Curriculum - Learning beyond the Classroom | Highcliffe School

Curriculum - Learning beyond the Classroom

Encouraging students to develop new skills, contribute to their community, pursue personal interests and broaden their horizons.  We run a wide variety of trips and visits along with many different sport clubs and activities.  

 

The Highcliffe Challenge

 

We believe the Highcliffe Challenge programme is unique in our local area. The Challenge helps students concentrate closely on their intellectual and personal development by tracking and rewarding a range of their achievements within the classroom and beyond, and by providing challenges and tasks to be completed. Form Tutors oversee the programme, which is divided into 3 distinct phases completed by the end of Year 8, Year 10 and Year 12. Each phase helps students succeed in the present and prepares them for the intellectual, social and practical demands of the next stage of their education.

 

For example, we begin preparing students for the demands of A Level study early on by including independent research projects in the Highcliffe Challenge from Year 7 onwards, and by offering Commendation Points, recorded in the Challenge, for students who make effective use in lessons of their wider general knowledge or their home reading. We run specific courses teaching students how to study and revise effectively, and record their successful participation in these through the Challenge.

 

The Challenge also encourages students to undertake charitable activity supporting the school or other local, national or international good causes. For older students the Challenge includes opportunities to undertake expeditions around Britain and abroad, or provide mentoring support to younger students. Students formally graduate after completing each stage of the Challenge, in a ceremony attended by parents.

 

Borneo was a life changing challenge that made me realise my potential. The experience, although hard at times, was brilliant and made a real impact on how I now see things. The new culture, new foods, new traditions and the friendships I brought away from the trip are all things I will never forget. – A Year 13 Highcliffe Student

 

Active Citizenship

 

The uniquely supportive community feel of Highcliffe School is partly explained by the role students willingly play as ‘good citizens’. In lessons students learn about the importance of making a positive contribution to the world around them. They are given opportunities to:

  • Support charities of their choice.  
  • Campaign on behalf of causes including human rights and environmental protection.
  • Engage with local and national politicians and businesses about topical issues.
  • Support developing communities in poorer countries such as Borneo.

 

Our annual Christmas Shoebox Appeal for orphan children in Eastern Europe is very well supported and has become a local tradition. In 2015 some Year 9 students organised campaigns on environmental protection in school and locally, including ‘Turn it Off Tuesday’ and ‘Walk to School Wednesday’. Other Year 9s wrote to David Cameron and Barack Obama quizzing them on their lack of progress greening the UK and US economies!

 

We actively encourage our students to think about social, political and economic issues in the wider world and take action to tackle injustice, pollution, poverty and conflict.

 

In addition Year Councils, School Council and the Sixth Form Junior Leadership Team give students a genuinely influential voice shaping how Highcliffe School develops. For example the recent changes to the Highcliffe Challenge, the Rewards Policy and Behaviour Management Policy were all made over a 9 month period of consultation and debate with students from Year 7 to 13; their views significantly influenced the School’s decisions.

 

I think that my being on the School Council was a very valuable life experience - in terms of people skills, confidence and decision making. It certainly taught me a lot about the democratic process and politics. We, the students, were able to hold the Senior Leadership Team to account and were heavily involved with big decisions, such as the Behaviour and Rewards policies, which were new for 2015/16. This made us feel that we were being listened to and that we have a real voice in our School. – A Year 11 Highcliffe Student

 


 

 

 


    Owned by: MDS | Last Published: 15/02/2024 10:22:11 | Next Update: November 2017


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