Year 9 Options Handbook

Page 24

Y9 Options Handbook

2023-24
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Art

Classical Civilisation

Mr J Gosden 10

Mr A D Smith 11

Computing

Mr S Newton 13

Mr M A Hearn 12 Design & Technology

Drama

Mr J L Rushton 14 Food & Nutrition Mrs K Wilson 15 French (Optional) Mrs C Vie 16 Geography

Mr A Ramsey 17 German

Mr J Youngs 18 History Mrs S Sharman 19 Latin

Mr A D Smith 20 Music

Mr D McIlrae 21 Philosophy &

Ms F Harrison 22 Russian Mrs C Wray 23 Spanish (Optional) Mrs C Pike 24

Contents: Year 9 Option Guide for 2023 - 2024
-
SECTION TEACHER PAGE A
OVERVIEW
B - FREE CHOICE
Programme of Study at Stamford School 5 Option Breakdown 6
SUBJECTS
Ethics
OUR SUBJECT COLOUR CODING: CORE SUBJECTS -All students will take FREE CHOICE SUBJECTS - Students to pick 5 from the following categories COMPULSORY English Mathematics Science A core Modern Language Physical Education HUMANITIES Classical Civilisation Geography History Philosophy & Ethics LANGUAGES French Spanish German Latin Russian ART & TECH
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Art & Design Computing Design Tech Drama Food & Nutrition Music
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Programme of Study at Stamford School

When students enter Year 9, they will follow a different curriculum from the one in Year 8 and will be able to design some of their own curriculum by choosing subjects that match their own interests and abilities.

By reducing the number of subjects studied they will be able to focus more fully on some subjects, studying them to greater depth, and generating a better basis of skills which will benefit them when they tackle their GCSEs/IGCSEs in Year 10 and Year 11.

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CORE SUBJECTS:

While providing a degree of choice we are concerned to maintain progress in key subjects; consequently the following remain as compulsory subjects throughout Year 9;

COMPULSORY:

English - Language and Literature Mathematics Science; Biology Chemistry Physics

A core Modern Foreign Language; -continuing from Year 8 French Spanish Physical Education Games

FREE CHOICE SUBJECTS:

The remainder of a student’s curriculum will be made up of five subjects chosen from:

In making choices you should be aware that these subjects will be available at GCSE/IGCSE in Year 10 and Year 11 (the Level 2 Certificate in Creative iMedia and GCSE Computer Science are the Year 10/11 options that progresses from Year 9 Computing).

In addition, Physical Education is a GCSE option.

While the Year 9 courses will promote interest and develop subject skills that will benefit students wishing to pursue the subsequent GCSE/IGCSE courses, they will not merely function as the first year of GCSE/IGCSE. It may therefore be possible for some subjects dropped now to be chosen for GCSE/IGCSE at the end of Year 9. We would need to discuss such cases individually at the appropriate time.

Initial work on structuring the Year 9 curriculum for the next academic year will take place before the start of spring term. Changes can be accommodated later in the summer term, but options will have to conform to the timetable pattern that will by then have been established.

This digital options handbook is issued to and discussed with students during assembly and tutor periods at the start of the spring term. It is our intention that, armed with this information, each student and their parents will have considered the possibilities, bearing in mind their particular abilities and interests.

Any student who wishes to change their option choices after submitting their completed form should speak to Mr Hewlett or Mr McCormick as soon as possible.

Deputy Head Academic - Stamford School

HPHewlett@ses.lincs.sch.uk

Mr S J McCormick

Deput y Head Academic - Stamford High School

SJMccormick@ses.lincs.sch.uk

HUMANITIES: Classical Civilisation Geography History Philosophy and Ethics LANGUAGES: French/Spanish -depending on core language German Latin Russian
ARTS & TECHNOLOGIES: Ar t and Design Computing Design Technology Drama Food & Nutrition Music
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Free Choice Subjects

WHEN MAKING CHOICES, PARENTS AND STUDENTS ARE ADVISED TO:

1. Choose subjects that you enjoy and subjects you have abilit y in.

2. Consider the progress that has been made in subjects during Year 7 and Year 8 and build upon areas of strength.

3. Think about the balance of the individual curriculum, considering the different types of subjects available: Humanities Languages Ar ts and Technologies.

4. Think about the variety of teaching and learning experiences you will have during the working week.

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The Art course in Year 9 is intended to be a ‘taster’ for GCSE. The students complete a range of projects that introduce them to a diversity of different art techniques, skills and media in both two and three dimensions. Learning is supported through the exploration of artists’ work and art movements. Importantly, students will learn to draw from life and then develop compositions through a wide and exciting range of techniques and media. Drawing is a key skill taught by the department and is seen as a principal vehicle for creative expression. Students will aim to develop their skills and heighten their perception, enabling them to discover important aspects about the world we exist in.

The projects in Year 9 cover themes such as organic sculpture, music, skulls and bones and personal expression. Each project will involve initial drawing, idea development and techniques such as painting, making with clay, printing or graphic design. Different styles of art will be explored, and the methods of expert practitioners studied, for example, Pop Art and Expressionism as well as individual artists from Leonardo da Vinci to Peter Randall-Page.

This is an intensive, exciting course that prepares the students for the GCSE in Art.

STUDENTS WILL BE TAUGHT TO:

• Actively engage in the creative process of art and design in order to develop as effective and independent learners, and as critical and reflective thinkers with enquiring minds.

• Become confident in taking risks and learn from experience when exploring and experimenting with ideas, processes, media, materials and techniques.

• Develop critical understanding through investigative, analytical, experimental, practical, technical and expressive skills.

• Develop and refine ideas and proposals, personal outcomes or solutions with increasing independence.

• Develop knowledge and understanding of art, craft and design in historical and contemporary contexts, societies and cultures.

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Art

Classical Civilisation

If you are interested in the history, society, myths and culture of the ancient Greeks and Romans, then this is a very good choice for you. The varied and exciting course is essentially an investigation into the lives, literature and history of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Sources studied include examples of art, archaeology and architecture as well as literature, but there is no translation involved. The course also provides you with the foundation for taking this subject at GCSE, as well as a general background knowledge of Classical culture which is useful for other humanities subjects.

COURSE CONTENT

We study four or more key topics from the following:

1. Roman Leisure and Entertainment: a study of how Romans enjoyed themselves, including chariot races, baths, gladiatorial combat, and dinner parties.

2. Myth and Religion: fascinating exploration of the various Greek and Roman gods and goddesses and the famous stories and myths about them.

3. Greek Heroes: a study of a selection of heroes such as Hercules, Jason and Odysseus, and their adventures.

4. The Persian Wars: a look at the Persian invasions of Greece, including the battles of Marathon and Thermopylae.

5. Roman Britain: investigation into the Roman invasion of Britain, the revolt of Boudicca and the organisation of the Roman army.

6. Aeneas and the fall of Troy: the story of the destruction of Troy and Aeneas’ journey, based on Virgil’s Aeneid.

SKILLS DEVELOPED

Studying the literature will teach you to evaluate ancient authors, and develop your imagination, and your understanding of the ancient Greeks and Romans. Study of the history and culture will help you evaluate the achievements of the Romans and Greeks, making comparisons with the modern world. You will also work on visual and material culture, producing and analysing maps, plans, posters and diagrams, and developing your ability to reproduce and relay information in a clear and informative way. We will work in a variety of ways, giving you the foundation in skills and knowledge which you need at GCSE. You will also use your IT skills in researching and presenting articles/posters and reports. You will be involved in interesting class discussions, analyse dramatic versions of the texts/stories and learn from documentaries and films.

RESIDENTIAL TRIPS

The Classics trips to Greece and Italy are major highlights for students of Classical subjects. You will have the opportunity to visit Italy, taking in the important sites of Rome, Naples and Pompeii, and Greece, including Athens, Mycenae and Olympia. The art, culture and history experienced on these trips are relevant for a whole range of subjects.

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Computing

Year 9 Computing’s theme is ‘Hands On’. Students in Year 9 will develop their ability in both Computer Science and Creative iMedia, albeit now in a much more practical way. Year 9 students will get the opportunity to use an array of Computing hardware, including: digital graphics tablets, DSLR cameras, lightboxes, Micro:bits, Kitronik kits, PS4/Oculus Quest VR, and PC Towers, along with full use of the Adobe software suite and the Office software suite.

TOPICS

COVERED DURING TERMS 1-4

• Animation: animated GIF creation, animation theory.

• Computational Thinking and Algorithms: BEBRAS*, VR bomb defusal, computational challenge carousel.

• Computers: computing history, emerging and future technologies.

• Digital Audio: Adobe Audition skill building, digital audio representation, digital audio composition.

• Digital Photography: photography history, digital photography basics, digital image capturing.

• Games Design: interactive multimedia games design, MakeCode Arcade games design competition (internal).

• Hardware and Software: input, processing, memory, storage, output theory, PC tower build.

• Photo Editing: Adobe Photoshop skill building, digital image editing.

• Python: Astro Pi**

* BEBRAS Computational Thinking Challenge, PixBlocks Programming Challenge UK, Oxford University Computing Challenge,

**Astro Pi: Mission Zero.

TOPICS

COVERED DURING TERMS 5-6

• Gamified Carousel: two-week rotated carousel with a number of Computing topics self-selected and studied by students. Carousel topics include: Python, MS Excel, Web Design, Digital Art, Video Editing, Windows OS, MS PowerPoint, Linux OS, 3D Modelling, Raspberry Pi 101, Typing Skills, Computer Engineering, and many more.

• Educational Visits

• National Centre for Computing History – historical and interactive computing museum.

• National Challenges & Competitions

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Year
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Design Technology

Design Technology is an inspiring, rigorous and practical subject which prepares all young people to live and work in the designed and made world - it is part of everyday life and is constantly evolving.

In Year 9 you will gain a solid foundation for the subject at GCSE, where students can specialise in either Product Design or Textile Design.

OUR YEAR 9 COURSE WILL FOCUS ON:

• The Iterative Design Process

• Exploring and analysing a design situation

• Generating your own ideas for products

• Developing an understanding of design and how it impacts our society

• Developing and modelling your ideas using a range of materials (such as wood, metal, plastics, textiles)

• Planning and manufacturing your designs

• Developing an understanding of Computer Aided Design (CAD), Computer Aided Manufacture (CAM) and 3D printing

• Evaluating and testing your designs

• Investigating theoretical topics such as sustainability, environmental issues, and material knowledge.

During the year you will design and manufacture a range of projects which solve a problem. Each project must be researched, designed and developed before producing a final working product.

You will then put all your experience learnt into a final design project which will have a contextual challenge. This challenge will give you experiences required for the GCSE major project.

Alongside the practical projects will be theory lessons which will support your practical projects but also develop an understanding required for the GCSE.

YOU WILL ENJOY DESIGN TECHNOLOGY IN

YEAR 9 IF:

• You enjoy problem solving and STEM activities

• You are creative

• You enjoy practical activities and manufacturing

• You enjoy communicating your ideas

• You enjoy Computer Aided Design (CAD) and Computer Aided Manufacture (CAM) including 3D Printing

• You think that you might like a career as a designer or engineer, perhaps as an architect, industrial designer, fashion designer, etc.

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Drama

The Drama course is inclusive for all students interested in pursuing and enjoying their dramatic skills and knowledge; equally, for those intending to take their study further, it is designed to prepare them for the rigour of the GCSE course.

TERMSCHEME AIMS

Autumn 1 Unit 1 Physical Theatre

Autumn 2 Unit 2

Stephen Lawrence and Devising

WrittenUnit 3

Characterisation

Spring 2Unit 4

Page to Stage

-Teechers - J Godber

• To explore abstract theatre through a simple introduction to physical theatre.

• To build on physical theatre ideas to personify objects.

• To make physical and vocal characterisation.

• To use stimulus to provoke ideas to create drama.

• To explore serious issues through drama and understand how to approach these maturely.

• To understand an assessment brief and create a performance that fulfils the criteria.

• To create imaginative and well thought out characters.

• To write monologues that have considered structure, narrative and purpose.

• To write, learn and perform monologues in front of the class.

• To understand, and perform in, the distinctive style of Godber’s work.

• To have an appreciation of the role of a producer in a performance.

• To present a ‘final performance’ standard piece of work.

SKILLS/TECHNIQUES

• Physical theatre

• Movement and mime

• Gesture

• Space and levels

• Vocal variety

• Verbal and written evaluation

• Improvising from a range of stimulus materials

• Stage combat basics

• Devising

• Keeping a reflective journal

• Practical and written assessment

• Independent working

• Objective and motivation

• Script writing (structure, purpose, entertainment, narrative, language choice)

• Script work

• Reading text from meaning

• Stage directions

• Script to stage process

• St yle

• Non-naturalistic conventions

• The role of the producer

Summer 1&2 Unit 5

Page to Stage

-Teechers - J Godber

Genre, Style and Form

- Commedia Dell’Arte

• To understand Commedia’s place in history.

• To understand how the form influenced later styles of acting.

• To develop improvisation and performance skills through Commedia form and conventions.

• To respond to, reflect upon and evaluate practical work completed during the year.

• To respond from the point of view of an actor and director to an unseen text extract.

• To demonstrate that written skills have developed throughout the year.

• Improvisation - verbal and physical

• Archetypes

• Group work

• Identification of st yles

• Verbal and written evaluation

• Self-evaluation

• Critical response to practical work completed by self and others

• Written work

• Structuring written work under timed conditions.

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Food & Nutrition

The Food and Nutrition course in Year 9 will provide a stimulating and up-to-date insight into food in today’s fast paced society. This course will give you a good grounding in preparation for the GCSE syllabus, ensuring a smooth transition into Y10.

The aim of the course is to teach you a wide range of practical life skills. You will learn how to adapt recipes to fit the current dietary guidelines as well as your own personal tastes –e.g. vegetarian - and, in addition, you will have plenty of opportunities to choose some more challenging recipes to stretch yourself further. You will also develop your knowledge and understanding of nutrition and the importance of food hygiene, whilst further developing your IT skills.

One third of the lessons will be practical based, one third will be workshop/experiment-based and one third will be theory-based.

THE THEORY WORK INCLUDES:

• Thinking deeply about what you are cooking, i.e. what are the functions of each ingredient, what changes take place during cooking and why things can go wrong.

• We offer the Level 2 Food Hygiene Certificate - Food Hygiene will be covered in depth, which will reinforce the importance of safety and hygiene when preparing, storing and serving food, thus enabling you to find employment in the food sector.

• The other topics covered include safety in the kitchen, nutrition and health, analysing your own diet using a nutrition programme, primary and secondary food processing, food commodities, food choice, British and international cuisine, sensory analysis, the science of food and food provenance.

PRACTICAL SKILLS YOU WILL LEARN

Knife skills – accuracy and safety when chopping vegetables

Stir fr ying

Shaping food – making burgers and meatballs

Sauce Making: ragu and roux

Curr y/Biryani

Shepherd’s pie

Pasta making

Scones

Cake making: creaming and whisking methods

Pastry making: shortcrust, choux and flaky to make a range of dishes

Preservation – jam making

Bread making - bread and pizza

Portioning a whole chicken

Experiments to show the function of ingredients

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Optional French

(in addition to core Spanish)

During the Year 9 French course, you will become more confident in applying vocabulary and structures learnt in Year 7 and Year 8; by the end of the Y9 course, your more in-depth study of the language will enable you to embark upon the GCSE in Y10 and Y11 with a sound basis.

TOPIC AREAS INCLUDE:

• house, home and daily routines

• school life

• food and drink

• family and friends

• fitness and health

• shopping

• holidays

• local area and surroundings.

Students are encouraged to express and explain their opinions and ideas within the topic areas in past, present and future tenses.

SKILLS DEVELOPED

By the end of Year 9 you will be more confident in all four areas –listening, reading, speaking and writing. You will be able to understand longer written and spoken texts in French and, even if you don’t grasp every word, you should have a good idea of what the text is about.

Everything in the course is useful for your future study of French and you will certainly be well prepared for the challenges of GCSE. As with other modern languages, you will have the opportunity to subscribe to French magazines appropriate for your level and it may be possible for you to spend some time with our French Assistant during lessons.

As our nearest neighbour, France is not only an important trading partner, but is also the most visited country in the world with 75 million foreign tourists each year. Studying French not only develops an important life skill and an enriching academic discipline, but also brings about new horizons in travel, culture and employment. Being able to communicate in French is rewarding – it is such a beautiful language and the country is steeped in rich heritage.

Students considering opting for French must have been studying it in Year 8; it cannot be picked up ab initio in Year 9.

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Geography

Do

issues that will change our lives and shape our futures?

Students who study Geography will be aware of and respectful towards the differing views of others and to world issues; geographers should have an enthusiasm for discovery. The topics are always relevant, from how people react to disasters, hazards and living on our unstable planet, to investigating how to live without damaging our environment.

WHAT WILL I STUDY?

1. Sustainability and caring for our planet

How can we ensure we have necessary resources in the future? How does an electric car work? What are food miles? How can we make our school sustainable?

2.

Global Hazards

How are volcanoes, earthquakes and tropical storms formed? What impacts do natural hazards have on people and landscapes? How can people prepare for disasters? How can we use technology to monitor natural hazards?

3. Weather Hazards

Weather hazards like tropical storms, heatwaves, droughts –including examples from around the world, their causes and the effects on people.

4. Dynamic Development

Reasons for disparities between different countries, and how these can be solved. World trade and business opportunities, how wealth varies globally, and how trade can bring positive and negative effects.

Geography also teaches you a wide range of extremely useful and transferable skills.

YOU WILL DEVELOP:

• Thinking and empathy skills: caring about our planet and its people

• Mapping: sketch maps and interpreting patterns

• Fieldwork: data collection in cities

• Graphical Skills: field sketches and interpreting different graphs

• Discussion Skills: how to communicate your viewpoint effectively

• Using Case Studies: developing your knowledge of the world.

• IT Skills: wide ranging, including GIS (digital mapping)

Everything in the course is useful for your future study of Geography and you will certainly be well prepared for the challenges of GCSE. Choosing Geography as an option will certainly not be something you regret.

Year 9 | Section B - Free Choice Subjects
“Geography students hold the key to the world’s problems” - Michael Palin.
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you have a passion for our planet? Are you concerned about the challenges that are facing us as a human population right now? Do you want to understand the big environmental

German

The Year 9 course builds on the core skills developed in the previous year. Students will study topics such as Holidays, Eating Out, Meals and Shopping, and Health and Fitness.

WHY STUDY GERMAN?

German is the most widely spoken language in Western Europe, with over 100 million people speaking German as their first language in Germany, Austria, Luxembourg, and parts of Switzerland. Germany is the largest and most influential power in Europe and our biggest trading partner. The Central European Bank in Frankfurt and the single market mean that knowledge of German opens up careers in business, manufacturing, finance, law and engineering.

German is also the second most important language after English for scientific research. Germany has stood at the heart of European history and culture for centuries, and close cooperation is an important factor for European harmony. German music, sport, cinema, design, and engineering have all enjoyed international recognition.

SKILLS DEVELOPED

• Speaking skills – role plays and short presentations.

• Writing skills – post cards, emails, and posters.

• Enhanced reading and listening comprehension skills, thanks to an expanding vocabulary.

• Expanding knowledge and understanding of grammar, including further work on the present tense, learning the past and future tenses, word order rules and the accusative and dative cases.

• By the end of Year 9 students will have covered many of the key grammatical concepts and vocabulary topics for IGCSE and will have a good insight into the requirements of the IGCSE course.

Students considering opting for German must have been studying it in Year 8; it cannot be picked up ab initio in Year 9.

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Choice

In Year 9 we examine important developments in modern world history to provide a good understanding of the world in which we live today. Topics such as the British Empire, Britain’s involvement in the Slave Trade, the Holocaust, the dropping of the atomic bomb and the development of civil rights all stimulate interesting discussion of key ethical issues that have had a significant effect on the lives of many people.

THE MAIN TOPIC AREAS ARE:

• The Transatlantic Slave Trade – how and why did Britain get involved in the buying and selling of millions of African slaves? We study the nature of the slave trade in the context of the British Empire, the experiences of the enslaved, and the reasons for, and characters involved in, its abolition.

• The First World War – what were its causes, events and consequences? We study the international tensions and rivalries leading up to 1914, re-enact fighting in the trenches, and consider propaganda, the lasting impact of the war and the controversial peace made in 1918.

• The Second World War - how was it fought at home and abroad? We consider a broad range of case studies, including the British people’s experience on the Home Front, the evacuation of Dunkirk, the surprise attack on Pearl Harbour, the ethics of strategic bombing, the bitter war on the Eastern Front and the end of the war in Europe and the Pacific, including the dropping of the atomic bomb.

• The Holocaust – how was it able to happen? We consider the escalation of persecution in Nazi Germany affecting the Jewish community and other groups.

• Civil Rights – how did the rights of groups develop across time? We look at the experience of different communities within the UK and the US and consider the outcomes of political, social, cultural and legal changes.

EDUCATIONAL VISIT

We will take a trip to the battlefields of the First World War in Belgium and France

SKILLS YOU WILL DEVELOP:

You will continue to develop your skills of explanation, analysis, empathy, evaluation and communication of information. You will also develop key source and interpretation evaluation skills in preparation for GCSE. All of these are invaluable if you wish to continue your studies of History at a higher level but will also prove useful in further education and in a wide range of jobs.

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The Year 9 Latin course gives you the opportunity to develop your interest and skills in the Latin language. The subject is still highly regarded academically as it supports and helps develop your intellectual progress across a wide range of areas. Studying Latin indicates a focussed, analytical and intuitive mind.

COURSE CONTENT

We use several resources and textbooks, focussing on the twopart OCR Latin to GCSE, as we improve your skills and build strong foundations for taking Latin at GCSE.

1. OCR Latin to GCSE Part 1 – this course sets out the way Latin works clearly and comprehensively, with practice for each language point and vocabulary learning to prepare you for GCSE, using sentences and stories from Roman myths and history.

2. De Romanis – continuing with this new Bloomsbury course, which explores the Latin language through mythological and historical stories, together with exploration of the social and cultural world of the Ancient Romans.

SKILLS DEVELOPED

Latin helps you develop a range of transferable skills which support your academic abilities, improve your academic profile and assist progress in all your subjects. In particular, you will:

1. Quickly expand your knowledge of Latin vocabulary, which will increase your ability to communicate well in English and other modern languages too.

2. Get better at problem solving; tackling tricky Latin sentences is challenging and complex - the best intellectual practice you can get.

3. Improve your translation skills as you develop familiarity with written Latin, working individually, in pairs and groups.

4. Work on puzzles, exercises and games using the various online materials, and create dramatic versions of Latin stories as a team.

The combination of skills and knowledge which you gain in Year 9 Latin will set you up perfectly for the stimulating and interesting challenge of continuing Latin to GCSE.

RESIDENTIAL TRIPS

The Classics trips to Greece and Italy are major highlights for students of Classical subjects. You will have the opportunity to visit Italy, visiting the important sites of Rome, Naples and Pompeii, and Greece, including Athens and Olympia. The art, culture and history experienced on these trips are fascinating and relevant for a range of subjects.

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Latin
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Music

Music in Year 9 is designed to enable students to widen their general knowledge of music and to develop their skills as musicians who will compose, perform, listen to and appraise music. In performance, students will concentrate on developing the skills needed to become a confident performer. Students will also explore composition and enhanced performance, aided by software including Soundtrap and Musescore. Students will also use all of their musical skills to research and analyse the musical significance of a favourite band or artist, composer or performer, and present a report to their class.

This course also prepares students to confidently undertake GCSE music.

CONTENT:

From Musical Contexts

• Dance Music

• Soundtracks

• Video Game Music

• New Directions

• Samba

• What Makes a Good Song?

THE FOLLOWING SKILLS ARE DEVELOPED:

• Students learn to compose, improvise, perform, sing and record compositions. Teamwork and problem solving as well as presentation and self-motivation are all transferable skills which are developed in Music.

• Students learn to use specialised music terminology and technology, as well as appraise their own and others’ work.

• Students study a range of exciting musical styles and genres.

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Philosophy & Ethics

Philosophy is concerned with the pursuit and love of wisdom, and Ethics is about the nature of goodness. This is a subject which asks important questions through critical analysis. It is both challenging and interesting and promises to make you think. The topics in Y9 are:

and Saint Augustine

MODERN PHILOSOPHY, INCLUDING:

• David Hume and the nature of cause and effect

• Speciesism, animals and Peter Singer

• The thinking of Paul Tillich and moral philosophy, and the atheism of Bertrand Russell

• Wittgenstein and language games

• Truth and goodness

• Reality and Rene Descartes

JEWISH ETHICS

LAW AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM, INCLUDING:

• What constitutes a crime and deviant behaviour and what effect does this have on society?

• The forms and aims of punishment

• Legal case studies and criminological theories

• Civil and human rights

• The arguments for and against the death penalty

• Racially motivated crime in cases such as that of Stephen Lawrence

• Crime in literature such as what’s written by Dostoevsky, Camus and Suskind

ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS, INCLUDING:

• Problems with the environment and possible ethical solutions

• Buddhist ethics

• Vegetarianism and animal rights

• Theistic and secular approaches

CLASSICAL AND MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY, INCLUDING:

• The Classical thinking of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle within the Greek world

• The medieval thought of Thomas Aquinas

• The impact of the Holocaust

• Jewish ethics of war

• Jewish philosophers

VIRTUE ETHICS, INCLUDING:

• Virtues, morals and values examined by the Functionalist, Emile Durkheim

• The relationship between virtue and the afterlife

• Marxism and communism

• Is God a gamble? The work of Blaise Pascal

• Superman – Friedrich Nietzsche and anti-morality

• Feminist theology

THE NATURE OF REALITY, INCLUDING:

• What is reality and how do I know this isn’t all an illusion?

• Questions of illusion and reality through films such as The Matrix and The Truman Show

• Free will & determinism – are my actions my own, or is free will simply an illusion?

• Does God exist?

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Russian

Russian is a challenging and stimulating language spoken by over 288 million people worldwide. The language is exciting, combining beauty of sound with precision of expression. It is the key to a better understanding of Russian politics and history and can be a stepping stone to the mastery of other Slavonic and Eastern European languages. Despite its initially forbidding appearance, Russian is accessible to all pupils and, once the Cyrillic alphabet has been mastered, the language poses few grammatical problems.

COUNTRY AND CULTURE

Russia is a fascinating and beautiful country. By the nature of its geographical situation, it is a very diverse country, both climatically and culturally, encompassing Siberia to the East, the ‘European’ city of St. Petersburg to the North, and Russia’s own tourist favourite – Yalta - to the South.

No-one will disagree that the invasion of Ukraine is unacceptable and that the actions taken by the Putin regime are hugely damaging to international relations and the reputation of Russia and the Russian people. However, to demonise the whole country and its culture seems equally counter-productive and does not help us look positively towards the future.

Understanding Russia and its culture, and being able to communicate effectively with Russian people, will be more important than ever, as will be understanding the dynamics of the region more broadly. The young people in our schools and universities today will be the ones that we will rely on to build peaceful relationships in the future.

ENRICHMENT

Given the current political situation, it is not possible for us to continue our long running exchange programme to Khimki, Moscow. However, we do maintain links with our partner school and have been engaging in video calls to enable our students to meet and break down stereotypes and barriers. We are also currently investigating a trip to Estonia.

COURSE CONTENT

• Background information about Russia (and the former Soviet Republics)

• Vocabulary and useful phrases from topics such as “your house, town, school, free time, holidays” etc.

• Basic grammatical structures to enable you to construct sentences correctly

• Past, present and future tenses

WHAT SKILLS WILL YOU GAIN?

• Read and understand the Cyrillic alphabet

• Write in Russian

• Hold a short conversation in Russian on a wide range of topics

• Listen to and understand spoken Russian

Students considering opting for Russian must have been studying it in Year 8; it cannot be picked up ab initio in Year 9.

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Optional Spanish

(in addition to core French)

The Year 9 Spanish course will continue to build on the progress made in Year 8 and sees the start of the study of the GCSE course book, ensuring that all students start Year 10 with increasing confidence over a range of topics, grammatical structures and skills, including translation.

TOPICS COVERED INCLUDE:

• Technology and free time

• Family and relationships

• Tourism and holiday destinations

• School

SKILLS DEVELOPED

By the end of Year 9 you will be more confident in speaking and writing Spanish and you will have a good understanding of verb usage and adjectives. You will also be able to deal with longer texts written in Spanish and, even if you do not grasp every word, you should have a good idea of what the text is about. Furthermore, you will listen to lots of Spanish in Year 9 and become increasingly able to understand spoken Spanish. Everything in the course is useful for your future study of Spanish and you will certainly be well prepared for the challenges of GCSE.

As with other modern languages, you will have access to a range of engaging additional materials, including subscriptions to online learning platforms.

Spanish is a wonderful language to learn and the culture of Spain and Latin America is truly fascinating. Choose Spanish and you could be opening the door to an exciting future by studying this increasingly popular language.

Students considering opting for optional Spanish must have been studying it in Year 8; it cannot be picked up ab initio in Year 9.

Year 9 | Section B - Free Choice Subjects Stamfordschools.org.uk | 25
Mr H P Hewlett Deputy Head Academic - Stamford School HPHewlett@ses.lincs.sch.uk Mr S J McCormick Deputy Head Academic - Stamford High School SJMcCormick@ses.lincs.sch.uk www.stamfordschools.org.uk facebook.com/stamfordendowedschools twitter.com/@spedenews Stamfordschools.org.uk | 26

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