The George Eliot Academy is a place where both pupils and staff feel a real sense of belonging. We are passionate about our vision to develop successful pupils who are independent, well-rounded, behave with integrity, and most importantly live happy and fulfilled lives. At The George Eliot Academy, we provide a caring environment which develops and nurtures the values, skills and attributes for creating good citizens with a strong moral purpose, who make positive contributions to their society. We aim to provide our students with opportunities and experiences, that engenders in them the love of learning and equips them to meet the challenges of a rapidly changing society and are ready and willing to grasp the opportunities available to them. We got involved with Skills Builder Accelerator as we recognise the importance of pupils have a range of skills to equip them for their future after The George Eliot Academy.
The essential skills has made a positive impact on pupils and staff. Pupils understand the importance of essential skills and know the importance of being able to develop them to help them in future life. It has allowed us to break down employability to pupils so that they can understand the importance of developing essential skills for employability in the future. It has been lovely each term for pupils who have worked particularly hard on particular key skills be awarded in our rewards assemblies for this.

Each PSHE lesson links to different skills, and this is mapped in the curriculum, using the Universal Framework. In some PSHE lessons, Hub short lessons are being used at the start of PSHE sessions to explicitly teach skills. To support where there may be cover lessons, the flexible support time included in our Skills Builder programme has been dedicated to creating offline resources, to teach individual steps from the Aiming High framework and provide learners with opportunities to practise them. Workbooks from the Hub have been printed and set for cover work during PSHE. In the reflection room, the behaviour manager has workbooks for each skill. These are used with students and a focus skill is chosen depending on their need.

All staff use the merit system on ClassCharts, which allows staff to award merits for pupils demonstrating essential skills. Every department has a focus skill; the Career Champion in each department area creates an action plan at the start of each half term, outlining their skill focus and how this will feed into their curriculum area. One of these champions attended the skills leader training day to receive further training. As per whole-school policy, each lesson has to begin with a lesson outcome slide, which outlines two focus skills and how they link to the lesson. All extra-curricular activities have been mapped with essential skills; there is a document with the extra-curricular activities, brief description and which skill is practiced. Pupils in year 7-9 participate in family lunch, which encourages them to practice their speaking and listening skills. PowerPoints are created centrally and shared with staff, and ensure consistency in the skills builder language being used.
We plan to look at creating some more of the offline paperless reflection sheets for all of the essential key skills in case of staff sickness, this means that pupils will still be able to learn and develop their essential skills. Using staff CPD to deliver inputs around the essential skills to continue with the consistent approach across the school. We want to continue to build on our current successes of the program by incorporating them into the subject areas even more using our career champions.