BTEC Workbook
BTEC Workbook
BTEC Workbook
STUDENT
HANDBOOK
SILVERDALE SCHOOL
KLeighton
Contents
1
What BTEC qualifications can I study at Silverdale
Enterprise Award
What is a BTEC
BTECs are work related qualifications which provide a more practical, real-world approach to
learning alongside a key theoretical background. BTECs are different from GCSEs in that you do
not have to sit as many exams; however this means that you have to complete a series of written or
practical assignments.
Coursework is generally between 75 100%. Some courses have an externally marked exam worth
25%.
2
Key features of the BTEC Firsts in Health and Social care
The Edexcel BTEC Level 1/Level 2 First Award in Health and Social Care has been developed as an
engaging introduction to the sector for learners aged 14 years and above. It aims to
give learners the opportunity to gain a broad understanding and knowledge of the health and
social care sector
give learners a more focused understanding of health and social care through the selection of
optional specialist units
give learners the opportunity to develop a range of personal skills and techniques, through the
selection of units that are essential for successful performance in working life
give opportunities for learners to achieve a nationally recognised level 1/level 2 health and social
care qualification
support progression into a more specialised level 3 vocational or academic course or into an
apprenticeship.
Course Structure
The Edexcel BTEC Level 1/Level 2 First Award In Health and Social Care course is taught over 120
GLH. This is equivalent in teaching time to a GCSE. It is equivalent to a GCSE and accordingly carries
15 credits. It has 2 core and 2 optional specialist units which consist of 30 guided learning hours
(GLH) each. 75% is internally assessed (3 units) and 25% is externally assessed. Edexcel sets and
marks these assessments.
When you have completed all the units of the course you will receive an overall grade for your
qualification Pass, Merit, Distinction or Distinction*. This is the grade that will be shown on your
certificate and that you should give when you apply for employment or when progressing to
another course.
3
Key features of the BTEC Jamie Olivers Home Cooking.
This course has been developed in partnership with Jamie Oliver Ltd and has been inspired by his
food initiatives and campaigns. Being able to cook is an essential life skill. Learning to cook used to
be passed down through the generations, but this is no longer necessarily the case. It is apparent
that many people do not have the skills to cook from scratch and lack food knowledge, creating a
reliance on pre-prepared or ready-cooked food. Lack of time and money are also considerable
issues. These have had a significant impact on the epidemic of obesity which is likely to have a
profound effect on the health of the nation over the next century.
In this unit, learners will be introduced to basic cooking skills by following recipes for simple dishes
and learning how to use kitchen equipment safely. Each recipe is underpinned with knowledge
about sourcing food, nutrition, hygiene and food safety where relevant.
Learners will demonstrate their skills by following a recipe. Learners will consider the value of
acquiring skills for cooking at home and explore ways to pass on their knowledge of cooking skills to
others.
This unit aims to give learners the skills and confidence to enjoy cooking at home, to continue
cooking for themselves and their families and to inspire others to do so.
Course Structure
The Edexcel BTEC Level 2 course in Home Cooking skills is taught over 60 GLH. It carries 6 credits (a
GCSE is 15). This course is 100% internally assessed.
4
Key features of the BTEC Enterprise Skills award.
The aim of this unit is to enable learners to develop the mind set and skills that a successful
entrepreneur needs for business.
Many people dream of running a successful business. Determination, vision, adaptability and a wide
variety of skills are required to make a business successful. This unit will enable learners to
investigate the qualities and characteristics of successful entrepreneurs, whilst developing the
attributes needed to plan and run a business. The development of mind set and skills will, in part,
depend on understanding that limits and constraints can be overcome with planning and
determination. This reassessment of previously learned concepts may take time, and therefore this
unit should be incorporated through the programme of study. This unit focuses on the attributes of
successful entrepreneurs, and learners are encouraged to consider these attributes in terms of their
own development. The unit focuses on the ability and capacity all learners have to develop into
successful entrepreneurs.
Course Structure
The Edexcel BTEC Enterprise Skills level 2 award carries 5 credits (a GCSE is 15). This course is 100%
internally assessed.
5
What do we expect from you on BTEC courses?
Show your commitment to the course and respect for your group by being punctual.
Read feedback and assignments carefully this will help you to improve the standard of
your work.
They ensure that you are aware of the requirements of the course and know how to achieve
the criteria available.
6
Unit Assessment Guidance
For each unit you will be given assignment sheets and guidelines. The assignment will usually be
split into 2 or 3 tasks to make the work more manageable. Each task will give you the opportunity
to achieve certain grading criteria set out in the Edexcel specification e.g. A1, A2, A4
In order to achieve a Pass, you must complete ALL the Pass criteria.
In order to achieve a Merit, you must complete ALL the Pass and ALL the Merit criteria.
In order to achieve a Distinction, you must complete ALL the pass, All the Merit and ALL the
Distinction criteria.
Unit Guidance
For each unit your assignment brief and guidelines will include the unit abstract, learning outcomes,
unit content, key skills (where applicable) and the grading criteria for each unit.
Grading
At the end of the course you will receive an overall grade based on all the units you have completed.
This will take into account the individual scores you achieved for each unit.
There are different grading criteria for the Level 2 and Level 3 BTECs on offer at Silverdale School.
Level 2 Business Enterprise
Points Per Credit
Unit QCF Level Pass Merit Distinction
Level 2 5 6 7
This is a Pass or Fail grading criteria, all units must be submitted by candidates in
order to achieve the overall grade.
Level 2 Health and Social Care/ Level 3 Health and Social Care
Points per Credit
Unit NQF Level Pass Merit Distinction
Level 2 5 6 7
Level 3 7 8 9
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Course Structure and Assessment
All BTEC courses are primarily based on coursework with the QCF 2011 BTECs there are exams.
You will complete a number of assignment projects. Each one is part over the overall qualification
and you will be required to complete all of them to pass the course.
Each unit will be based on a different topic related to the course. The details of each unit can be
found in the course handbook and specification.
Each course is organised at the start of the year by your subject teachers so there is a clear order in
which units you will undertake and when they need to be completed by. Each BTEC course if
unique; therefore Course Leaders will outline this for you.
Each subject will have devised an assessment plan for the units you will work through during the
course in either KS4 or Ks5.
8
The assignment will ask you to produce evidence for each of the statements listed in the
Pass/Merit/Distinction criteria column as per screenshot below. These statements are linked back
to the unit content explained on the previous page. You must complete all these to pass the unit.
If you are successful in completing the all the evidence for the pass criteria you may attempt these
activities which will help you gain a higher grade.
9
Assessment Feedback
All your work is assessed internally by your teachers. They will give you Interim feedback to you on
how you have done and whether you have met the Pass criteria (see previous page) and on any
Merit or Distinction criteria you may have attempted using an Assessment Feedback Sheet (see
below) During your BTEC courses you will be given feedback in two different ways:
FORMATIVE FEEDBACK this is given to you during your unit and will give you advice and
guidance on how to improve or move on to the next assessment criteria.
SUMMATIVE FEEDBACK this will be given to you at the end of each unit and will summarize your
work and grade for that unit.
This will give you a permanent record of what you still need to do. It will also tell you what you have
completed so far. It may be for example that you have completed all the Pass work but have not yet
achieved the Merit work. You will then be given the opportunity to improve your work using the
feedback you have been given to help you before a Final Submission of the work is given to your
teacher.
Based on your previous work and the target grade you have been set by your teacher, you should
then have a good idea of what you still need to do for this piece of work.
After you have attempted the work for a second time it will be reassessed and you will receive
feedback again. This process will continue beyond this depending upon your target grade and in line
with the re-submission policy which is explained later.
10
Internal Verification
All the assignment work that you complete is marked by your teachers. However to make sure that
it is being marked correctly and consistently across all students some of the work is then checked by
other teachers in the department. This process is known as Internal Verification. This is the system
used to ensure that the correct standards are being met by you and by the teachers assessing it.
During the course of the year some samples of work may also be sent to someone outside of the
school who will also check the work and the assessment carried out in school. This is known as
External Verification and is again another quality check.
These processes should make no differences to you and your work and you should continue to work
hard to meet deadlines and produce the work you have been asked to. If you have any concerns
about the decision that you teacher has made when marking and assessing your work then you
should refer to the Appeals Policy, details of which are included in the Policies section of this
Handbook.
1. You can speak to your teachers during lessons or at any other time outside of lessons about your
work and your progress.
2. You can make a written comment on the Assessment Feedback Sheet (explained in the
Assessment Feedback section) that your teacher completes when they return marked work to you.
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Command words and obtaining a pass
Its important you understand exactly what you have to do for an assignment task.
Describe Give a clear, straightforward description that includes all the main points.
Outline Give all the main points, but without going into too much detail.
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Command words and obtaining a merit.
Analyse Identify the factors that apply, and state how these are linked and how each of them
relates to the topic.
Compare Contrast Identify the main factors relating to two or more items and point out the
similarities and differences.
Competently use Take full account of information and feedback you have obtained to review or
improve an activity.
Describe Give a full description including details of all the relevant features.
Justify Give reasons for the points you are making so that the reader knows what you are
thinking.
13
Command words and obtaining a distinction
Analyse Identify several relevant factors, show how they are linked, and explain the importance
of each.
Compare Contrast Identify the main factors in two or more situations, then explain the
similarities and differences, and in some cases say which is best and why.
DemonstrateProve that you can carry out a complex activity taking into account information that
you have obtained or received to adapt your original idea.
Describe Give a comprehensive description which tells a story to the reader and shows that you
can apply your knowledge and information correctly.
Evaluate Bring together all your information and make a judgement on the importance or success
of something.
Explain Provide full details and reasons to support the arguments you are making.
RecommendWeigh up all the evidence to come to a conclusion, with reasons, about what would
be best.
14
The Silverdale BTEC Policy & Appeals Process from September 2014
If you feel the grading criteria were being met but the teacher failed to recognise this.
If you feel you havent been supported appropriately during the assessment of the unit
requirement.
The teacher is not willing to accept alternative evidence as meeting the evidence
requirement.
Silverdale School will follow Edexcels policy regarding your right to appeal. Edexcel will not
intervene until we have carried out an extensive internal enquiry which involves these five stages:
STAGE 1 If you are unhappy with the grade/outcome of your assessed work.
STAGE 2 You must discuss the outcome with the teacher/tutor that has marked your work. If you
are still unhappy with the outcome go to stage 3. [Within 5 working days]
STAGE 3 Your work will be re-assessed by your Programme Leader in conjunction with the Lead IV
for your subject area. If you are still unhappy with the outcome go to stage 4. [Within 5 working
days.]
STAGE 4 The Programme Leader / LIV for your subject will review your work and make a
judgement, either in favour of the student or the assessor. If you are still not happy with the
outcome of the appeal, move to stage 5. [Within 5 working days.]
STAGE 5 The appeal will be referred to the Quality Nominee (Mrs Lebon). Contact will be made
with Edexcel and the appropriate documentation will be completed in order for them to assess the
appeal. [Within 5 working days.]
15
This is what the appeals form looks like.
Name.
Date...
Course...
Teacher/assessor.
Grade given
Please write a brief description below of the reason you are appealing and explain why you are
unhappy with the tutor/assessors decision.
If you would like someone to help you fill in this form you can ask your parent, form tutor, head of
key stage or another adult.
16
Assessment Malpractice
plagiarism by copying and passing off, as the learners own, the whole or part(s) of another
persons work, including artwork, images, words, computer generated work (including Internet
sources), thoughts, inventions and/or discoveries whether published or not, with or without the
originators permission and without appropriately acknowledging the source
collusion by working collaboratively with other learners to produce work that is submitted as
individual learner work. Learners should not be discouraged from teamwork, as this is an essential
key skill for many sectors and subject areas, but the use of minutes, allocating tasks, agreeing
outcomes, etc are an essential part of team work and this must be made clear to the learners
impersonation by pretending to be someone else in order to produce the work for another or
arranging for another to take ones place in an assessment/examination/test
introduction and/or use of unauthorised material not allowed by the requirements of supervised
assessment/examination/test conditions, for example: notes, study guides, personal organisers,
calculators, dictionaries (when prohibited), personal stereos, mobile phones or other similar
electronic devices
If a course tutors believe a student has cheated they will inform Deputy Head Teaching and
Learning. He will investigate the allegation, informing parents. Edexcel will be informed and will
work with the school to decide if there are grounds to declare the assessment of the unit or
qualification invalid.
17
Additional note on plagiarism
Students are expected to produce work that is entirely of their own making and any quotations or
sourced material must be properly referenced. Any material that is not appropriately referenced will
not be included when marked and this may prevent the students work from passing the
assignment. Students may also be asked to either re-write the assignment or add the correct
reference notes.
Stage 5 Silverdale will refer the appeal to Pearson Edexcel. The appropriate documentation will be
completed by the Exams Officer.
Further Queries
If you have any further questions please contact the BTEC Subject Leader who is in charge of the
course) in the first instance or Mrs Lebon ( BTEC Quality Nominee).
18
Glossary of BTEC Terms
This glossary lists the most common BTEC terms that are used in unit assessment criteria together
with indicative definitions.
ANALYSE Break down a complex topic into simpler parts, exploring patterns and explaining
significance.
DISCUSS Present and examine clearly the various views on a topic or issue.
EXAMINE Lay out the essential elements of an issue and investigate in detail.
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Special Circumstances
If, for a valid reason, you need some extra time to complete an assignment you must submit a
written request to your teacher five days before the hand in deadline. You will need to agree a new
deadline that cannot be broken.
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