Intent statement
We want to enable students to understand economics by seeing the topics they study in the here and now of current affairs. We encourage students to nurture a passion for the power of Economics and to use their knowledge to advance social justice and equality.
Subject Lead
Subject Lead in Economics and Politics
Mr Lawton
Curriculum Principles
Implementation Key Principles:
- A curriculum that is logically sequenced to reflect the interconnectivity and building block nature of economics.
- Content is rich, relevant and reflective of the diverse world in which we live.
- Learning is sequenced to enable young people to develop knowledge and skills.
- Literacy is explicitly delivered across the curriculum.
- Learning is adapted to support the specific needs of individuals.
- A sustainable approach is supported through the curriculum.
- Resilience is promoted for students by frequent (low stakes) assessment to inform teaching.
In classrooms, this may look like:
- Lessons balance knowledge of topic, analysis of topic and evaluation of topic in light of other topics already learnt.
- The Long term plan is guided by the three terminal exams and explicit deconstruction of mark scheme and examiners reports.
- students will work their way from definition writing - analysis - evaluation exam questions.
- Carefully planned shared schema, developed by experts and tailored by teachers to meet the needs of teaching groups
- DO NOW tasks drawing on prior learning
- Signature strategies used for Checking Understanding, such as Show Call, Show Me, Intentional Monitoring
- Shared literacy and reading strategies in place, such as Inside Outside Beyond and whole class reading work
- Precise pedagogical decisions made for students with additional needs (EHCP, SEND K, PSP, Behavioural, PA) including additional adults, alternative resources or outcomes, seating arrangements, precise deployment of signature strategies
- Teaching which alters according to student understanding demonstrated both from assessment points and within lessons.
In work produced, this may look like:
- Pre-reading independent study includes note-taking of key concepts
- Uplearn is used for consolidation.
- Regular feedback, which addresses knowledge or skills gaps
- Opportunities for conscious practise by students (reteach episodes, ‘fix-it’ sessions, revision)
- Opportunities for self and peer assessment, engaging with success criteria
- As relevant to Key Stage, opportunities to engage with exam-style content
- Home learning will promote digital literacy in line with school strategy
For students, this experience may include:
- Weekly private study divided between pre reading, consolidation and assignments.
- In class students will participate in debates/ discussions and paired talk.
- Students will also practice a volume of written work, self, peer and teacher marked.
- Consistent staffing in lessons with teachers who know them and similar learning journeys across year groups
- Regular opportunities to engage with feedback on progress (parents’ evenings, progress grades, reports, assessment feedback, in-class feedback, marking)
- A clear sense of the curriculum journey leading to CEIAG – how can you pursue this field of study? What might it lead you to?
- Where students are taught by professionals at the start of their career, they can expect additional adults in classes supporting through a range of strategies (live coaching, learning walks, observations, team teaching)
Impact Key Principles
In evaluating the impact of our curriculum, we will consider:
- Outcomes data, such as A level and BTEC Results, GCSE results, Additional qualifications (sports leaders, community languages, Entry level qualifications) and the performance of vulnerable groups within that data
- Destinations data at common points of transition from the school (Key Stage 4 and Key Stage 5)
- Internal and external Quality Assurance processes (Ark review processes, governor accountability processes, internal audit processes, Ofsted)
- The development of professionals into experts in their field through their work in supporting colleagues, supporting other schools, developing curriculum resource, becoming examiners etc.
Curriculum Coverage
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Year 13
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