Monday 7 February 2022

The Curriculum - Razna Choudhury

A good curriculum in a secondary school is an inclusive learning journey on which the student acquires knowledge and skills that prepare them for a successful life after school. It also involves developing or enhancing key attributes to ensure students lead a successful, happy, healthy life and they are actively engaged with the world around them. It sounds simple, yet to achieve this is a complex task... so how should we plan our curriculum? In this blog I'll attempt to provide you with some ideas.

Curriculum Coherency

In Mary Myatt’s book, ‘Huh’ she argues for coherence within curriculum planning through proper identification and teaching of concepts. She points out that these are the golden threads that run through subject's ‘baskets’ which hold meaning and signpost underlying structures. Myatt goes on to say that a well-planned, coherent curriculum, where concepts are revisited in different contexts, helps students to make sense of learning. This also enables them to build on prior learning and understand how it is related to the new knowledge they are acquiring.

Marry Myatt argues that curriculum coherency is crucial to help students develop deep understanding.

Mary Myatt also talks about the 'curse of content coverage' - there is a temptation to think that covering more must mean that students learn more. But I believe that we cannot teach the next lesson or part of the scheme if students have not grasped what we are currently teaching.The idea that we should move on because that is what the schemes of learning says sends the message that the curriculum plan is more important than the students. 


Identifying the key concepts

Identifying the key concepts within the curriculum is crucial for learning. The concepts are important because they contain the big ideas and when students grasp these big ideas, learning becomes more efficient. We need to be mindful that if too much curriculum planning is focused on task completion, which is a bad proxy for learning, this may not lead to deep understanding.  When students grasp the concepts, their learning is more secure than if they have just completed a few worksheets or exercises from a textbook. Covering a lot of content may give the impression that students have learned a great deal when, in fact, all that may have happened is that students have completed some exercises, the learning is then superficial and will not stay in the long term memory. Students need to be able to say in their own words what they have learnt and how it relates to the bigger picture. If we ensure that the curriculum plans support conceptual development, we make planning easier and learning deeper.


When students understand concepts, this makes new knowledge secure. If students have access to, understand and are able to use the conceptual, technical vocabulary expertly and confidently, they are entering the territory of long term memory. So when we are planning, we have to identify the key concepts we want students to learn. When we identify these and do work around their original meanings, we take students into a deeper understanding of the subject.

Covering content does not guranteed understanding. It is crucial curriculum design provides the flexibility to promote deeper understanding of core concepts.

Thoughtful Sequencing

When the curriculum lacks coherence, it is harder to teach and harder for students to learn. It is tempting to think that because students have been taught something, they have got it. Careful consideration must be paid to the organisation and sequencing of the material to be taught. Topics must be rethought in order to avoid confusion. This needs to be held in mind when long and medium term plans are constructed and also during the daily delivery of lessons. We need to remind ourselves and our students of how what we are learning today fits into a bigger picture. 


Knowledge Transfer

I believe that it is important to show students that the learning process is not as isolated as it seems during the school day rather, in reality, it consists of many interconnected pieces. Learning does not end after one timetabled lesson but there are strong links within topics in a subject and across the wider curriculum. Learning is a continuous process not an event.


One way to show students the relevance and interconnectedness of learning is through cross-curricular teaching. Heidi Hayes Jacobs defines cross-curricular teaching as “a conscious effort to apply knowledge, principles, and/or values to more than one academic discipline simultaneously.” The goal of cross-curricular teaching is to bring together seemingly isolated subject areas by incorporating the knowledge and skills of one area into the work done in the others.


One of the benefits of cross-curricular teaching is that the more connections the mind makes, the better it is able to learn and retain information. Cross-curricular teaching helps students make more connections and gives more meaning and relevance to the subjects and skills they are learning. You can at least begin to show students that the things they are learning do have practical applications beyond an isolated classroom.

The more connections students can make between different subjects they learn the more developed there schemas become -this helps to promote deeper understanding and longer term memory and recall.

If we want our students to see and understand the connections between various subject areas, then teachers themselves need to look at each other subject's schemes of learning and identify common topics leading to a discussion on knowledge, skills, pedagogy, similarities and differences and making this explicitly clear to students. Sharing and using the same resources in different subjects allows students to see key concepts in different contexts and having discussions about the different meanings of keywords will lead to less confusion. Doing prior knowledge checks before starting a new unit of work or brainstorming curriculum connections to a new topic with students could lead to an opportunity for teachers from different disciplines to work collaboratively. Leaders need to ensure lesson planning time is used effectively and encourage working collaboratively across the curriculum which will reduce workload in time and forge better working relationships with teachers from different departments.


Further reading:

Razna Choudhury - Assistant Headteacher

You can follow Razna on Twitter @RC_Denbigh