents. The Sylvia Young Theatre School recognises that assessment does not need to be in the form of formal examinations but can be a progression within the school maximising the potential of each individual student. Assessment is the obtaining, analysing and interpreting evidence for use by both pupils and teachers to enable the review, planning and improvement of learning.  It is fully integrated with the delivery of the curriculum and is an essential component of classroom practice.

The Sylvia Young Theatre School aims to practice forms of assessment that:

  1. Promote and support learning
  2. Informs teaching
  3. Is both informative and summative
  4. Uses appropriate and diverse strategies
  5. Recognises pupil progress in all areas of the curriculum
  6. Develops self-assessment for all members of the school
  7. Develops shared responsibility between school and home

Assessment and recording (academic):

Internal assessment and recording

Consistent record keeping by all teachers allows the effective monitoring of student progress and the regular evaluation of teaching content/styles/methods. 

Good practice encourages:

  1. Common assessment marks/grades recorded in teacher mark books
  2. Homework grades recorded in teacher mark books
  3. Regular informal assessment as part of the learning process
  4. Regular formal testing in all subjects for all year groups. This may take the form of half termly tests, end of topic tests or end of unit / module tests. Testing may take the form of written tests or oral / speaking assessments or a combination of both
  5. End of year or end of Key Stage tests in subjects where this is appropriate
  6. Mock GCSE examinations in January of each year for year 11 in all subjects taken

Teacher records are used to inform reporting both formal and informal, to students, parents and the school management team.

Assessment and recording (vocational):

Sylvia Young Theatre School operates a detailed system of assessment and reporting.  Towards the end of the autumn term students' achievements are reported to parents, in brief, by way of the 'Interim Report'.   During the summer term a detailed assessment is made and reported in the students 'Record of Achievement'. Parents log on via a secure link to access reports, prior to parents evening, for parents perusal.

When grading, it is important that a uniform policy is adopted across all departments and across all year groups.  All staff therefore use the scale of E to U where E represents the highest achievement, U the lowest. 

Dates of parents’ afternoons / evenings and reports are published in the school calendar at the start of each academic year.

Staff have school e-mail addresses and if parents have any subject specific queries or concerns then e-mailing the teacher concerned is the best course of action in the first instance. 

Parents afternoon

An opportunity for individual appointments with vocational staff during a parents’ afternoon are arranged during the school year. Appointments are made on your behalf.

External assessment

Students are assessed externally in public examinations as follows:

  1. GCSE controlled assessment tasks during years 10 & 11 where this forms part of the GCSE examination requirement for the subject
  2. GCSE examinations taken in the Summer term of year 11

Year 6 students are NOT entered for Key Stage 2 SATs tests. Internal testing and teacher assessment are used in year 6. 

Homework

Homework is an important part of every student’s learning experience that helps them to make more rapid progress. It provides students with the experience of working by themselves to consolidate or extend work covered in school. It also establishes and develops good study habits, time management, self-discipline, commitment and perseverance that are so valuable in the future of life long learning and adaptability. Homework must be viewed as important by staff, students and parents / guardians.

Purposes of homework

These include:

  1. encouraging students to develop the skills, confidence and motivation needed to study effectively on their own;
  2. consolidating and reinforcing skills and understanding developed at school;
  3. extending school learning and encouraging broad and original thinking;
  4. encouraging reading for information and for pleasure;
  5. sustaining the involvement of parents and carers in the management of students’ learning and keeping them informed about the work students are doing;
  6. managing particular demands such as GCSE coursework.

Setting, recording and quantity of homework

The general expectation is that staff will set at least one piece of homework per subject per week. However, extended tasks may be set, particularly at GCSE level, which may take several weeks.

Homework tasks for each subject should take an average of 30 minutes in Years 6 & 7 increasing to an average of an hour per subject by Year 10.

Homework tasks are recorded by students in their diaries which are checked and signed weekly by parents / carers and form tutors. Tasks are also displayed by staff on the noticeboards for each year group on the 3rd floor for the benefit of students who were absent when the work was set.

In addition to homework tasks, students who have been absent due to professional work, or other reasons, have to catch up with missed classwork. The school has a clear procedure and proforma in place for setting of such work which is known as ‘CW1 work’.

Failure to submit homework on time without a reasonable explanation results in a letter home and may also generate a detention.

Appropriate tasks for homework

Homework time should not regularly be used simply for “finishing off” work carried out in class as this can place too heavy a burden on some students and too light a demand on others. However, there are occasions on which this type of homework may be necessary / appropriate.

Appropriate homework tasks will vary considerably between different subjects but might include:

  1. tasks to consolidate classwork;
  2. extension tasks;
  3. reading;
  4. research;
  5. preparation for forthcoming work;
  6. learning tasks / revision

Homework tasks should be differentiated, where possible, to allow students to achieve at their own level.

Feedback for students

Homework should be handed in / completed by the agreed time and feedback should generally be given to students by the following week. Extended tasks such as GCSE coursework obviously take a lot longer to assess and feedback should be given as soon as is practical and possible after the work has been submitted.

Feedback is given through written and verbal comments and, where appropriate, by marks, grades or National Curriculum Levels. Comments are used to recognise good work / effort / progress and also to give suggestions and targets for improvement.