Catalyst Handbook 2019 | Page 6

Catalyst • Junior Secondary Curriculum • Handbook 2019 Junior Secondary – what is it? The junior secondary program at Guildford Grammar School aligns with the early adolescent learning phase of development. We believe that students in the middle school years have a great deal of intrinsic curiosity. They yearn to be challenged and are ready to have the educational flexibility to pursue their individual talents and interests. At this time, students begin to develop strong social networks and start to show independence, both personally and in their learning. By establishing a junior secondary teaching and learning program, the School can cater for the unique academic, social and developmental needs of students of this age. In response to this need, we have developed the concept of junior secondary; a program of learning that is appropriately challenging and flexible for students in Years 7, 8 and 9, but one that capitalises on the specialisation that only a secondary school system can provide. Rather than being taught by a general, middle-school teacher, when your child chooses Media Film Production in Year 7, they will be taught by the same teacher who teaches the subject in Year 12. What’s more, the class will be the Media Lab, not the room in which he or she learns English. The Guildford Grammar School junior secondary teaching program has been structured around the secondary school model of specialist teachers and a strong student-centred approach to teaching and learning. Offering students significant choice in what they study as part of their academic program is also a key element to our Year 7-9 program. In approaching learning through the junior secondary model, students experience the very best opportunities to explore problems and challenges in an academically rich environment. The emphasis on secondary schooling, rather than middle schooling, is an important distinction for our school. As a concept, middle schooling is often promoted as a bridge between primary and secondary education. As an experience, it is most often found to simply be an extension of primary school. 6