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. GCSE Computer Science. General Information The spec has been developed with the support of Microsoft The specification and sample assessment materials.

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Presentation on theme: ". GCSE Computer Science. General Information The spec has been developed with the support of Microsoft The specification and sample assessment materials."— Presentation transcript:

1 . GCSE Computer Science

2 General Information The spec has been developed with the support of Microsoft The specification and sample assessment materials can be found on our website It is now accredited by Ofqual It is a single tier, linear specification available in summer only It is for first teaching from September 2012 and first assessments for all units and certification will be Summer 2014 Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

3 Why offer this course? The qualification:  is based on extensive feedback from teachers  is different from other GCSE ICT/Computing specs because it focuses on o the fundamentals of programming o the practical creation of applications e.g. mobile and web technologies and computer games o key Computing concepts Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

4 Why offer this course? Having studied this course, students will be able to:  create their own mobile applications  create interactive web-based applications  create their own simple computer games Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

5 Why offer this course?  It offers a selection of controlled assessment tasks that allow students to choose areas of broad interest to them from gaming, mobile, web and more traditional systems  It offers a choice for schools and colleges to select computer languages that best suit them and their students  It has academic rigour which will be attractive to GCSE students at all levels and their teachers Version and its licensors. All rights reserved.

6 Why offer this course?  It is an alternative to GCSE ICT and can be delivered in conjunction with GCSE ICT  It allows progression with the opportunity for students to gain knowledge and skills to move on to A-levels, vocational courses, industry recognised IT courses, degree level courses in the areas of computing, engineering and science and employment As a GCSE, it meets the criteria required for school/college performance tables Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

7 Specification at a glance One tier of assessment – grades A* to G; 100% terminal Component 1 – Practical Programming: Approx 50 hours controlled assessment (2 tasks of 25 hours each) 60% of marks (63 marks for each task) 180 UMS Tasks provided by AQA each year. Each student completes two tasks from choice of four. Students demonstrate their ability to code a solution to a given problem. Tasks will be set in engaging and relevant contexts eg gaming, web, mobile phone applications. Tasks (individual portfolio) may be submitted on paper or electronically (saved to CD/DVD). Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

8 Specification at a glance Component 1 – Practical Programming contd: Portfolio for each scenario should be divided into four sections: 1.Design of the solution (9 marks) 2.Solution development (9 marks) 3.Programming techniques used (36 marks) 4.Testing and evaluation (9 marks) AQA acknowledges that a wide range of software packages will be used by students. Moderators will assess work based on the assessment criteria in the specification, rather than students’ use of the specific package. Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

9 Specification at a glance Component 2 – Computing fundamentals: Examination paper – 1 hour 30 minutes 40% of marks, 84 marks 120 UMS Option of paper-based or on-screen version All questions compulsory – taken from across the subject content Range of types of questions from very short to extended answer Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

10 Subject Content The subject content should be taught within a range of realistic contexts Based around the major themes within the specification of web, mobile, gaming and more traditional coding systems A number of the sections would benefit from being taught holistically eg: algorithms could be taught alongside programming techniques owing to the close relationship between them See specification for detailed subject content Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

11 Controlled Assessment New tasks will be published in September of each year on e-AQA (Secure Key Materials) In the future, AQA expects to have tasks available 3 years before certification to allow for schools/colleges delivering the course over 3 years First submission and certification is May 2014 with Teacher Standardisation in autumn 2013 (Subject Adviser – initial support) Task taking – control level medium – students must complete all work (except research) under informal supervision Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

12 Controlled Assessment contd For collaborative work, individual students document the work they produce and individual contributions are recorded accurately Sources used by students must be clearly recorded and acknowledged Students can revise and redraft their work before submitting the final version Exemplar material on marking will be available via the website Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

13 Support includes……. Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.  online briefings and meetings for teachers, which are free of charge (https://coursesandevents.aqa.org.uk)  resources, including schemes of work and a pseudocode structure (a teaching aid for Unit 2) as well as Microsoft resources already available on the website. Further resources for teachers and learners are being developed  ongoing support for schools/colleges from controlled assessment advisers throughout the delivery of the controlled assessment unit  Remember to check the website for regular updates!

14 If you have any specific queries please: Send an email to ict-subjects@aqa.org.uk and include:ict-subjects@aqa.org.uk o reference to AQA GCSE Computer Science o Your name and position in the school/college o the school/college name and centre number OR Contact Zoë Thomas at zthomas@aqa.org.ukzthomas@aqa.org.uk Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.

15 If you would like to register for updates Go to the Computer Science subject webpages http://web.aqa.org.uk/qual/newgcses/ict/computer-science-updates and click on the ‘register for updates’ link Version 1.0 Copyright © 2008 AQA and its licensors. All rights reserved.


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