qualifications update: higher politics jane henderson qdm qualifications update: higher politics...
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Qualifications Update:Higher Politics
Jane Henderson QDM
Qualifications Update:Higher Politics
Jane Henderson QDM
• Coherent progression from related National 5 subjects to Higher Politics
• Relevant, challenging and enjoyable contexts • Opportunities for candidates to show the breadth
and depth of what they know• Opportunities for candidates to show the
application of their Politics skills• Personalisation and choice for learners in the
Assignment
Key messagesKey messages
• Units combine skills and knowledge and offer flexibility in how evidence is gathered, to challenge and motivate learners
• Knowledge and understanding and the application of skills build progressively up levels in Unit and in Course assessment
• Maintains many of the best aspects of current Higher while offering learning contexts that ensure the continuing quality and credibility of Politics
Key messagesKey messages
• Feedback from SQA development team, Qualification Design team, Principal Assessor and the question paper team identified a small number of necessary changes to clarify and improve:– Alignment with SCQF level 6– Unit Outcomes and Assessment Standards– Description of mandatory content in the Course
Assessment Specification
Changes to mandatory documents
• Forthcoming and previously published Unit Assessment Support Packs are based on the revised Unit Specifications
• Specimen Question Paper and Assignment published February - April 2014 will align with the revised Course Assessment Specification
• Final versions of Higher documents – in all subjects – published in June 2014
Next steps
Assessment Support Schedule 2013/14 Assessment Support Schedule 2013/14
Sept 13 CfE Update Letter
Oct 13 Unit Assessment Support (Package 1)
Feb 14 Unit Assessment Support (Package 2)
Feb 14 Higher Specimen Question Paper
Mar 14 Coursework General Assessment Information
Apr 14 Unit Assessment Support (Package 3)
May 14 Update Mandatory Documents
June 14 Update Unit Assessment Support
PoliticsUnit Assessment
HigherElaine Walls QDC
PoliticsUnit Assessment
HigherElaine Walls QDC
Unit assessmentUnit assessment• Supports assessment as part of learning and
teaching • Is flexible in the ways in which evidence can
be generated• Open in the context which is used and in the
form of the evidence
Unit Assessment Support Unit Assessment Support packages – purpose packages – purpose
• Assess your candidates
• Adapt in line with your own assessment strategy
• Help you develop your own assessments
Unit Assessment Support Unit Assessment Support Packages – key featuresPackages – key features
• Tell you – with examples – how to judge evidence against Assessment Standards
• Provide further clarification of the Assessment Standards
• Encourage and support professional judgment• Include advice on adapting to different contexts • Valid from August 2014
Unit assessment support Unit assessment support packages - approachespackages - approaches
• Unit by Unit approach – discrete assessment tasks for each Unit
• Combined approach – groups Outcomes and Assessment Standards from different Units
• Portfolio approach – evidence generated Assessment Standard by Assessment Standard
Assessment Packages Assessment Packages Pack 1 – Unit by Unit Assessment
Political Theory Political Systems Political Parties and Elections
Skill: Draw a conclusion
Context: Conservatism, Socialism and Power
Skill: Compare
Context: UK and US political systems
Skill: Analyse and Evaluate
Context: 2010 UK Election, Labour Party
Pack 2– Combined AssessmentSkills and/or knowledge brought together under theme of ‘Scotland and Politics’
Political Theory Political Systems Political Parties and Elections
Skill: Draw a conclusion
Context: Nationalism and Liberalism, Legitimacy and Authority
Skill: Compare
Context: Scottish and UK political systems
Skill: Analyse and Evaluate
Context: 2011 Scottish Election, SNP
Assessment Pack 2 Assessment Pack 2
• 3 Tasks– Task 1 - links
– Also includes advice on how to adapt the task
– Evidence in one form may be supplemented with evidence in other forms
Document read-throughDocument read-through
• Overview of Assessment – Contains an outline of the example task
– Also includes advice on how to adapt the task
– Evidence in one form may be supplemented with evidence in other forms
Document read-throughDocument read-through
• Assessment Conditions– Level of teacher/lecturer support should be
appropriate but evidence must be the candidate's own work
– When group work is used, evidence of individual achievement is required
– Centres responsibility to ensure that all evidence is the individual candidate’s work
Document read-throughDocument read-through• Assessment Conditions (continued)– SQA has left the conditions of assessment at Unit
level open and flexible– Candidates should have sufficient time to
complete the task– Candidates should have access to appropriate
resources to undertake the assessment– Do not inflate the standard by applying conditions
not required by the Assessment Standards – Consistency in the application of these conditions
National 3 – Higher
Document read-throughDocument read-through
• Evidence to be gathered– A range of possible forms of evidence may be
appropriate– Keep accurate records of the evidence gathered
and the assessment decisions made– Only need sufficient evidence to show
achievement of the Assessment Standards once
Document read-throughDocument read-through• Judging Evidence– Table tells you how to judge evidence against the
Assessment Standards– Illustrations of possible candidate responses– Approach used can change, Assessment Standards
do not change– Columns 1 – 3 are fixed, column 4 will vary with
the task
Document read-throughDocument read-through
• Re-assessment arrangements – Assessment should be carried out when the
individual candidate is ready – If a candidate fails to provide evidence for all the
Assessment Standards, it is only necessary to re-assess the individual Assessment Standard that they have yet to achieve
Document read-throughDocument read-through
• Examples of recording documentation– Exemplar tables for recording candidate’s/group’s
achievement of Assessment Standards– These can be adapted as required
Document read-throughDocument read-through
• Assessment Task– Aligns with the prompts in the Overview of
Assessment section– Exemplifies one context in which Unit assessment
may take place
Workshop 1Workshop 1• Use the materials provided:• In groups of 2-3 discuss:– The assessment task in the Unit Assessment
Support provided– How to generate evidence for the UAS provided– How to make assessment judgements for the
UAS provided
Workshop 1Workshop 1Use the materials provided:•read the UASP (10 mins) focus on the candidate task and the judging the evidence tableIn groups of 2-3 discuss:•how you would use or adapt the task provided (20 minutes)•how column 4 illustrates the standard defined in column 3 (15 minutes)•the ways in which Unit assessment fits in with your overall assessment strategy (15 minutes)•what will you take back to your centre to support others?
Politics Higher Course Assessment
Alan Barclay QDC
Politics Higher Course Assessment
Alan Barclay QDC
Context and Rationale for development Context and Rationale for development of Higher Politicsof Higher Politics
• Level of demand benchmarked against SCQF level 6 as in current Higher
• Although direct progression and articulation from National 5 not an issue – need to consider prior experience
• CfE principles e.g. personalisation and choice, importance of skills
• Opportunity to refresh and update content and contexts• Consistency with and distinction from other Highers • FIOCA provides further detail
Process of DevelopmentProcess of Development• Course Specification – Aims and rationale of the
Higher Politics Course• Unit Specifications – Skills developed across all
Units and assessed within specified contexts• Course Assessment Specification – Requirements
for Question Paper and Assignment – application of skills to mandatory content
Added ValueAdded Value• Makes the Course more than the sum of its parts• Builds on current Course assessment and Group
Award approaches • Defined as breadth, challenge and application as
outlined in Building the Curriculum 5• May involve accumulation, assimilation, integration
and/or application of skills, knowledge and understanding
• Uses one or two of 7 defined assessment methods
Adding Value – National 4, Adding Value – National 4, National 5, HigherNational 5, Higher
• For National 4, the added value is assessed in the Added Value Unit - not graded
• For National 5 and Higher (and Advanced Higher) the added value is assessed in the Course Assessment - graded A - D (as at present)
Higher – Course AssessmentHigher – Course Assessment• Two components
– Question Paper: 60 marks - 66% (75% at National 5)
– Assignment 30: marks - 33% (25% at National 5)
• Skills and knowledge and understanding will have equal importance across course assessment as a whole
• Both components will be externally marked
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question Paper• Three sections each worth 20 marks: Political Theory, Political
Systems and Political Parties and Elections There will be a choice of questions in each section
• Mandatory content will be sampled
• Will assess the skills of analysing and evaluating, and draw on detailed knowledge and understanding of complex issues as well as applying information handling skills (source based questions) of comparing and interpreting electoral data
• Greater emphasis on knowledge and understanding than skills
• Range of marks – 8, 12 or 20
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question Paper• In the Political Theory Section; candidates will have a
choice of one from two extended response questions. There will be a wider choice of ideologies.
• In the Political Systems Section; candidates will have a choice of one from two extended response questions. They will be able to answer in the contexts of Scotland, the United Kingdom, the USA or the European Union.
• In the Political Parties and Elections Section; candidates will have a choice of one from two extended response questions. There are both familiar and new contexts in this section.
• There will be no choice of source based questions
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question PaperA limited range of command words/question stems will be used in the paper for extended response questions:
•Compare …
•Analyse …
•Evaluate …
•Discuss …
•To what extent …
Greater clarity and support for centres in general marking principles and detailed marking instructions as to how these questions will be marked
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question Paper“Compare” questions require candidates to…
Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of similarities and/or differences.
SQA Guidance
Comparison will derive from a body of knowledge and understanding.
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question Paper“Analyse” questions require candidates to…
Identify parts, the relationship between them, and their relationships with the whole. Draw out and relate implications.
SQA Guidance
Analysis will derive from a body of knowledge and understanding.
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question Paper“Evaluate” questions require candidates to…
Make a judgement based on criteria.
SQA Guidance
Evaluation will derive from a body of knowledge and understanding. Candidates will make a judgment(s), reach a conclusion(s), make evaluative comments
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question Paper“Discuss” and “To what extent” questions require candidates to…
Analyse and Evaluate and present a logical and coherent line of argument
Analysis and evaluation will derive from a body of knowledge and understanding.
Higher – Question PaperHigher – Question PaperSource based questions require candidates to…
Apply skills to a range of detailed/complex sources
“Compare” questions will require candidates to compare information from 2 sources of evidence and identify and explain differences/similarities and reach conclusions
“Evaluate electoral data” questions will require candidates to analyse/evaluate between 2 and 3 sources of information and make an overall judgement based on evidence
Controlled AssessmentControlled Assessment• Where the assessment method is not a question paper,
SQA has introduced the concept of controlled assessment to ensure fairness and reliability
• Three stages of assessment: Setting, Conducting, Marking the assessment
• Each will have a defined level of control: SQA-led activity, Shared responsibility between SQA and centres, Centre-led
• Subject-specific decisions, but mostly SQA-led activity in initial years
Higher – AssignmentHigher – Assignment• Opportunity for learner personalisation and choice
• Candidates will have an open choice of Political Issue
• Marked out of 30
• Externally marked
• Evidence produced in controlled conditions in up to one hour 30 minutes
• Assesses the results of their research and the application of skills
Higher – AssignmentHigher – Assignment• Greater emphasis on skills than knowledge and
understanding
• SQA will provide General Assessment Information and the Assessment Task
• Task does not change from year to year
• Detailed marking instructions available and can be shared with candidates
• Guide to candidates will be provided
Workshop 2Workshop 2• Use the materials provided:• In groups of 2-3 discuss:– the requirements of the Higher Course assessment– How these requirements build on the Higher Units– How these requirements build on prior experience
• Materials provided:– Further Information on Course Assessment
Workshop 2Workshop 2Use the materials provided:•read the FIOCA (10 mins)In groups of 2-3 discuss:•the relationship between assessment at Unit level and Course level (10 minutes)• aspects of your current practice which you plan to
continue (15 minutes)• aspects of your current practice which you plan to
change (15 minutes)•what will you take back to your centre to support others? (Add key points to Worksheet)