Curriculum Intent, Implementation and Impact
Our Curriculum Intent
At Maids Moreton CE School, our purpose is to foster a love of learning within a nurturing Christian community in a way that enables every child to be the best they can be and to flourish in an ever-changing world. We continually strive to provide high quality teaching and learning experiences through a broad, balanced, engaging and challenging curriculum, encompassing all core and foundation subjects, which is accessible to all and enables all children to fulfil their potential. Our curriculum has been carefully designed to ensure full coverage and progression. It is important that children have rich and diverse opportunities and a range of memorable experiences from which to learn.
Our curriculum aims to strikes a balance between developing children’s skills and knowledge, whilst also encouraging pupil voice. It is taught through discrete subjects, ensuring proportionate priority is given to all curriculum areas, but with an overarching theme or “bigger picture.” This is to deepen thinking, make learning more memorable and to enable children to make connections in their learning. Where it is not possible to link topics, it has not been forced, with the priority being the coherent sequence and acquisition of skills and knowledge in each subject, rather than tenuously linked learning under a topic umbrella.
Many of our children enjoy rich experiences outside of school which builds their cultural capital and enables them to acquire a large and rich vocabulary. We are aware that a small minority of our pupils are not so fortunate. It is therefore imperative that as a school we seek to enrich the experience for all.
Embedded within our curriculum is the continual promotion of spiritual, moral, social and cultural development of children in order to prepare them for the opportunities, responsibilities and experiences of adult life in modern Britain.
We aim to generate an excitement for learning for all, developing lively enquiring minds, character building opportunities, the ability to question and reason, the confidence to make mistakes and the motivation and resilience to work independently and overcome obstacles.
We comply with the duties in the Equality Act 2010 and the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Regulations 2104 to ensure that the curriculum is accessible with those with disabilities or special educational needs.
Our intent has been to create an aspirational curriculum that meets this vision and prepares our pupils for the next stages of their school career and future. We want children to leave us able to tackle the challenges of life with curiosity and confidence, secure in who they are. As such we have created end of Key Stage hierarchical goals for our children to reach, and set out what our curriculum needs to include, and the experiences children need to have had, in order to achieve these goals. These can be found in our Curriculum Strategy document. [see link below]
We have reviewed our curriculum and made some changes to ensure that we are delivering:
A curriculum which is rigorous and coherent, promoting a clear and explicit progression in learning within each discipline. It focuses on fluency and allows pupils to acquire the cumulative skills, knowledge and vocabulary required for the next stage of their learning in a logical sequence, across all subjects. There is a balanced and relevant focus on knowledge, skills, understanding and vocabulary, leading to challenge for all.
Leading to learners who:
Have a solid grounding in the fundamentals of each subject, developing the skills, knowledge and vocabulary required for each stage of their schooling. They make connections in their learning, know more, remember more and are able to do more.
A curriculum which promotes high standards of numeracy and literacy. A curriculum that provides opportunities for children to use and apply reading, writing and mathematical skills across all subjects of the curriculum, as well as through discrete teaching of these subjects. A curriculum that encourages a lifelong love of reading.
Leading to learners who:
Are confident readers, writers and mathematicians. They are able to use and apply skills taught in maths and English lessons, across the curriculum and in real life situations. They read for purpose and enjoyment.
A curriculum which reflects the background and experience of our pupils which is outward facing, global and celebrates diversity whilst promoting unity. It is rooted in authenticity and context, making links with the real world so learners can see the relevance of their learning.
Leading to learners who:
Are reflective and show an understanding and empathy towards others, leading to tolerance and respect. They have a growing understanding of the world in which they live and have opportunities to develop their own strengths and find their passion.
A curriculum which promotes social, emotional, physical and mental well-being and balances the importance of the whole child alongside academic achievement. It sees emotional development and intellectual development not as alternatives but as strands of a rope, which mutually strengthen one another
Leading to learners who:
Understand the importance of being physically and emotionally healthy. They take responsibility for their own actions. They understand their place in the wider community and their own moral responsibility within it. They grow up to be responsible global citizens.
See PSHE curriculum. See geography, science, RE, history, PE curriculum.
A Curriculum which is engaging by making learning relevant, fun and interesting, leading to relevant and wide-ranging experiences. It encourages teamwork and collaboration. It brings learning to life by promoting a sense of awe and wonder and creating memories.
Leading to learners who:
Are excited and motivated to learn, interested, enthusiastic and happy. They have enquiring and critical minds who approach learning with curiosity and creativity. They actively engage in learning, collaborate effectively with others and communicate confidently, growing to become lifelong learners.
A curriculum rich in Cultural Capital which gives children from all backgrounds exposure to and vast array of experiences.
Leading to learners from all backgrounds who:
possess the essential knowledge to be educated citizens and who are knowledgeable about a wide range of culture and are comfortable discussing its value and merits.
See cultural capital at Maids Moreton CE School document. See school website-News and Events-gallery of events, curriculum-visits and visitors. See children’s books.
A character building curriculum in which the children are determined, resilient and active learners, who have ownership of their learning and drive themselves forward to be the best they can be.
Leading to learners who:
Are risk takers with lively enquiring minds. They can question and reason and have the confidence to make mistakes and the motivation and resilience to work independently and overcome obstacles. They understand the importance of working hard and pushing themselves to reach their personal best.
Our Curriculum Implementation
Subject leaders draw from Long Term Plans to create Medium Term Plans which show what will be taught in each unit in each subject, in which order, and how learning links together in a purposeful way. Medium term plans also show where the learning fits into the whole school curriculum, building on previous learning and laying foundations for future learning in school. Short term plans are compiled that break down objectives into weekly or daily teaching. Progression documents, knowledge organisers and key vocabulary documents show the key knowledge, skills and vocabulary that the children are expected to acquire each year through each unit of work.
Teachers in the EYFS plan purposeful learning experiences based on the children’s interests and next steps, in line with Development Matters and EYFS guidelines and principles.
Our Curriculum Impact
The coverage, progression and effectiveness of the curriculum at Maids Moreton CE School is monitored by the head teacher and subject leaders through triangulation of observation of teaching, work scrutiny, discussions with pupils and formative and summative pupil assessment data. Teaching staff lead and monitor areas of the curriculum, identify strengths and areas for development and contribute to the School Development Plan.