Curriculum
At Waseley Hills we aim to improve the life chances of all our pupils through a broad and balanced academic curriculum. Our motivation is to develop confident and creative young people who can thrive in a changing world. Our curriculum vision is inclusive, well-designed and coherently sequenced to establish a strong foundation for all our pupils. Our curriculum also provides pupils with opportunities to take reading within this and interdisciplinary literacy is a key driver of curriculum development. Oracy is also an integral part of literacy; empowering pupils to articulate their knowledge, understanding, and thinking. Knowledge acquisition is central to our vision, and we provide rich and varied contexts and opportunities for pupils to acquire disciplinary knowledge and then develop and apply this broad knowledge.
This rationale explains the principles of how we have designed the curriculum for our pupils and how these principles underpin how we have selected the things we want them to learn.
Each subject within the curriculum has a further subject-specific rationale that demonstrates how schools have selected what they want pupils to learn in each subject and how the order has been arrived at so that pupils make progress in their learning. We have a three-year Key Stage 3 building on Key Stage 2 and leading into KS4 and 5.
Our overall curriculum design is underpinned by our vision for what the pupils in our communities need to thrive and become confident learners. Our Curriculum offer identifies the Knowledge, Skills, Attributes, and Experiences we seek to develop in our pupils. We see each component of KASE as an entitlement for pupils and KASE shapes the whole experience within a school. Our Subject Curriculum design is driven by the Knowledge aspect of KASE; developing expert subject knowledge alongside disciplinary skills to encourage critical thinkers who can communicate ideas and thoughts with clarity. Key to our curriculum vision is that pupils experience a wide range of cultural opportunities and materials within the school and that pupils are encouraged to communicate and talk about their knowledge, thinking, and learning.
Knowledge: is the driver of our subject planning and the aim is to develop expertise by ensuring that pupils master, over time, the key substantive and conceptual knowledge within each subject discipline. We think of knowledge as consisting of
- Substantive knowledge – the substance of each unit of learning and its associated vocabulary, connected through the subject to other units by substantive concepts – the “big ideas” of each subject.
- Disciplinary knowledge – how the thinking in each subject develops as pupils build more substantive knowledge, what is commonly thought of as the ‘subject-specific skills’ of each subject.
The design of the curriculum within each subject is characterised by the relationship between substantive and disciplinary knowledge, interwoven and built over time. Knowing more, remembering more, being able to do and demonstrate more is at the core of the sequencing. Making conceptual connections differs in each subject, so each subject rationale makes explicit the order and sequence of how this knowledge will be learnt and each school has detailed medium-term and unit plans. Some subjects are more hierarchal: Maths, Science, MFL, and Music, whereas others are cumulative, such as History, Geography, and Art.
We want pupils to know and understand more but also to explore and interrogate knowledge. We believe that, for our pupils, we need to design learning opportunities to promote key attributes that are associated with developing an appetite and a thirst for learning, such as resilience.
Pupils need to see models of how these attributes are key to higher achievement and pride in their work. As they gain more knowledge, they are changed by what they learn, and they grow more detailed and conceptual connections (“schemata”) within subject disciplines. For the same reason, we have identified a range of skills that are characteristics of effective learning. The substantive and disciplinary knowledge within each subject provides a framework for how pupils get better and make progress in that subject, developing subject skills. These characteristics of effective learning are drivers of pedagogical design. We place particular emphasis on the development of exploratory talk and reasoning to apply the substantive vocabulary pupils are learning in different subjects (fluency and communication).
Experiences of activities, visits to places and encounters with people provide stimuli for and models of how knowledge is gained. The design and planning of our curriculum make explicit the weaving in of authentic experiences and a wide range of rich ‘texts’ which give pupils the opportunities to see where knowledge and learning can take them and enable connections and links to be made.