Posts Tagged ‘Distance Learning’

Ofsted and Children “missing” from Education

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Today Ofsted has published a report called, without any apparent irony, ‘Children Missing from Education’. Anyone involved in home education will find its assumptions and conclusions highly questionable, at the very least.

The summary of the survey reads as follows:

‘Ofsted’s latest survey highlights the challenges local authorities face in identifying and tracking children who are missing from education. Children missing from education, and whose whereabouts become unknown, not only risk failing academically but are also potentially vulnerable to physical, emotional and psychological harm.

‘The Children missing from education report surveyed 15 local authorities of different sizes across England, in both urban and rural areas. It found that none of the authorities felt confident that they knew about all the children living in their area in order to fulfil their duties to keep children safe.’

The first and most obvious point to make is that although some children may be (shamefully!) missing from certain local authorities’ records, this does not mean they are missing from education. On the contrary, we can be sure that many of them are receiving a full and carefully-constructed education within the home environment.

At Oxford Home Schooling, we are supporting thousands of students in this category, most of them working successfully towards Key Stage 3, GCSE and A-level qualifications. Some of these youngsters have been assisted by their local authorities, others have been studiously ignored.

We are not aware of a single home-learner who is “vulnerable to physical, emotional and psychological harm”, although one can never be complacent.  We work closely not just with the students but with their families and in the vast majority of cases, the families are close-knit, supportive and conscientious in their commitment to a high-quality education within the home environment.

Once again the tragic case of Khyra Ishaq is hauled into the debate, e.g. in the BBC’s report on the Ofsted survey, as if the tragedy would have been averted if the local authorities had had slightly different powers. In that case, the authorities had enough information and enough power to intervene but, for various reasons, did not do so in time.

The obvious lack of education taking place was the least of the apparent problems.  But the authorities had the power to ask the Ishaq family to demonstrate that full-time and appropriate education was in place and, if evidence was not forthcoming, to issue a School Attendance Order. This seems to me to be an appropriate set of safeguards and procedures and it is a shame that they were not observed. For Ofsted to claim that local authorities are unable to deal with home-educated children is disingenuous in the extreme.

Ofsted are best known for their inspections of schools so it should come as no surprise that they are in favour of inspection of homes where home education is (or is not) taking place. At a time when a new government is putting quangoes to the sword,  or, worse still, sending them to Coventry, it is understandable that it should seek to appropriate yet more powers and generate the work that might save a few of their own jobs.

But they are unlikely to get their wish. This is partly because of the near-universal hostility to the idea of inspection amongst the bona fide home-schooling community (e.g. HEAS).  Perhaps more importantly, the timing is all wrong. The Labour government, during three terms in office, might have sought to apply the same level of bureaucratic control to home schooling as it has done to other aspects of education, but it did not do so in the end.

The Con-Lib coalition has a a very different philosophy. At a time when the government is seeking to reduce cost, bureaucracy and the “nanny state”, it is highly unlikely to tamper with the delicate balance of freedoms, controls and responsibilities which is currently applied to the home education sector. In that context, Ofsted’s report will be pereceived as an empty gesture.

Our experience at OHS is that local authorities vary enormously in their treatment of home learners.  Some do not even have the mechanisms to find out from the schools involved that a particular pupil has been withdrawn. It would be a good idea to put effective systems in place, right across the country, to  ensure that schools do  always share this information. Home-educating families can then be positively supported rather than suspiciously monitored and inspected. But there is a world of difference between the provision of resources, tutors and perhaps even funding and the kind of unwelcome control that Ofsted offers.

(Dr) Nicholas Smith,

Principal, Oxford Home Schooling

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In praise of distance learning

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

In today’s Guardian, Jonathan Woolf reviews the history of distance learning in the UK and the article has been given the somewhat misleading heading:

‘Distance learning: good on costs, not so good for social cohesion’

The sub-heading is also an inaccurate summary of the article that follows:

‘The danger of distance learning is that it may make second-class citizens of students who choose it’

On the contrary, Woolf’s article celebrates much that is good in the history of open learning, notably the contribution of London University’s external degrees. As one who taught on one of these distance learning programmes (via Wolsey Hall, one of its long-lasting agents), I can vouch for their importance in helping learners, in a wide variety of personal situations, rise the social and academic ladder.

Nelson Mandela was one such student in an earlier era but by the 1980s, the London degrees were very much in decline, at least in the UK. The reason was simple – the programmes were not funded in the same way as the Open University.  The latter’s operation was hugely subsidised by the state while London’s far-flung students were generally in receipt of no financial support at all and generally having to pay the full market rate for whatever teaching and textual support they could find.  As far as HE distance learning was concerned, the Open University was granted a virtual monopoly and they have done a great job with that opportunity.

Social isolation is a relative term and these days distance learning is a much less isolated affair if only because technology enables easy and speedy contact between students who are geographically separated.  Distance learners are encouraged by organisations like Oxford Home Schooling and Oxford Open Learning to integrate themselves into the wider community of learners and to share their learning experiences. There are chatrooms and blogs and virtual learning environments where friendships can be made and common interests shared.

Of course, the opportunities could be better still. We hope that the government will embrace the ethos of distance learning, and not just at a Higher Education level.  At modest cost to the state, huge improvements could be made in the infratructure and affordability of distance learning and lead to a revival of the idea of lifelong learning.

Distance learning can help to make first class students of us all.

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Edexcel IGCSE English Anthology revision notes

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Education Secretary, Michael Gove, recently announced that state schools will be able to offer IGCSEs from September 2010.

At Oxford Open Learning we have developed a suite of IGCSE courses to meet the requirements of Edexcel’s new IGCSE specifications for first examination in June 2011.  The nine subjects we currently offer include:

Maths 

English

Accounting

Business Studies

Economics

French

Geography

History (Modern World History)

Spanish

Our new range of IGCSE science courses including Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Human Biology and Combined Science will be available by the end of 2010.  

IGCSE English

Developed to meet the requirements of Edexcel’s new IGCSE English Language A specification 4EA0, our course includes a brand new set of 19 worksheets to accompany the texts in Sections A and B of the Anthology.  For any student revising for their Edexcel English Language A exam, these worksheets provide vital support in preparing the texts.  Further details are freely available in the Anthology Introduction as it appears in our IGCSE English course.  The introduction provides general guidelines on how to approach and prepare a text.  These will be useful to students everywhere who are preparing to sit their Edexcel IGCSE English A examination.  If you found the Introduction useful and would like to order a pack of 19 Anthology worksheets, please email weblinks@ool.co.uk.  

If you would like further details of our IGCSE English distance learning course, please contact us.  Your call is free.  

A bookworm made out of red and green plants in a Manchester street

A plant bookworm reading an open book in Manchester

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IGCSE and GCSE: what’s the difference?

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

The recent announcement by Education Secretary, Michael Gove, that state schools will be able to offer IGCSEs (International GCSEs) from September 2010 raises a couple of key questions: ‘what’s the difference between a GCSE and an IGCSE?’ and ‘why has the government given the green light to IGCSE qualifications in state maintained schools?’

What’s the difference between a GCSE and an IGCSE?

General Certificate of Secondary Education examinations (GCSEs) were introduced in 1986 and replaced the previous GCE ‘O’ Level and CSE systems by merging them together.   Coursework became a new feature of assessment, one that teachers rightly regarded with scepticism.  The recent introduction of controlled assessment for coursework attempts to overcome the issue of coursework authentication by making coursework supervision compulsory.

While many employers only recognise A*-C grade GCSEs, others have criticised the qualification as lacking in challenge for more able pupils.  With more and more students achieving A grades, the GCSE exam is widely perceived as getting easier and easier, and lacking an ‘absolute standard’.  GCSEs are offered in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland with Scotland offering its own system of qualifications.  Click here for a full account of the background, controversies and national statistics for GCSE.

IGCSEs were introduced in 1988 and are internationally recognised qualifications. Candidates can sit IGCSE examinations all over the world.  Offering over 70 subjects, IGCSEs are taken in over 120 countries. IGCSEs do not include coursework.  Similar to GCSEs, they are perceived by some as academically more rigorous, and for this reason have recently been adopted by over 300 independent schools in the UK.  In Febuary 2009, 16 Cambridge IGCSE syllabuses received accreditation from Ofqual, the government body that regulates qualifications, exams and tests in England.  IGCSEs are widely accepted by universities and colleges as part of their entry requirements.  IGCSEs are offered by Cambridge and Edexcel exam boards and you can find more information about them on the webpages linked here.

Why has the government given the green light to these qualifications?

As part of its shake up of national qualifications in which academic diplomas are to be dropped, the government is to allow IGCSEs to be taught in state schools.  Schools Minister, Nick Gibb, said that

“schools must be given greater freedom to offer the qualifications employers and universities demand, and that properly prepare pupils for life, work and further study.”

“For too long, children in state maintained schools have been unfairly denied the right to study for qualifications like the IGCSE, which has only served to widen the already vast divide between state and independent schools in this country.

“By removing the red tape, state school pupils will have the opportunity to leave school with the same set of qualifications as their peers from the top private schools – allowing them to better compete for university places and for the best jobs.”  (BBC News, 7 June 2010)

Where can I study for IGCSE qualifications?

IGCSE qualifications are ideal for those wanting to study for national qualifications by distance learning.  Without all the administrative problems that encumber GCSE coursework, IGCSEs offer a practical way forward for those studying at home as assessment is by written exam at test centres world-wide. If you need qualifications to go to college or university, apply for a professional or vocational course, or need say, Maths or English GCSE or IGCSE to apply for a job, then IGCSEs will help you achieve your goal.  At Oxford Home Schooling we offer IGCSEs in

  • Maths
  • English
  • History (Modern World History)
  • Geography
  • French
  • Spanish
  • Accounting
  • Business Studies
  • Economics

Our new courses in Biology, Chemistry, Human Biology, Physics and Science will become available by the end of 2010.  Contact us if you would like to talk about the qualifications you need to move forward.  Your call is free.

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Lifelong learning is a lifeline

Friday, June 4th, 2010

In his first speech as Business Secretary Vince Cable spoke of how adult education had saved his mother’s mind after she recovered from a mental breakdown.  Upholding the value of education for its own sake, Cable indicated that his department would place ‘increased emphasis’ on lifelong learning as further education colleges across England face cuts of £200 million to their adult learning budgets.  The cuts were recently confirmed by the Chancellor as ‘efficiency savings’ (BBC News, 3 June 2010).

Courses at risk

According to an earlier report, ‘courses at risk include plumbing, electrical installation, catering, care and A-levels and GCSEs for adults.’ (BBC News, 2 February 2010).  The University and College Union warned many of the courses likely to be affected are skills for life programmes which are aimed at people with few or no qualifications in literacy and maths.

Nobody who believes in the value of education wants to hear of courses being cut and opportunities for learning thereby reduced.  We all want to see colleges making the best possible use of diminishing budgets, and hope that they will continue to provide learning lifelines for all ages.  (In Oxford, for example, the college of further education opened its doors to schoolchildren to learn pottery on a Saturday morning, rather than let its facilities go unused over the weekend.  This nicely balances the way that schools open their doors to adult learners in the evenings.)

As some courses will inevitably be cut and less opportunities for adult learning remain available in colleges, where else can people turn to learn the skills they need, or study for GCSEs, IGCSEs and A Levels they need to enter employment, change employment sectors, or go on to further study?

Is distance learning a viable alternative?

My previous blog focussed on how the new Vice Chancellor of the Open University, Martin Bean, aims to engage employers and employees in distance learning opportunities through new web technologies.  Whether online or in traditional print-based media, distance learning has long offered a cost-effective way forward for those who, for work, family, health or economic reasons cannot attend college courses.  Home educated children, busy working parents, those with special needs, and those who have always wanted to know more about a subject but, until retirement, have never had time to pursue their interest, have all found opportunities to study through the flexibility of distance learning courses. 

Online learning 

New web technologies now offer the possibility of online distance learning within the context of web communities of learners with whom students can make online contact about their subject.  As distance learning organisations open up their courses to new media they can reach out and bring together those with shared interests.  Students can access online resources in a systematic way, and make the best use of their time.  Such courses offer a cost-effective route to essential qualifications, vital both to the student and the national economy as a whole.

Oxford Open Learning

Oxford Open Learning has over twenty years’ experience in helping thousands of students to gain qualifications, and others simply to satisfy a lifetime’s curiosity about a subject.  We offer courses in English, Maths, Science, Chemistry, Biology, Physics, French, Spanish, History, Geography, Law, Accounting, Business Studies, Psychology and Sociology at GCSE, IGCSE and A Level.  We also offer courses in Educational Administration, Accounting and Business Management.  Our Key Stage 3 courses are very popular with parents and children in the home education community.  We have a Creative Writing School, and also offer courses to those who want to brush up on basic numeracy and literacy skills.

We share Vince Cable’s view that ‘education and learning are desirable in their own right’, and hope that his department’s increased emphasis on lifelong learning will enable the colleges still to hold out that lifeline.  But we also share a hope that through new technologies, online distance learning will enable new communities of learners to achieve their goals. 

If you would like to know more about our courses contact us for more information.  Your call is free.

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Is your money well spent? Distance learning in today’s market place

Friday, May 28th, 2010

A recent edition of the BBC’s Money Programme  reported on a sharp rise in complaints about distance learning courses. Students are increasingly turning to distance learning courses as a means to achieve new qualifications and skills both to enter, and re-enter, many sectors of employment.  For many, the decision to study for qualifications is a key investment in their future, and they rightly expect a course to deliver on its aims. 

What’s going wrong? 

Over the past year, however, Citizen’s Advice has received over 4,000 complaints about distance learning courses, a 61% increase over the previous year.  In many cases training providers’ claims to deliver high quality learning but the opportunity to achieve good results is not borne out by the course materials or tutor support.  The Trading Standards Institute has investigated complaints which include instances of plagiarism – where course materials are simply cheaply produced copies of self-study books sold over the internet for exorbitant prices -, and others where tutor support is either poor or non-existent.  Dissatisfied students are being encouraged to take action under the Supply of Goods and Services Act, and educational charities are now calling for government regulation of private training providers.

Why is the problem getting worse?

In the current employment market many are keen to broaden their range of employable skills and therefore the demand for training is increasing.  To meet this demand, there is a mass of information available online about training courses, some of it accessible via a helpline on the BBC’s own website.  The databases of training courses that can be consulted online, for example, the government-funded database at www.hotcourses.com also accessible at www.advice-resources.co.uk allows all private, as well as, public sector training providers to upload details of their courses, but the sites themselves give no indication as to the quality of the training provision, provider, course materials, or tutor support.  The information provided is not moderated, nor are there any onsite reviews or evaluation of the courses described.  Is this helpful?  How can users distinguish the good from the bad?

What can you do?

If you are thinking about signing up to a distance learning course, look carefully at training providers’ organisations, course descriptions, tutor support and course materials; ask lots of questions before you sign on the dotted line.  Read the  blog on this site ‘Choosing a course’ : this gives advice on how to ensure that you are choosing the right course for you.  Make sure that the course you sign up to offers:

  • high quality materials (at Oxford Home Schooling you can look through the entire course and return it to us if you are not satisfied, and we will refund you your money);
  • fully qualified, experienced teachers to support you in your learning (all our tutors are fully qualified, experienced teachers of their subject);
  • help with finding a test centre and applying for exams (at OHS we have a dedicated exams officer)
  • someone to turn to when you need advice about your course (at OHS we have a team of student advisers)
  • help with submitting coursework for assessment (at OHS our exams officer and her team will check that all your papers are in order)

At Oxford Home Schooling we have over twenty years’ experience in delivering high quality courses that successfully deliver national qualifications to both adults and younger learners.  For more information contact us, or visit Oxford Home Schooling.  We trust you won’t have cause to complain!

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Famous people who were educated at home: Dame Freya Stark

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

In the first of our series of famous people who were educated at home, we focussed on Aleen Cust, Britain’s first woman vet.  Aleen grew up during the period that gave rise to the Education Act of 1880 which made school attendance compulsory for all children in Britain between the ages of five and ten.  Although it is no longer compulsory for children in the UK to attend school, every child has a legal right to an education, and many choose to educate their children at home.

Childhood and Education

Dame Freya Stark (1893?-1993), writer and traveller, was born in a Paris studio probably on 31 January 1893, the eldest daughter of Robert Stark, an artist, and his wife, Flora.  While she was a young child her father was busy renovating houses in Devon.  During the summer he painted in Italy where the family rented lodgings at Asolo.  In 1903, her father remained in Devon while her mother settled at Dronero in Italy; he emigrated to Canada in 1911.  Her mother invested in, and managed an Italian silk factory, whose owner later married Freya’s younger sister, Vera. 

Freya was educated at home, and after completing a correspondence course she studied History at Bedford College, University of London, between 1911 and 1914.  She was taken to the Alps in 1913 by William Paton Ker, an English professor to whom she was introduced by friends of her family, and formed a lifelong interest in mountaineering.  During the First World War she trained at Bologna to become a nurse, and on Ker’s advice she joined an ambulance unit in Italy in 1917. 

Travels and Writings

After the war Freya was frequently bedridden with illness, but when she was well enough she went climbing with Ker. Following his death in 1923, she trekked through Europe with a friend, Venetia Buddicom.  In 1924, she became the second woman to climb the east face of Monte Rosa.  While recovering from an ulcer she learned Arabic in order to become a governess in the Middle East, briefly studying Arabic at the School of Oriental Studies in London.  In 1927, Freya lived in the Lebanon for several months and travelled through Syria with Venetia Buddicom.  Her father had given her some money, and she went to visit him twice in Canada before he died in 1931.

After reading about Persia in the British Museum, Freya moved to Baghdad in 1929.  She wore Arab dress and was shunned by British expats.  Her journeys to Lurestan and Mazandaran enabled the War Office to make maps of the area, and her work as a journalist in Baghdad gave her information about the Kurdistan uprisings that she published in The Times.  When she returned to London in 1933 she was celebrated as a female traveller, receiving a grant from the Royal Geographical Society, and becoming the first woman to receive the Burton medal from the Royal Asiatic Society.  Her account of her travels The Valley of the Assassins (1934) was an immediate success.  In 1935, she went to southern Arabia in search of an ancient trade route, and on her return published The Southern Gates of Arabia (1936), which was awarded the Mungo Park Medal by the Royal Scottish Geographical Society.  She returned to Arabia in 1937-8 on an archaeological dig, but fell out with others and returned on her own, riding through the desert on a camel.

During the Second World War Freya joined the Ministry of Information and worked as an expert on south Arabia in Aden, Yemen and Egypt.  She also travelled in Iraq and India, returning from Delhi to Tehran in a government car which she then sold privately.  Although wayward, she was invited by the Ministry to lecture on Palestine in the United States in 1943-4.  She also spoke to women’s groups in India in 1945, and after the war returned to northern Italy where she set up English reading rooms.  She published a series of essays, Perseus in the Wind (1948), and the first volume of her autobiography, Traveller’s Prelude (1950), which includes an account of her early life. 

In 1947, Freya married a diplomatic colleague, Stewart Perowne, and accompanied him on a posting to Barbados, but the marriage was not successful and they separated in 1952.  She continued her autobiography in Beyond the Euphrates (1951), The Coast of Incense (1953), and Dust in the Lion’s Paw (1961).  Between 1974 and 1982 she published eight volumes of her letters at her own expense.  In her later years, she moved away from journalism and government diplomacy and journeyed to places of classical antiquity, following in the footsteps of Alexander the Great and Lucullus.  She made other journeys to Afghanistan and Nepal, went rafting on the Euphrates with a BBC film crew, and horseriding around Annapurna.  She received further medals and honorary doctorates; in 1953 was named CBE, and in 1972 became a dame of the British Empire.  She died in Asolo in 1993.

Freya Stark was an avid and courageous traveller. Biographers attribute her intrepid nature and strong motivation to travel to her early childhood.  Also shaped by her early childhood and education at home, her evocative travel writing continues to be appreciated by readers all over the world.

Source:  Peter Hansen, ‘Stark, Dame Freya Madeline (1893?-1993)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online edition, May 2009

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Choosing a course

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

With so many different ways to check out courses – online, by glossy prospectus, on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, through friends, students or work colleagues – it helps to have a checklist of what to look out for before you make your choice.  Not all distance learning and home study colleges or centres are the same!

What do you want to study?

First of all: what do you want to study?  Are you, or your children, aiming for specific qualifications – say GCSE Maths or English – or are you trying to decide between, say A Level psychology or sociology?  It helps to be clear about why you want to study a particular subject – will it help you get the right number of GCSEs, IGCSEs or A Levels to apply for university or teacher training college?  Or do you need, say a science GCSE to get on to a nursing course?  If you are aiming to gain qualifications for a course of training, university or college, then you need to be clear about what the entrance requirements are before making your choice.

Where do you want to study?

Once you’ve made up your mind about what subject(s) you want to study, the next question is – what course(s) are you going to study in order to achieve that goal?  If you are aiming to gain qualifications for a course of training, university or college, then make sure you choose the right qualification to study. For those thinking about distance learning or home study, the choice between GCSE and IGCSE is critical.  Some GCSEs, for example, law, psychology and sociology, are currently assessed by written exam, but most subjects include coursework that is assessed by controlled assessment.  While school pupils can do their coursework with controlled assessment in a classroom, home students and distance learners do not have this option.  So for those studying at home, IGCSE is the exam of choice for Maths, English, History, Geography, French, Spanish, Business Studies, Economics and Accounting.  IGCSE is widely accepted by universities and colleges world-wide, and provides excellent progression to A Level. Check out the details of the course you want to study, and make sure you are not caught out by the limitations of controlled assessment.

Where can you sit your exam(s)?

Another aspect of assessment is: where can you sit your exam?  When you contact distance learning and home study colleges, ask whether they will help you find a test centre and complete your exam application form.  Is there someone there who is in contact with the exam boards and knows the procedures and deadlines for entering for exams?  Can they help you, even if you live on a remote island, are based in the jungle in Borneo, based abroad for six months, away travelling and don’t want to miss a deadline, or are simply concerned to make sure that you have filled in the form properly?

Who will help you?

Studying at home can be hard sometimes, so ask whether the course you want to study includes the support of a tutor.  If it does, then ask whether that tutor is a qualfied teacher, and has experience in teaching the subject you want to study.  This will be of much more help to you, or your children, than being assigned a tutor who is not qualified to teach, and has little relevant experience  either of teaching or the subject you want to learn.

What other help might you need?  Well, apart from a good tutor, you might also want help from a student mentor or adviser who you can call about other aspects of your course than those dealt with by your tutor.

What should the course materials include?

Next, check out the course materials.  Whether these are online or in print, the course provider should allow you time to look these over and decide whether this is the course for you.  Courses should be developed by experienced teachers, writers and editors to match the qualification specification they set out to teach.  Make sure the materials are up to date, include clear sets of aims, well structured and clearly written lesson content, a wide range of activities, practice material, recommendations for further reading, self assessment tests, tutor marked assignments and practice exams. 

How long does a course last?

Some students want to fastrack to a qualification, others prefer a gentler pace.  Ask how the course you want to study works: is it over a fixed time period, or is it flexible?  Can you go at your own pace?  Is there a fixed start date, or can you begin as soon as you want to?  Can you study for a GCSE or a A Level in one year, instead of two?

Here’s a checklist:

At Oxford Home Schooling we ensure that all our students have:

  • opportunities to study for a wide range of GCSE, IGCSE, A Level, business, accountancy and educational administration qualifications;
  • a set of course materials to match the qualification specification
  • a qualified, experienced teacher as a personal tutor
  • a student adviser to assist with queries about the course
  • a dedicated exams officer to help with entry for exams
  • an online examination centre finder to help you find your nearest test centre
  • flexible courses

Check out our courses on our website, or contact us for more information.  Your call is free!

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Distance learning route to training in remote regions

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Postbox and road sign at junction to Mull of Kintyre

Postbox at junction to Mull of Kintyre

An article in yesterday’s Guardian ‘Distance learning provided training for would-be nurses in remote regions’ illustrates how distance learning with the Open University has enabled former healthcare assistants, some with family responsibilities, to obtain nursing qualifications while living in remote areas.  From the Mull of Kintyre to the Channel Island of Jersey students are now able to gain full nursing qualifications by distance learning. 

Without distance learning as an option, none of those who successfully qualified as nurses would have been in a position to study and qualify.  All confirmed that with self-motivation, commitment and good time management they were able to combine the demands of work, family life and study to achieve their goals.  Most importantly, each received the support of a fully qualified, experienced tutor, together with that of a course mentor who offered advice and support throughout the entire period of study. 

If you live in an area or region that makes it difficult to follow a course of study by attending school or college then Oxford Home Schooling can help you achieve your goal.  Our GCSE, IGCSE, A Level, business management, accountancy training, and Certificate in Educational Administration courses have made it possible both for adult individuals and families who are home educating their children to study from home.  

We know that studying at home takes self-motivation and commitment to succeed. But we don’t expect you do go it alone. Like the trainee nurses mentioned in The Guardian, Oxford Home Schooling students receive support from a fully qualified experienced tutor, a student adviser, and a dedicated exams officer to help them make the most of their course of study.  We do our best to help you succeed, and we hope our students will consider us as part of their valued small community. 

Whether you live in the heart of the city, or miles from the nearest shop, distance learning with Oxford Home Schooling is easily accessible by phone, email, online or in print.  Contact us for information about how we can help you gain the qualifications you need.  The door is open.

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GCSE Pre-release Booklet Guidance Notes

Friday, March 26th, 2010
No escape narrow image with face and hands

Escape

Students working towards their AQA GCSE English exam this June will have received a ‘Pre-release booklet’ containing an anthology of media texts and poetry in January this year.   The GCSE exam will include questions based on these texts, and students will receive another copy of the booklet, together with their exam paper, at the start of their exam. Having read and annotated their own copy of the texts, students now need to plan their revision to make sure that they are well prepared for the exam.    

At Oxford Home Schooling we aim to give our students plenty of support at this busy time.  This week we are sending all our English GCSE students a full set of Guidance Notes including worksheets on each of the anthology texts. There is no extra cost to the student, as these are sent free of charge.    

While providing overviews of each text, the worksheets encourage students to focus on details of language and style, and to look closely at what images are saying and how they contribute to the meaning of the article in which they appear.   

For the 8 media texts, the worksheets focus on presentation, different registers, audience, tone, language, style, and the impact of any images on the text.  The texts are united by a common theme to which the image at the beginning of this article gives a clue!   

The 8 poems are considered in terms of language, style and content, and exam-style questions encourage students to explore thematic links between poems. The poems explore ideas and feelings of belonging to a place or community from the point of view of an insider or an outsider.   The places and communities differ in location and culture, but the voices in the poems express similar feelings.   

If you are studying for your AQA GCSE English exam we hope you enjoy exploring these texts and images using Oxford Home Schooling’s Guidance Notes.  If anyone else would like a copy, just click here: AQA GCSE English Pre-release Booklet Guidance Notes 2010 . Good luck with your exam!   

The Insider funfair ride at Basler Herbstmesse 2005

The Insider

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