Middle Years Programme (6-8)

What is the Middle Years Programme?

7th grade student, Felicia, speaks to an audience about her focus country - Antarctica.


 
It is a programme of international education designed to help students develop the knowledge, understanding, attitudes and skills necessary to participate actively and responsibly in a changing world. Frazier offers Level I, II, & III (6th - 8th grade) of the programme. This period, encompassing early- to and mid-adolescence, is a particularly critical phase of personal and intellectual development and requires a programme that helps students participate actively and responsibly in a changing and increasingly interrelated world. Learning how to learn and how to evaluate information critically is as important as learning facts.
 
 
What are the five areas of interaction?
 
The five areas of interaction are:
  1. Approaches to learning (ATL): Through ATL teachers provide students with the tools to enable them to take responsibility for their own learning, thereby developing an awareness of how they learn best, of thought processes and of learning strategies.
  2. Community and service: This component requires students to take an active part in the communities in which they live, thereby encouraging responsible citizenship.
  3. Human ingenuity: Students explore in multiple ways the processes and products of human creativity, thus learning to appreciate and develop in themselves the human capacity to influence, transform, enjoy and improve the quality of life.
  4. Environments: This area aims to develop students’ awareness of their interdependence with the environment so that they understand and accept their responsibilities.
  5. Health and social education: This area deals with physical, social and emotional health and intelligence—key aspects of development leading to complete and healthy lives.
 
How are students assessed?
 
Teachers organize continuous assessment over the course of the programme taking account of specified criteria that correspond to the objectives for each subject. The MYP offers a criterion-related model of assessment. This means that students' results are determined by performance against set standards, not by each student's position in the overall rank order. Teachers are responsible for structuring varied and valid assessment tasks that allow students to demonstrate achievement according to the required objectives within each subject group.
 
These may include:
 
  • open-ended, problem-solving activities and investigations
  • organized debates
  • hands-on experimentation
  • analysis reflection
Assessment strategies, both quantitative and qualitative, provide feedback on the thinking processes as well as the finished piece of work. There is also an emphasis on self-assessment and peer-assessment within the programme.