We know this one of the biggest challenges schools will face. To address this, we have designed the programme to be very flexible.
Although there are several Challenges to choose from for each year, you do not need to do them all.
One of the most important aspects of the programme is that it can be successfully delivered in several ways. The best way is what works best for you. There are three main options:
- by setting aside a whole day to work exclusively on a Challenge. This works well at the beginning or end of a semester or term/half term.
- by introducing a fixed regular timetabled teaching period called Global Perspectives.
- By embedding it within content-based subjects.
Setting aside a whole day makes everyone in the school focus on the Challenge and can be effective at engaging everyone especially when the regular timetable is already full. Learners at different stages can interact with each other (juniors interviewing seniors for example) and this can reinforce a whole school community feel.
Alternatively, you can offer the programme as a separate subject, timetabled as Global Perspectives. If there is some time that is currently allocated for cross-curricular work (e.g. library, study skills or reading skills) this might lend itself to being adapted for Global Perspectives.
Finally, you can also introduce it as part of other subject lessons. Some of the topics in the Challenges make connections with a particular subject, or you can deliberately draw out the links. For example, a Challenge that concentrates on the skill of analysis might be appropriate to deliver as part of a mathematics lesson. Equally, the teacher might see links to an English topic they are covering and incorporate the activities of the Challenge into that work. There are many options.
Consider offering a mix of these approaches to see what works well in your setting.
Comments
0 comments
Article is closed for comments.