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Primary Years Programme

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Title: Primary Years Programme


1
Primary Years Programme
  • The unique benefits of the PYP

2
Contents
  • IB mission statement
  • IB Learner profile
  • What are the IB programmes?
  • PYP definition
  • PYP curriculum definition
  • Essential elements synthesis model
  • Written curriculum
  • Transdisciplinary themes
  • Concepts
  • Skills
  • Attitudes
  • Action
  • Overview

3
Organization What is the IB mission and legal
status? The IB is a not-for-profit foundation,
motivated by its educational mission, focused on
the student.
Mission
Core values
The International Baccalaureate aims to develop
inquiring, knowledgeable and caring young people
who help to create a better and more peaceful
world through intercultural understanding and
respect. To this end the organization works with
schools, governments and international
organizations to develop challenging programmes
of international education and rigorous
assessment. These programmes encourage students
across the world to become active, compassionate
and lifelong learners who understand that other
people, with their differences, can also be right.
Motivated by a missionWe aim to create a
betterworld through education PartnershipsWe
achieve our goals byworking together QualityWe
value our reputation for high standards Participa
tionWe actively involve our stakeholders Internat
ional mindednessWe embrace diversity
Legal status
The IB is a non-profit making Swiss Foundation
registered in 1968. The activities of the
organization are determined by an Act of
Foundation approved by the Swiss authorities.
  • Further resources
  • The Annual Review including accounts is available
    on www.ibo.org.

4
Programmes What is the learner profile? Its
the IB mission statement translated into a set of
learning outcomes for the 21st century.
IB learners strive to be Inquirers Knowledgeable
Thinkers Communicators Principled Open-minded Cari
ng Risk-takers Balanced Reflective
The attributes of the learner profile express the
values inherent to the IB continuum of
international education these are values that
should infuse all elements of the three
programmes and, therefore, the culture and ethos
of all IB World Schools. IB programmes promote
the education of the whole person, emphasizing
intellectual, personal, emotional and social
growth through all domains of knowledge.
5
Programmes What is the PYP programme?
Primary Years Ages 3 - 12
School authorization programme evaluation
Curriculum Assessment
Professional development
6
Definition How is the PYP defined?Primary
Years Programme summarized into a single paragraph
  • The IB Primary Years Programme, for students aged
    3 to 12 focuses on the development of the whole
    child as an inquirer, both in the classroom and
    in the world outside. It is a framework guided
    by six transdisciplinary themes of global
    significance, explored using knowledge and skills
    derived from six subjects areas, as well as
    transdisciplinary skills, with a powerful
    emphasis on inquiry- based learning.

7
Learners constructing meaning How is the PYP
curriculum defined? Three interrelated
components expressed in the form of three
open-ended questions.
  • Written curriculum
  • Taught curriculum
  • Assessed curriculum
  • This is a model whereby all three
  • components inform each other.

8
The PYP essential elements What makes up the
synthesis model?As represented in the IB
learner profile
9
Essential elements How are they illustrated or
described in the written curriculum?A balance
is sought between the five essential elements
below
  • Knowledge
  • Significant, relevant content we wish the
    students to explore and know about, taking into
    consideration their prior experience and
    understanding
  • Concepts
  • Powerful ideas that have relevance within the
    subject areas but also transcend them and that
    students must explore and re-explore in order to
    develop a coherent, in-depth understanding.
  • Skills
  • Those capabilities the students need to
    demonstrate to succeed in a changing, challenging
    world, which may be disciplinary or
    transdisciplinary in nature.

10
Essential elements How are they implemented in
the written curriculum?
  • Attitudes
  • Dispositions that are expressions of fundamental
    values, beliefs and feelings about learning, the
    environment and people
  • Action
  • Demonstrations of deeper learning in responsible
    behaviour through responsible action a
    manifestation in practice of the other essential
    elements

11
Themes What are the PYP transdisciplinary
themes? Transdisciplinary themes provide a
basis for discussion interpretation within a
school
  • Who we are
  • Inquiry into what it means to be human
  • Where we are in place and time
  • Inquiry into orientation in place and time
    local and global perspective
  • How we express ourselves
  • Inquiry into the ways in which we discover and
    express ideas

12
Themes What are the PYP transdisciplinary
themes?
  • How the world works
  • Inquiry into the natural world and its laws, the
    interaction between the natural world and human
    societies
  • How we organize ourselves
  • Inquiry into the interconnectedness of
    human-made systems and communities.
  • Sharing the planet
  • Inquiry into rights and responsibilities in the
    struggle to share finite resources with other
    people and with other living things.

13
Example 1 Sharing the planet (for students
aged 8-9)
  • Finite resources infinite demands.
  • To understand better the central idea that
  • Our planet has limited resources that are
  • unevenly distributed, water provides a
  • good example. We would inquire into
  • Where water comes from
  • How different people and countries use water
  • How much water we use and what happens after we
    have used it
  • Distribution of usable water around the world
  • How human activity has affected the availability
    of water
  • Our responsibility for water conservation.
  • To support this inquiry students would
  • develop knowledge and acquire skills
  • derived from science and social studies,
  • in addition to developing
  • transdisciplinary skills such as critical
  • thinking, communication and time
  • management.

14
Concepts What are the PYP concepts?The PYP
commits to a concept-driven curriculum,
supporting all inquiry framing the learning
  • Form - What is it like?
  • The understanding that everything has a form
    with recognizable features that can be observed.
  • Function - How does it work?
  • The understanding that everything has a purpose,
    a role or a way of behaving that can be
    investigated.
  • Causation - Why is it like it is?
  • The understanding that things do not just
    happen, that there are causal relationships at
    work, and that actions have consequences.

15
Concepts What are the PYP concepts?
  • Change - How is it changing?
  • The understanding that change is the process of
    movement from one state to another. It is
    universal and inevitable.
  • Connection - How is it connected to other things?
  • The understanding that we live in a world of
    interacting systems in which the actions of any
    individual element affect others.
  • Perspective What are the point of view?
  • The understanding that knowledge is moderated by
    perspectives. Perspectives may be individual,
    group, cultural or disciplinary.

16
Skills What are the PYP transdisciplinary
skills?The construction of meaning
understanding, is complemented by the acquisition
application of skills
  • Thinking
  • Comprehension Grasping meaning from material
    learned communicating interpreting learning.
  • Social skills
  • Resolving conflict Listening carefully to
    others compromising reacting reasonably to the
    situation accepting responsibility
    appropriately being fair.
  • Communication skills
  • Reading Reading a variety of sources for
    information pleasure comprehending what has
    been read making inferences drawing
    conclusions

17
Skills What are the PYP transdisciplinary skills?
  • Self management skills
  • Time Using time effectively and appropriately
  • Research skills
  • Collecting data Gathering information from a
    variety of first and second-hand sources such
    as maps, surveys, direct observation, books,
    films, people, museums and ICT.
  • Communication skills
  • Reading Reading a variety of sources for
    information pleasure comprehending what has
    been read making inferences drawing
    conclusions

18
Attitudes What are the PYP attitudes?Attitudes,
as an essential element of the PYP, make a
commitment to a values-laden curriculum
  • Appreciation
  • Commitment
  • Confidence
  • Cooperation
  • Creativity
  • Curiosity
  • Empathy
  • Enthusiasm
  • Independence
  • Integrity
  • Respect
  • Tolerance

19
Action How is the PYP action defined?Through
the action cycle the students are able to grow
both personally socially
  • Action in the PYP can involve
  • service.
  • It is intended that the person taking
  • the action will grow from the
  • experience, and that the process of
  • taking action or not will contribute to
  • each student establishing a
  • personal set of values.

20
Overview of the PYPThe holistic PYP visually
represented
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