At Collingwood Park
State School we implement the Australian Curriculum. Australian Curriculum
Assessment and Reporting Authority (ACARA), is responsible for the
development of the Australian Curriculum. The following information is
provided by ACARA regarding the Australian Curriculum.
Structure of the Australian Curriculum
The Australian
Curriculum sets out what all young Australians are to be taught, and the
expected standards of achievement as they progress through schooling.
For additional
information view the Foundation
to Year 10 Australian Curriculum.
What are the elements of the curriculum?
The overall structure of
the curriculum is consistent across learning areas and includes the following
elements:
A rationale that explains the
place and purpose of the learning area in the school curriculum.
Aims that identify the major
learning that students will be able to demonstrate as a result of learning
from the curriculum.
An organisation section that
provides an overview of how the curriculum in the learning area will be
organised from Foundation to Year 12.
Content descriptions that
specify what teachers are expected to teach. These are accompanied by
elaborations that illustrate the content descriptions.
Achievement standards that
describe what students are typically able to understand and able to do,
and which are accompanied by work samples that illustrate the achievement
standards through annotated student work.
General capabilities that
describe a set of knowledge, skills, behaviours and dispositions that can
be developed and applied across subject-based content.
Cross-curriculum priorities
that ensure the Australian Curriculum is relevant to the lives of students
and addresses the contemporary issues they face.
What are the content descriptions?
The content descriptions
specify what teachers are expected to teach. They include the knowledge, skills
and understanding for each learning area as students progress through
schooling. The content descriptions provide a well-researched scope and
sequence of teaching, within which teachers determine how best to cater for
individual students’ learning needs and interests. Examples that
illustrate content descriptions can be found in elaborations. These assist
teachers in developing a common understanding of content descriptions.
What are the achievement standards?
An achievement standard
describes what students are typically able to understand and able to do as they
progress through schooling. An achievement standard comprises a written
description with illustrative student work samples.
The sequence of
achievement standards across the Foundation to Year 10 Australian Curriculum
describes and illustrates progress in the learning area. This assists teachers
to plan for and monitor learning and to make judgments about their teaching to
support student learning. The achievement standards can support formative and
summative assessment practices and provide a basis for consistency of
assessment and reporting.
Work samples play a key
role in establishing and communicating expectations described in the
achievement standards. The examples of student work include the task and a
student’s response, with annotations about the learning evident in that
response in relation to relevant parts of the achievement standard.
What are the general capabilities and
cross-curriculum priorities?
The Australian
Curriculum pays explicit attention to how seven general capabilities and three
cross curriculum priorities contribute to, and can be developed through,
teaching in each learning area.
The seven general
capabilities are:
- Literacy
- Numeracy
- Information
and communication technology (ICT) capability
- Critical
and creative thinking
- Personal
and social capability
- Ethical
understanding
- Intercultural
understanding
- The three
cross-curriculum priorities are:
- Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander histories and cultures
- Asia
and Australia’s engagement with Asia
- Sustainability
Further detail is
available by visiting the ACARA website.