About this curriculum
Anchored in our six core concepts, our approach is designed to facilitate a progressive accumulation of knowledge and understanding over time, ensuring that our students not only know 'what' happened but also 'why' and 'how' it is relevant to them and the world they live in.
Intent
Widey Court is situated in the city of Plymouth in the South West of England. Our location has influenced the decisions made in designing this curriculum. As a coastal city and historic port, there is a strong need for pupils to understand themes of explorers and conflicts and how Plymouth has impacted on local, national and international history. Through using the concepts of empire, civilisation, impact and influence, culture, relationships and movement each unit will be shaped by these concepts. Each unit builds from the prior knowledge gained and enables our children to think deeper about their understanding of History. Deliberate curriculum choices have been made to enable the children to conduct historical enquiry both in the class and through fieldwork and trips wherever possible. Our curriculum refers to the rich archaeological and historic treasures and sites available on our doorstep. Choices have been made to facilitate the best possible retention of learnt facts through a sequential curriculum where children revisit key concepts throughout their primary career.
Implementation
History follows the National Curriculum; objectives are delivered through units building to a final piece of work- a fewer things greater depth approach is taken with History. Children a timeline at the start of each unit to embed their chronological knowledge. The substantive concepts ensure skills specific to History are taught each multiple times across each child’s primary career at Widey, they are based on the aims of the national curriculum. The curriculum makes use of prior knowledge and provides clear references on how learning will be used in each unit and each lesson. Children will enjoy school trips, welcome visitors and view artefacts– all of which works to enrich their experience within History.
Impact
Through lesson observations and children interviews, children will be able to demonstrate their increasing knowledge of historical skills. Children will be able to recall known facts that have been taught and gain a deeper understanding of the substantive concepts over time, making links between different historical periods.