Politics A Level

Course Overview

According to MP Edmund Burke (1729-1797) society is ‘a partnership not only between those who are living, but between those who are living, those who are dead and those who are to be born’. He believed it was vital that knowledge was passed down to different generations. Politics A Level will allow you to understand and engage with the world around you whilst understanding how we got to where we are.  There has never been a more important time to study Politics and to understand the societies in which we live, work and study. 


How does the UK government differ from other democratic and non-democratic countries? How well are rights protected in the UK and USA? Vital questions about how democracy functions in the UK and USA and what powers are held by those who govern us are just small parts of the course, alongside wider ideas such as Liberalism, Socialism, Nationalism and Conservatism that have shaped the modern world in both positive and negative ways.

Across both years of the course, we will study political ideologies and both UK and US Politics and government, covering democracy, political parties, pressure groups and electoral systems alongside the UK and US Constitutions, Parliament and Congress, Prime Minister and President, as well as rights and the role played by the Supreme Courts in both countries. We will study how these systems emerged and how they have changed with recent challenges.

You will have the opportunity to attend a range of trips, talks and workshops by visiting speakers. This year these have included talks from local MPs Anthony Browne and Daniel Zeichner, virtual exchange with American students from Troy High School in Michigan, and even a trip to 10 Downing Street

This is an excellent subject for anyone looking to study Law, Economics, Politics or International Relations at university and opens doors to career paths in local government or the wider Civil Service. Former students have gone on to have successful careers working with the Welsh Parliament and even setting up and directing “Centre”, a cross-party think tank!

Year 1 Modules

  • Politics and Government of the UK
  • Politics and Government of the USA and Comparative Politics
  • Political Ideas

Year 2 Modules

  • Politics and Government of the UK
  • Politics and Government of the USA and Comparative Politics
  • Political Ideas

Group of students outside 10 downing street

Key Info

Minimum Entry Requirements

  • Five GCSEs at Grade 5 including:
    • Grade 5 in GCSE English Language
    • Grade 5 in another GCSE Humanities subject 
    • Grade 4 in GCSE Maths

Assessment

  • 100% Exam
  • Exam Board: AQA


 

103

Total students

21

Average class size

 

 

 

 

 

 

Why choose this course? 

You will enjoy this course if you enjoy reading and learning the historical and political context around the theory and practise of how the UK and USA are governed and how the UK system can be compared to that of the USA in terms of democracy, the distribution of power and the protection of rights. Additionally, you will enjoy Politics if you are interested in current affairs and reading around ideas relating to how societies should and could be organised and how conservatives, socialists, liberals, and nationalists differ from each other on such fundamental themes, including the state, the economy and society. 

Recently, the Politics department has welcomed local MPs Anthony Browne, Daniel Zeichner and Lucy Frazer and students recently visited the UK Parliament at Westminster alongside Downing Street. It is hoped that it will be possible at some stage to visit Washington DC. The aim is for students to establish a student Politics society and to get involved in a podcast dedicated to the wider subject, not just topics covered in the exams. 

Skills you'll gain

In A Level Politics you will gain vital skills in researching, wider reading, analytical thinking and answering questions on topics as varied as the nature of modern democracy, the powers and role of Parliament in the UK, the Prime Minister, the protection of racial minorities in the USA and the extent to which humans are naturally selfish or co-operative.

You will gain confidence in essay writing, extended reading, source questions and how to answer political questions by carefully considering the evidence and coming to balanced and substantial judgements. 

After Long Road

Politics students can go forward to study at university with a number of options open to them, including: Politics, Politics and International Relations, History and Law, as well as Politics studied alongside a foreign language. Recent students have progressed to study Politics at UEA, History and Politics at University of Sheffield, Philosophy and Politics at University of Liverpool.

The subject is a useful A level for those wishing to progress onto further studies in History, Law, Economics or Sociology and the skills developed throughout the course would be a benefit to students wishing to work in law, journalism, local government or the wider civil service. 

Politics allows students to understand both the ins and outs of how our government works and what our involvement means living in a democracy. Every lesson is varied and having a good teacher makes it worthwhile.