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Forest of Dean Trust Principles for Curriculum and Pedagogy

 

Curriculum Principles

Our curriculum ensures long-term, progressive learning from Early Years to A-level, building subject knowledge and skills systematically across all phases.

Key Curriculum Features:

1. Long-Term Progression:

  • The curriculum is structured to ensure seamless development from Early Years through to A-Level.
  • Endpoints and skills are clearly defined to build towards a long-term aim.

2. Medium-Term Planning as the Bridge Between Curriculum and Pedagogy:

  • Medium-term plans are where curriculum (what is taught) and pedagogy (how it is taught) intersect.

Medium-term plans will contain:

  • A clear learning objective (e.g., WALT, LO, TBAT).
  • Planned skill development that contributes to long-term progression.
  • A toolkit or WILF defining success criteria.
  • Key vocabulary is explicitly planned.
  • A structured lesson outline incorporating research-informed teaching strategies.
  • Scaffolding for children who need additional support.
  • Opportunities for depth of learning/extension for greater depth learners.
  • Resources planned and embedded into teaching materials.

3. Alignment with Lesson Delivery:

  • Medium-term plans work alongside lesson slides and PowerPoints to form a coherent curriculum.
  • Lessons will be designed to deliver curriculum content in a structured, research-informed way.

Pedagogical Principles

Our pedagogical approach is grounded in evidence-based strategies to ensure the most effective teaching and learning practices are consistently applied across all schools within the Trust.

Key Pedagogical Features:

1. Use of Rosenshine's Principles of Instruction:

The majority of lessons are structured around Rosenshine's principles, focusing on:

  • Reviewing prior learning.
  • Clear explanations and modelling.
  • Guided practice before independent work.

2. Research-Informed Teaching Strategies:

  • All teaching practices are underpinned by educational research.
  • Strategies for effective classroom practice, drawing on research-informed approaches such as, Rosenshine's Principles of Instruction, Teach Like a Champion, WalkThrus, Cognitive Load Theory, and adaptive teaching.

3. Adaptive Teaching to Meet All Learners' Needs:

  • Teaching is responsive and flexible, ensuring that all students can access learning.
  • Scaffolding, questioning techniques, and differentiated support will be embedded in lessons.

4. Assessment and Feedback as Part of Effective Teaching:

  • Formative assessment (low-stakes quizzes, retrieval practice, questioning techniques) is embedded in all lessons.
  • Summative assessment ensures long-term retention and curriculum coherence.
  • Feedback loops ensure marking is purposeful and feeds into student progress.

5. Collaborative Professional Development Across the Trust:

  • Networking and sharing of good practice is central to staff development across all schools.
  • Subject leaders and teaching staff will regularly engage in professional dialogue and lesson studies.
  • Trust-wide CPD will also be available on the latest changes in education.