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Curriculum
“Those who fail to learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.”
Churchill.
In each History project, we want our children to learn about periods of history which are significant culturally and ethically to help them develop their moral compasses and think about how they can make the world outside St Mary’s a better place to live today from the lessons learned from the past.
Furthermore, this type of planning encourages a consistent, in-depth teaching of history, especially with the interesting and beneficial cross curricular links. It facilitates the opportunity for St Mary’s children to focus their historical enquiry, knowledge and analysis of sources to a gradually formed answer to their class question.
History planning is devised through professional discussion with teaching staff, the history leader and the Senior Leadership Team (SLT); it meets the requirements of the National Curriculum, which is organised in our school ‘National Curriculum Ladders’. This facilitates the opportunity for skills learnt in previous years to be reinforced to encourage yearly progression and highlight links. Furthermore, for each history topic, children are exposed to key vocabulary to make their historical learning valuable, relevant to the period of history and linking to their project values. Children are challenged at St Mary’s by being encouraged to engage with and answer ‘Deeper thinking Questions’.
History is taught mainly during our Discover Projects (Autumn Term). Other opportunities for developing history skills and knowledge and to support children’s long term memory development are planned into the Explore and Express projects (Spring and Summer Term, depending on year group). The focus of our history studies enables pupils to engage with their Project Question and Project Values. For example, Year 5 ask: ‘Does history remember everyone fairly?’ and study the values of: ‘Power, Fairness, Justice, Influence and Respect’. They explore the history of the Ancient Egyptians, and without glorifying the Pharaohs, who enslaved many people, explore what life was like in the ancient civilisation. They also investigate the discovery of the Rosetta Stone and question why it is currently held by The British Museum. They answer questions like: ‘Whose history is most important?’
Across the school we learn about the Solo Taxonomy verbs of: Describe, Analyse and Evaluate. We use these verbs to layer challenge into our study of sources. Teachers use this vocabulary, alongside class discussion, to ensure all pupils can engage with sources with historical relevance. During history lessons, children have the opportunity to work independently, with a partner or in mixed ability groups to enable everyone to engage with our history curriculum.
History National Curriculum Ladder
Thinking like a Historian KS1
(Describe, Analyse & Evaluate.)
Thinking like a Historian KS2
(Describe, Analyse & Evaluate.)