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Peter Price Head of Geography, Charterhouse 9 April 2016 Cambridge Advanced: post-16 options Peter Monteath Regional Director, UK and Ireland
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A level reform in England The following are being redeveloped for first teaching in September 2015: English Language and Literature, sciences, art and design, business, computer science, economics, history, sociology, psychology Subjects for first teaching 2016: Modern foreign languages, geography, dance, drama, music, P.E. and religious studies Remainder will be reformed by 2017.
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Where does Cambridge fit in?
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Cambridge Advanced Cambridge Secondary 1 Cambridge Checkpoint Cambridge ICT Starters Cambridge IGCSE Cambridge O Level Cambridge ICE Cambridge Secondary 1 11 to 14 years old* Cambridge Secondary 2 14 to 16 years old* Cambridge Primary Cambridge Primary Checkpoint Cambridge ICT Starters Cambridge Primary 5 to 11 years old* Cambridge Advanced 16 to 19 years old* Cambridge International AS and A Level Cambridge Pre-U Cambridge AICE
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Cambridge International AS and A Level Tens of thousands of learners use it every year to gain places at leading universities worldwide Cambridge International AS and A Level options available Over 55 subjects – specialise or retain breadth. Schools can build an individualised curriculum In UK, offered by independent sector schools only – not Ofqual regulated International A Level, domestic A Level, Pre- U mix is not uncommon.
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“We think that Cambridge International qualifications are a really good preparation for university study. They allow students to specialise in particular subjects and to develop lots of other skills which are really useful for university study – things like communication skills, research skills and problem-solving skills” Roseanna Cross, Head of Undergraduate Admissions, University of Bristol “Cambridge International A Levels are an excellent technical qualification. They provide really good core knowledge and help to build aptitude and they provide a really good bedrock for the move – the transition to university in the first year of study.” Richard Partington, Senior Tutor, Churchill College, University of Cambridge
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Assessment Structure
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Scheme of Assessment (to 2017) Paper 1 Core Geography (AS Level, 3 hours) Paper 2 Advanced Physical Options Paper 3 Advanced Human Options (Each 1 hour 30 minutes, forming A Level with Paper 1) Delivery can be staged or linear.
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Scheme of assessment from 2018 ComponentDurationWeighting AS LevelA Level Paper 1 Core Physical Geography1 hr 30 mins50%25% Paper 2 Core Human Geography1 hr 30 mins50%25% Paper 3 Advanced Physical Options1 hr 30 mins-25% Paper 4 Advanced Human Options1 hr 30 mins-25% Up to and including 2017, Papers 1 and 2 are combined
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All four (three in 2017) components are externally assessed by Cambridge No coursework International qualification so compulsory fieldwork would have been difficult to assess. Fieldwork is actively encouraged but not directly assessed in components.
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What is the content of the Core? Physical Core 1 Hydrology and fluvial geomorphology 2 Atmosphere and weather 3 Rocks and weathering Human Core 1 Population 2 Migration 3 Settlement dynamics
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Advanced Options at a view (unchanged for 2018) Choose Two Advanced Physical Options from: 1 Tropical environments 2 Coastal environments 3 Hazardous environments 4 Arid and semi-arid environments Choose Two Advanced Human Options from: 1Production, location and change 2Environmental management 3Global interdependence 4Economic transition
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Examination sessions Two examination sessions October/November May/June After AS Level, full A Level must be completed within 13 months AS Level can be re-taken or full A Level can be re-taken No unit re-takes.
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In Summary Well-established syllabus Staged approach of AS contributing to full A Level grade is retained. It can also be taken in a ‘linearly’ AS moves to a two paper examination in 2018 November examination series, if required All components assessed by Cambridge Support resources – especially past papers
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2005/6: The initial steer Approach from schools Some discontent with current A Level provision Issues around modularity: Retake culture Grade inflation Lack of discrimination Loss of teaching time
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Advantages of assessment after two years More time for learning Time to ‘find voice’ in subjects Time to make transition into Sixth Form life Time to link ideas, concepts, themes Less emphasis on examination culture Freedom for teachers to build exciting, innovative study programmes
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Distinction Merit Pass D1 D3 M2 M3 P1 P2 P3 D2 M1 E/U boundary A/B boundary C/D boundary Cambridge Pre-U exists in a defined relationship to A Level It is accessible to all who currently achieve pass at A Level Grading
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Universities Recognition, offers and destinations
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Typical offers from selective universities Cambridge - History Standard A Level Offer: A*, A, A Mixed portfolio: D2, A, A Warwick – Chemistry Standard A Level Offer: A, A, B Mixed portfolio: D3, D3, B Nottingham - Geography Standard A Level Offer: A, A, B Pre-U OfferD3, D3, M1 Essex – Mathematics Standard A Level Offer: B, B, B Mixed portfolio: M2, B, B Plus: Recognition and offers from top US universities We encourage schools to contact us early about non- UK applications so that we can liaise with the university.
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Cambridge Pre-U UK A Level
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So where does that leave us? Cambridge – greater stability and continuity. Long established qualifications Syllabus reviews driven by schools with university input on overarching aims Offering real choice for decision-makers in schools.
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Learn more! Getting in touch with Cambridge is easy Email us at info@cie.org.uk or telephone +44 (0) 1223 553554 www.cie.org.uk
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