Curriculum Overview & Offer

At The Park our curriculum focusses on the development of basic skills and the preparation of students for the adult world whilst fostering a love of learning.

Basic Skills are numeracy and literacy and the communication skills needed for adult life.  These skills are the building blocks for, and underpin, successful future learning.

They are transferable and need to be practiced in a range of contexts, environments and situations. All our students require many opportunities every day to develop their basic skills in a range of learning opportunities that are appropriate for their needs, abilities and rates of progress.

KS3 & KS4 Curriculum Overview

Basic skills include:

Literacy

  • Reading
  • Writing

Mathematics

  • Numbers
  • Shape, space and measures
  • Time and Money


Subject Specific Learning

All subject specific learning is based on The National Curriculum. It is largely delivered in topics in each subject that allow balance and breadth across the curriculum. Students access these topics at a level appropriate to their attainment, development, needs and rate of progress.


Key Stage 3

The curriculum covers the following subjects:
  • English
  • Maths
  • Science
  • History
  • Cultural Studies combines modern foreign languages and geography in topic based subject that covers a range of countries to give students an introduction to geography, language and culture 
  • Art and Design also incorporates Design and Technology with some practically based art topics that include DT components
  • Music
  • Physical education
  • PSHE (Personal, Social and Health Education) incorporates citizenship
  • IT
  • Careers
  • Social Communication


Key Stage 4

During key stage 4 most students work towards national qualifications - usually Entry levels BTECs and GCSEs.

The curriculum covers the following subjects:
  • English
  • Maths
  • Science
  • IT
  • Physical Education
  • Social Studies (includes RE / PSHE) 
  • Art
  • ASDAN
  • Careers – includes careers guidance (included within social studies)
  • History
  • PFA (Preparation for adulthood including careers) 

Each subject has a long-term subject map and then medium and short term planning is organised as schemes of learning.

Spiritual, Moral, Social and Cultural development and British values are taught in PSHE and also covered in subjects as cross curricular themes.

TheParkSchool CuriculumOverview 1
 

TheParkSchool CuriculumOverview 2 



Whole School Curriculum Intent

Trust Curriculum Intent 

  • Ensure inclusivity and equality of provision. 
  • Provide an inspiring educational experience for every student. 
  • Teach and develop the character strengths and skills which allow students to be independent, to succeed in life and make a positive contribution to society. 
  •  Provide enrichment opportunities that are inspirational, aspirational and of a national standard. 
  • Ensure students achieve mastery with a deep, rich knowledge and skill base. 
  • Provide opportunities for building the cultural capital required for academic and personal fulfilment and success. 
  • Promote correct use and high standards of literacy, articulacy and numeracy.  

School Curriculum Intent 

To provide a safe and supportive learning environment where a creative, personalised curriculum enables students to fulfil their potential into adulthood by: 

  • Delivering a curriculum is of comparable breadth and ambition to the national curriculum but is reflective of the needs of the students
  • Giving students the essential skills and knowledge for employment and independent living 
  • Enabling students manage their friendships, emotional life, and mental wellbeing 
  • Ensuring the best possible progress in English and Maths 
  • Ensure a smooth transition to post 16
  • Fostering a love of learning 

How we teach Reading and Maths

Reading

Learning to Read … Reading to Learn

Reading is a fundamental life skill and an integral part of our school day in almost every aspect of our curriculum. All of our staff read with the students and are trained to teach reading including specific training in the alphabetic code and phonics.  Our approach to teaching reading is to foster a love of reading, in all its forms at whatever level the students can access it.  We start from where they are, and take them on a journey to success, supporting them to feel confident readers for lifelong learning.  Our aim is for all students to achieve success and from the start, see reading as something that they can do.

Every morning, students take part in a group reading session within a small group, matched to their ability.  The aim is to encourage them to read aloud a range of different texts, with an adult as a role model, talk about what they have read, show understanding, make inferences and practice intonation and expression.  This helps to develop enjoyment in reading. Children are exposed to high quality texts which are age appropriate, whilst at the same time, suitable for their reading age.  This helps to keep the students engaged and motivated for reading, developing self-confidence as readers.
As well as this, students have four English lessons each week.  Each lesson has a reading aspect to it with one lesson having a very specific focus on reading and phonics, which is then revisited briefly in every other English lesson.  We encourage students to see the English language as a code that we need to work out to be able to read accurately and fluently. 

At TPS, we follow the national curriculum framework for teaching phonics (letters and sounds), using a systematic approach within the Read Write Inc programme.  We supplement this with our own games and resources to ensure we maintain excitement and enthusiasm for learning.  Students are assessed regularly and an individual focus for each student ensures that they make the maximum progress with the ability to decode unfamiliar words eventually leading to automaticity in reading.  “Tricky words” (those that are not decodable) are taught as whole words and students are encouraged to look for patterns and shapes, using multisensory approaches to help them memorise them.  

For our more able students, a higher level of phonics is taught, e.g., working with morphemes and syllables and being able to manipulate these to help them read more complex words.  For those students that are ready, they will progress, in KS4 to taking Functional Skills English exams where students complete reading tasks related to practical, functional reading.

Alongside this, students listen to a wide range of texts, commenting on various aspects of it, creating excitement about books and introducing them to new language.  This also helps to develop inference skills, specifically teaching our students to think “beyond the literal” and “outside the box”.  This extends their thinking skills and expands their understanding of the wider world.

Our partnership with families at home is essential to support our students with their reading.  We work together to encourage all students to read at home as much as possible.  All reading is valuable whether it be a recipe, magazine, internet search, game instructions etc.  Students will bring home a range of books from our colour coding and number system, which will have a specific focus e.g., to help them decode words, comprehension, inference, expression or for family to read to them to develop enjoyment, understanding and expose them to a rich vocabulary. 

Teaching reading in this way enables all of our students to be successful as readers.  We teach them to read, so that they can read to learn and feel confident in all aspects of reading in their everyday lives, now and in the future.


Maths

Mathematics is a creative and highly interconnected discipline that has been developed over centuries, providing the solution to some of history’s most intriguing problems.

It is essential to everyday life, critical to science, technology and engineering, and necessary for financial literacy and most forms of employment.  A high-quality mathematics education therefore provides a foundation for understanding the world, the ability to reason mathematically, an appreciation of the beauty and power of mathematics, and a sense of enjoyment and curiosity about the subject. (National Curriculum in England: mathematics programmes of study – September 2021)

At The Park School we offer an ambitious, broad and balanced Maths programme, reflecting the aims of the National Curriculum in England (September 2021). Opportunities are provided for practical and written activities, questioning and working through problems both collaboratively and individually. The varied and individual needs exhibited by our students are met through high levels of adaptive teaching ensuring that learning materials, teaching styles and expected learning outcomes focus on the needs of every student. Maths teaching throughout the school is centred on the key areas listed in the National Curriculum in England (September 2021) and is informed by the engagement model (July2021).

The four strands of the National Curriculum are: Number, Measurement, Geometry and Statistics. For the purposes of our teaching and to ensure comprehensive coverage of the programmes of study, we have further subdivided these into 8 modules to meet the needs of our students. These match the 8 modules of the AQA Entry Level specification and for students studying at levels above Entry Level 3, fully cover the Level 1 Award and Foundation GCSE content. Learning outcomes in each of these modules will support students in their progression towards their optimum levels of achievement.  The 8 modules of Maths that we use are: Properties of Number, Four Operations, Ratio/Fractions, Money, The Calendar and Time, Measures, Geometry, Statistics.

All students have 4 Maths lessons per week. Two of the four lessons each week are dedicated to Number (Properties of Number/Four Operations) and the remaining 6 modules are taught over the course of the year – one module per half term. Each module is taught at Bronze, Silver, Gold (below recognised accreditation), Entry Level 1, Entry Level 2, Entry Level 3, Level 1 (Number & Measures) and Foundation GCSE (Grades 1-5).

All students are base lined within the first few weeks of starting at The Park, and attainment in each module is assessed annually, before and after teaching. Maths ages are assessed on entry, during each school year and on exit in Year 11. Students follow the Scheme of Learning for each module at their individual learning level. 

In Year 7 students are taught in class-based groups until baseline assessments have been completed. They are then split into ability groups and continue to be taught in 2 ability groups throughout their time at The Park. Students are formally and informally assessed throughout each academic year and targeted intervention is put in place for all those not on track to reach their target grades. At the end of year 11 students will sit AQA Entry Level, Edexcel Level 1 and Edexcel Foundation GCSE exams as appropriate.
 

Assessment & Tracking

Assessment & Tracking

Rationale

To determine an appropriately aspirational flightpath for each TPS student, we look at each individual child at transition and assess their needs holistically.  

Why

There is no agreed method to predict what a child with an EHCP can or should achieve. Unlike mainstream schools, there are no national datasets to generate reliable data, and internal data sets are too small. With the changing landscape of SEND, diverse range of needs within our school and ramifications of the pandemic, we cannot use one source of data to determine a student’s flightpath.

How

A range of quantitative and qualitative data is collected on each student and discussed by experienced SEND specialist leaders to make an informed picture of need that is used to create their progress flightpath. The flightpath tracker maps what good progress looks like for each individual student and reviewed at regular intervals. 


Teaching & Learning

Teaching and Learning 

Flow Learning 

The WMAT teaching and learning team has developed a model of teaching and learning to have maximum impact on student progress and attainment.  The model is based on our experience and research evidence. The key components are simplistic, but the detail is necessarily more complex. This is because we need to raise the expectation in terms of thinking hard about the links between different elements of great teaching, instead of breaking it down into a tick list of what to observe in a lesson.

Flow Learning

Please contact the school office if you would like to find out more about our curriculum offer and the relevant member of staff will get in touch with you.

Accreditation in KS4

Accreditation in KS4:

  • GCSE Maths
  • Certificate of Achievement Entry Level Maths
  • Functional Skills Maths
  • Functional Skills English
  • Functional Skills ICT
  • Certificate of Achievement Entry Level Science
  • GCSE Art
  • Bronze Arts Award
  • GCSE English
  • BTec Science
  • BTec Home Cooking Skills
  • Duke of Edinburgh Bronze Award