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“We aim to send all young people into an ever-changing world able and qualified to play their full part in it.”

Curriculum

Maths

Subject Staff

Mr Burnham, Mr Lewis

Exam Board

Edexcel

The Subject Way

Our subject has a ‘Subject Way’ at the heart of it. Our Subject Way is designed to help students become young subject specialists. The Subject Way has two main purposes:

Firstly, to teach students the vital skills they need to achieve their full potential and gain the very best grades they can. Secondly, to teach students how each subject relates to the wider world, incorporating the life skills they will learn.

It is our belief that knowing how what you learn links to the wider world brings a subject to life and therefore improves overall understanding and engagement.
 

Curriculum Intent

At Thrybergh we understand that getting the curriculum right for each and every individual student is the single most important factor in ensuring progress, encouraging positive engagement and raising aspirations.

At Thrybergh, we want all students to leave able and qualified to play their full part in an ever-changing world through an ambitious, creative and innovative curriculum, which empowers students with the skills, knowledge and attributes to allow them to succeed in their next phase of education and their working life.

We aim to engender a love of learning, self-belief and aspiration through 4 key intentions:

  • The removal of barriers to learning
  • Developing skills for learning
  • Developing personal attributes (Thrybergh Way)
  • Enriching student experiences and broadening their horizons

Our curriculum is not driven by performance tables. It is our belief that a strong, broad, balanced curriculum, tailored to individual needs can remove barriers to learning and allow all students to access the curriculum appropriate to them and will therefore meet their individual needs.

We believe in a strong foundation of core subjects including English, Maths and Science. All students who are identified with deficits in literacy and numeracy are given additional curriculum support. These core fundamental skills are essential in both accessing our broad curriculum offer and the next stage of life; be it education, employment or training.

 

Intention 1 – The removal of barriers to learning

We want all our students to go out into the world, and become successful, happy, fulfilled adults who will be good citizens and make a positive contribution to society. The acquisition of basic skills is either at the heart of achieving this or a barrier to learning and prevents students from fully flourishing. Four common barriers, if left unchallenged, will limit the progress, engagement and development of students who access our curriculum.

They are:

  • Literacy
  • Numeracy
  • Oracy
  • Vocabulary

We see these barriers as a high priority for the school. In order to prevent them from becoming a barrier for student development and progress we implement (and closely monitor) the following strategies:


Literacy

Ensuring learners access reading and writing opportunities within a maths lesson is non-negotiable. Learners regularly work on worded problems and investigations, all of which require learners to build on their literacy skills and give reasoning for their answer. Goal free problems are also used as a method to assist learners with their approach to questions that may require more reasoning or literacy skills.

Our assessments are carefully written to ensure that learners are regularly assessed on reasoning and problem solving questions and the weighting of these questions is in line with that of formal examinations. Learners are encouraged to underline key terminology and identify what is needed to complete the problem.


Numeracy

Naturally, numeracy is one of the barriers that mathematics focuses on intensely as numerical proficiency correlates well with success in mathematics. We aspire to remove the barrier that numerical fluency places in front of effective study of mathematics. We make use of numeracy tasks to give learners the opportunity to practise, discuss and embed skills that we feel are critical for future success. Number plays a large role within the mathematics curriculum and is interleaved multiple times over the 5-year journey to embed and develop numeracy skills. Our numeracy intervention is well sequenced and supplements the curriculum to ensure that all learners leave numerate.

Oracy

Whilst communicating in a written medium is important, being able to communicate complex mathematical ideas effectively is essential for learners to thrive. Staff model mathematical language during lessons and encourage opportunities to allow students to develop an argument, justification or proof. Questioning, discussion and reasoning is how we encourage learners to approach their lessons so that they can articulate their understanding of abstract topics to further their learning and improve their confidence when speaking in front of peers.

Vocabulary

Mathematics is a subject that is almost like a language in its own right and learners being confident of word definitions often makes the difference between understanding a question or not. As such, we focus on vocabulary and command words each lesson giving learners the support they need to understand the words. It is our aim to make our learners “word rich” so that they can speak and write about mathematics with confidence. The Frayer Model is used within the curriculum to expose learners to academic language on a regular basis.

Intention 2 – Developing Skills for Learning

Developing student knowledge and essential learning skills go hand in hand. Students need to remember with fluency in order to be fully established mini-subject specialists. We strive, at all times, for personal excellence by developing the 6 key skills for success:

  • Recall
  • Interpretation
  • Creativity
  • Analysis
  • Evaluation
  • Divergent thinking

 

Retrieval is an essential skill in mathematics. The ability to apply and recall knowledge quickly is crucial to support progression in mathematics as it frees up working memory to allow learners to engage with problem solving. We interleave previously studied content by using retrieval tasks as lesson starters labelled ‘flashback’. Our curriculum follows a mastery approach giving learners time to persevere, work on topics in-depth for longer periods of time, thus enabling learners to move fluently between mathematical ideas.

In order to ensure that pupils have the required prerequisite knowledge, the curriculum highlights the key skills for each small step and these are embedded within lessons as ‘get ready’ tasks. If the required knowledge isn’t there, lessons are adapted to ensure that all pupils are able to access the lesson and are appropriately supported and challenged.

Generalisation in mathematics takes the patterns that we see in number, algebra and geometry and tries to define a rule for those patterns. We use modelling, derivations and investigations in class to help learners develop their interpretation, analysis and evaluation skills as they seek to generalise what is often abstract content. Problem solving is also a crucial part of mathematics allowing learners to think creatively.

We structure our curriculum to allow learners more time on each strand of learning to not only embed skills but also to facilitate the time to engage with solving problems that linktogether the vast plethora of mathematics they study.

Intention 3 – Fostering personal attributes

Our curriculum promotes the skills and attributes our children need in order to develop the independence, responsibility, accountability and resilience they need to have a happy and successful life. We refer to this crucial aspect of our curriculum intent as The Thrybergh Way and it is embedded in everything we do.

The Thrybergh Way enables us to develop well-rounded individuals ready for the next stage. It is about embedding employability skills such as resilience, collaboration, communication, aspiration, responsibility, tolerance and respect in order for them to be an active participant in the local community and beyond.

The Thrybergh Way is embedded in assemblies, form periods and our extra-curricular programme. It is the language that we speak and key aspects of the Thrybergh Way are as follows:

  • We take pride in and look after our school community
  • We believe in ourselves
  • We work hard
  • We take responsibility for our choices and actions
  • We are respectful and listen to others
  • We are proud of our achievements
  • We are ambitious
  • We take risks and rise to a challenge
  • We support others around us
  • We are equipped to learn
  • We take pride in our appearance
  • We are prepared to make mistakes and learn from them

 

Intention 4 – Enriching student experiences and broadening their horizons

Our intent is that all students have a full understanding of how to develop themselves as well rounded citizens, maintain healthy relationships and understand how to keep themselves safe both online and in their day-to-day life. We want all students to know what options are open to them in the future and understand the routes they have in order to progress on their life journey. Our curriculum will include:

  • Exposing learners to worded problem-solving questions based on real life situations
  • Measuring distances and working with time in PE lessons
  • Tabulating and graphing results in science and geography lessons
  • Opportunities throughout the curriculum that expose learners to careers involving mathematical knowledge and skills.
  • Opportunities throughout the curriculum to learn about mathematics in different cultures and across the ages
  • Celebrating mathematical focus days (such as Pi Day and Number Day)
  • Emphasis on financial maths skills during Money Matters Week in Key Stage 3 in line with the PSHE curriculum

Our Curriculum

Key Stage 3

Using KS2 results, students are placed in sets on entry to school.  Students have three 80 minute maths lessons each week. The topics studied build in difficulty and we aim to ensure the KS2 skills are solid before working up to GCSE standards.  Homework is set via vle.MathsWatch.co.uk. The department uses regular assessments and ‘sticker tasks’ to assess the understanding that students have developed, thus allowing us to plan their next steps and meet their needs more effectively.  Each assessment will be followed by a bespoke intervention task for each pupil, allowing them to work on and improve in any areas they may struggled with.

Key Stage 4

All students have 3 lessons per week and the course is assessed by 3 terminal papers, each lasting 90 minutes and worth 80 marks per paper.  Students work towards the EDEXCEL Linear GCSE (2 calculator papers and 1 non-calculator paper). Tiers of entry for each student is carefully considered to allow every student to achieve their best possible outcome at the end of year 11.  

We aim for students to enjoy maths and increase their confidence, building on the skills and understanding they have formed in KS3.  Students need to be able to use and apply their maths in real world settings, particularly with the new focus on problem solving and mathematical reasoning at GCSE.  Students are supported and their progress carefully monitored throughout the course. There will be some students who will require additional support; and they will be able to access intervention as appropriate.

Students have regular topic tests and these, alongside homework, allow staff to check the ongoing understanding of the students.  The use of mock exams in both year 10 and 11 allows the students to be comfortable and confident in an examination setting as well as helping them to target their revision more effectively.  Home learning includes vle.MathsWatch.co.uk for both homework and independent revision. Other recommended sites include corbettmaths.com and mathsgenie.co.uk.

Careers in the Curriculum

Throughout our KS3 curriculum all pupils will link their learning to other subjects. Every half term pupils will see a different subject and the connections between what they have learnt throughout their time at RCS. Please see an example below of how a Year 7 lesson links to History and the understanding of reading from tables.

Money Matters Curriculum

As well as exposing our pupils to their Maths lessons, all pupils at RCS will be exposed to a “Money Matters Curriculum.” These sessions will be delivered in their Maths lessons and links real life financial elements to help prepare all of our pupils leave RCS able and qualified to enter the real world.

Key Stage 3

Title

Learning Objectives

Budgeting Challenge

To understand the budgeting process    
To appreciate that budgeting may involve having to  make choices within financial limits

Branding

To recognise how branding can influence our spending choices    
To compare one product against another in terms of  its taste, appearance and packaging etc. and make a ‘best value’ judgement

Saving and borrowing

To understand how and why saving and borrowing can help us to manage our finances    
To appreciate that interest payments play an important part in our personal finances

Debt

To understand what debt is and how it can be a problem    
To appreciate the possible consequences of not managing debt responsibly

Cost of living

To understand how to plan and keep track of their money    
To appreciate that they may have to evaluate and prioritise spending

Money safety

To understand how to recognise and avoid potential fraudulent situations 
To appreciate that being a victim of fraud may affect me emotionally as well as financially

Banks and Banking

To learn about financial services and use information and advice to make financial decisions

Money and Consumer Choices

To learn that money decisions can affect ourselves and others

Budgeting

To learn how to plan and budget

Saving

To know that saving money can enable better longer term money management

Exploring Economies

To recognise the important role money plays in our economic well being    
To understand how this country’s economy works in relation to the economies of other countries    
To appreciate how changes in the national economy can affect personal finances

Inflation Investigation

To recognise the important role money plays in our economic well being    
To understand that monetary inflation has implications for the whole country    
To appreciate how changes in the national economy can affect personal finances

Talking Tax

To recognise the important role money plays in our economic well being    
To appreciate that certain taxes affect everyone    
To understand the role a tax-collecting body plays in the economy

Key Stage 4

Title

Learning Objectives

Sources of financial information

To understand that there is a wide range of financial information available    
To appreciate the difference between advice and information    
To recognise that some financial information and advice might be more impartial than others

What do banks do?

To recognise that banks can provide a range of financial services and products    
To appreciate that while banks help us manage our money, they are also businesses    
To know that they might have to make choices about financial products and services in the future

The New Year’s Resolution

To understand the reasons why young people need to save for the future    
To appreciate that they need to make choices about how to save in the future.

How to avoid holiday horrors

To know that certain types of insurance are a legal requirement and that others are voluntary    
To know what steps to take should they fall victim to financial fraud, theft or damage to property

Hosting a major event

To identify benefits and costs of hosting a major event    
To explain the role of taxation in funding public services including major public events    
To understand how personal finances can be affected positively and negatively by changes in tax

Payslips

To know about work and income and how work choices may impact on our financial situation

Avoiding scams and identity theft

To know about financial fraud and identity theft

Long term planning and borrowing

To know about longer term financial planning and borrowing

Insurance and managing risk

To know how to identify and manage potential risk and insurance

Expectations vs Reality

To recognise that the expectations of Higher Education may not match the reality.    
To identify the career, personal and financial benefits of Higher Education and potential drawbacks.    
To recognise the potential rewards compared to the costs of Higher Education.

Higher Education Pathways – Making informed decisions

To understand the pathways available for young people to access Higher Education     
To appreciate the need to make informed choices about progression into Higher Education

Getting to grips with HE finances

To identify the basic costs associated with Higher Education.    
To understand the need to be financially capable.    
To evaluate student financial experiences depending on income and expenses.

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