Your child’s teacher at school may discuss `National Curriculum levels’ with you. Your child’s tutor may talk about `11+ levels’. To all of us it is just a numbers game. Some 11+ work can be floated between different levels.
We are all used to dealing with a house number, or a registration number, or a telephone number. Each one of these types of numbers suggests a different kind of numbering system. Moving between Level Numbers in the National Curriculum and the levels a child is aiming to reach in 11+ examinations is an inexact science. At first glance it may look as if an 11+ candidate needs to be preparing for an examination a whole level higher than the National Curriculum. This could be a red herring.
Take the two words
bark and
barque. A ship can be a
bark – because this is a word that can be used for a ship. The word
barque is largely a rather technical term used for a type of rigging of a ship – or even a ship. The word
bark does not need to need to be anything to do with a tree or the sound of a dog or even barking up the wrong tree! At what National Curriculum Level number should a child be able to define or even comprehend the difference? Should children working towards the 11+ need to know the intricacies of the word?
National Curriculum Level
Year 3 Achieving Level 2
Working mainly at Level 3 in class.
Year 4 Achieving Level 3
Starting to work at Level 4 in class.Year 5 Achieving Level 3
Working at Level 4 in class.Year 6 Achieving Level 4
Starting Level 5 in classIn National Curriculum terms each level represents 2 school years, therefore a child is not expected to progress a whole level per year. Levels may have an A, B or C grading – where A is the highest.
11+ Examination
Year 3 Achieving Level 3
Working mainly at Level ¾ in LessonsYear 4 Achieving Level 3/4
Starting to work at Level 4 in LessonsYear 5 Achieving Level 4
Starting Level 5 in LessonsYear 6 Achieving Level 4/5
Working mainly Level 5 in Lessons. Revising Level 4.
All parents can do is encourage their children to read as wide a range of books as possible. Some Year 3 children will naturally pick up a wide vocabulary. Other children may meet the word `barque’ for the first time on an 11+ paper. All parents can do is try to add as many words and their meanings to their child’s vocabulary as is sensible. Anyway all parents are sensible all of the time!