1a Curriculum Intent Master Yr 10 1
1a Curriculum Intent Master Yr 10 1
1a Curriculum Intent Master Yr 10 1
Foundation Remembrance
Am I able to demonstrate competence using number and place value Day – 11th November
in various contexts? Can I show competence in applying the rules of
Algebra to manipulating expressions and formulae? Anti-Bullying Week- 16th-20th
November
· Apply systematic listing, using BODMAS, operations with decimal
numbers, metric conversion, factors multiples and primes, using Advent - 1st December
listing, prime factorisation and Venn diagrams to calculate HCF
and LCM.
· Using the correct notation; writing and simplifying more complex
expressions; multiplying and dividing expressions; recognise the
difference between a formula and expression; expanding,
simplifying, and factorising expressions; use mathematical and
science formulae.
Science ICT
Biology: infection and response: How does our body defend us Digital Information Technology: Component 1
against diseases. Students will look at how communicable and non-
communicable diseases work. Learning Aim A
Chemistry: (Quantitative chemistry)- How can you use numbers to
explain the efficiency of their reactions and their values? A1 What is a user interface
Perform a series of calculations to comprehend physical / chemical - Learners will investigate different types of user interface used
reactions (qualitatively method) to a number method, used in industry by individuals and organisations. They will investigate how
to understand profit and waste. they vary across different uses, devices and purposes.
Physics: (Electricity) – How does electricity get into our homes? A2 Audience Needs
Students will learn what current and voltage is and how our national - Learners will investigate the varying needs of the audience
grid system works. and how they affect both the type and the design of the
Biology: Bioenergetics: How do plants make and use their own food? interface.
Students will have a chance to test out rate of photosynthesis on A3 Design Principles
aquatic plants such as pondweed. They will also understand the - Learners will investigate a wide variety of design principles
differences between aerobic and anaerobic respiration. that provides both appropriate and effective user interaction
with hardware devices.
A4 Designing an efficient user interface
Describe and explain patterns and trends in data presented in a
- Learners will investigate techniques that can be used to
variety of tabular or graphical forms
improve both the speed and access to user interfaces.
State describe and explain variables
-
Evaluate methods and determine if the results are valid
Skills Covered
Identify the main hazards in specified practical context
Candidates will assess how:
effectively the user interface meets the audience's
requirements, including their accessibility needs, skills level
and demographics.
effectively different design principles have been used to allow
both appropriate and effective user interactions with
hardware devices
techniques have been used to allow different types of users
to efficiently interact with the interface.
Religious Studies Geography (Option A)
How can we manage water around the world?
Global Inequalities of Resources
How do religious believers put their beliefs into action?
Water footprints and embedded water consumption
Component 1 Global changes in the demand for water and the causes of this
The beliefs of Islam Why water security leads to water management
The nature of God (tawhid). Evaluate sustainable strategies to manage water supplies at different
Muslim beliefs about the afterlife. scales.
Beliefs about angels and the Prophet Muhammad. Issues with abstraction and over abstraction of water supplies.
Muslim beliefs about the origins of the world How is the UK changing?
Location/distribution of the UK population.
Muslim worship
How retail in the UK is changing.
Worship according to the 5 Pillars of Islam. Spheres of influence of shopping and services
Worship at the Mosque. What is counter-urbanisation and the impact it is having on the UK.
Religious festivals including Eid-al-Fitr. Explain how rural areas of the UK are changing.
Religious places of Pilgrimage including Mecca. How the UKs’ population is changing and explain the likely impacts of
this.
Knowledge of geographical locations, concepts and processes (AO1)
Skills: Comprehension – inference from sources (interpretation),
Understanding of geographical concepts, processes and interactions
Identifying similarities and differences between practices, explaining
(AO2)
religious beliefs, explaining the influence of beliefs on practice.
Interpreting, investigating and evaluating information to reach
conclusion (AO3)
Geographical information and skills (AO4)
Sociology
3.1 Conflict Versus Consensus - The Sociological Approach
In this unit you will learn about the sociological approach,
including debates within sociology. You will learn about
the perspectives of different sociologist such as
Durkheim, Marx and Weber.
3.2 Thinking like a Sociologist - Social structures, Social
process and social issues
Through this topic you will understand how Socialists conduct
experiments and evaluate how the issues are interpreted
by sociologists.
Skills:
Apply Sociological knowledge.
Critically analyse information and use evidence to make
informed arguments.
Apply knowledge to social structures.
Use sociological theories to understand social issues.
Evaluate sociological methodology.
Make connections between topics.
History (Option A) German (Option B)
Murderous Medieval to Revolting Renaissance – Crime and “Who am i?”
Punishment from 1000-1700 Students will consolidate and build upon linguistic skills, knowledge
Edexcel GCSE – Paper 1 and understanding of …
A breadth study of the changes in British society across the Medieval
and Early Modern Period, focusing on the role and power of the - more complex vocabulary & grammatical structures to describe self,
church, the attitudes of different monarchs and the impact of global family and friends, including teen angst
events such as the Black Death on the nature of crimes and how they
were dealt with. This includes case studies on the murder of Thomas
Beckett, the Gunpowder Plot and the Witchcraft Trials of the 1600s “Relationships”
Students will consolidate and build upon linguistic skills, knowledge
and understanding of …
Why do Australians speak English? Crime and Punishment from
1700-1900 - more complex vocabulary & grammatical structures to describe
Edexcel GCSE – Paper 1 relationships, marriage & role models
Continuing the breadth study, and building on prior knowledge, - cultural celebrations, traditions and festivals (Oktoberfest & Halloween
students will look at the seismic societal changes brought about by the Christmas)
Industrial Revolution and the modernisation of the world, including
how new crimes started, how old crimes evolved and how institutions Grammar and linguistic skills: Listening, reading, writing & speaking
were set up in order to tackle these problems.
I A1 What is an Enterprise? Aut 1: The topics studied will be: Preparing food and Safety, Nutrition
A2 Types and characteristics of small and medium enterprises and Fruit and Vegetables Food sources and how they are grown.
A3 The purpose of enterprises Students will have a practical lesson based on the topic studied.
A4 Entrepreneurs Aut 2: The topics studied will be: Food choice and dietary needs,
Traditional ingredients, Complex carbohydrates, primary and secondary
Skills: Application of production skills, comparison, research, process of carbohydrates.
communication skills with the Businesses, independence. Students will have practical lessons based on the topics studied.
Wider Curriculum
West End Theatre trip giving students a cultural experience (Drama)
Rock climbing course for GCSE PE students to enhance their practical skills (PE)
Bowling rewards trip for students who have shown consistently outstanding attitude and behaviour to learning (Pastoral)
Visit to Hertfordshire University to experience University life and raise aspirations (Careers)
Science Museum trip to bring Science to life through a range of interactive experiences (Science)
Extra-curricular clubs during lunch and after school
Careers development
Virtual employer encounters
Students will have the opportunity to participate in virtual careers talks with experts from a wide and varied range of careers and backgrounds, including a series of webinars produced by
https://www.hopinto.co.uk/explore-careers/webinars/virtual-employer-encounters/
Curriculum Document Year 10 Spring Term
Maths English Assembly/Form Time SMSC & BV RSE
Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Trouble Themes
Higher I will have studies the ill-fated journey of Macbeth in his quest of power Forgiveness - Should we How to recognise the
Am I able to change the size and position of shapes according to a and Kingship. always forgive? (Form) characteristics and
Skills covered: Achieve & individual identity
given rule? positive aspects of
Respond analytically to extracts from Shakespeare. healthy one-to-one
Can I demonstrate competence in the various applications of Selective Breeding and
Evaluate authorial messages. Martin Luther King Day intimate relationships,
equations, inequalities and probability? Genome (Science)
Tentatively evaluate possible alternative audience interpretations. which include mutual
Am I able to use graphs in abstract and contextual presentations?
Cyber-bullying – staying safe respect, consent,
“Writing is the Painting of the Voice” -- Voltaire online The use of finite loyalty, trust, shared
Drawing plans and elevations of solids; translate, Enlarge, Reflect and I will have practiced responding to a variety of fiction extracts, and resources in the world interests and outlook,
Rotate shapes; accurate construction of shapes using appropriate developed my own narrative and descriptive artistic skills. (Science)
Time to talk sex and friendship
equipment; scale drawings and bearings; constructing angles and Skills covered: (Form)
shapes using appropriate equipment; using loci to solve problems. Analyse and explore writer’s craft. Individual Liberty:
Solve inequalities and show the solution on a number line and using Write fiction with creative flair. Carers Being responsible for How aspects of health
set notation; rearrange and solve quadratic equations; solve Write fiction with technical accuracy. our own needs and the can be affected by
various types of simultaneous equations including real-life Holocaust Memorial Day needs of future choices they make in
situations. generations sex and relationships,
Use the product rule for finding the number of outcomes for two or (sustainability) (Geog) positively or
Careers Week
more events; use two-way tables and sample space diagrams to negatively, e.g.
solve probability problems; identify & find the probabilities of How could we solve physical, emotional,
mutually exclusive outcomes and events; estimate the expected Fair Trade Fortnight
resource inequality mental, sexual and
results for experimental and theoretical probabilities & compare across the world? Do we reproductive health
to decide if a game is fair; draw and use frequency trees; calculate British Science: Week have a responsibility to and wellbeing
probabilities of independent events; use probability tree diagrams share resources equally? (Form)
to solve problems; use Venn diagrams to solve conditional World Poetry Day (Geog)
probability problems. The facts around
Finding and using the gradient and intercept of linear graphs; drawing Understanding Rules pregnancy including
Key events
and interpreting distance-time & velocity time graphs; finding and regulations of the miscarriage
equations of parallel & perpendicular lines; solving quadratics internet and explaining (Form)
World Religion Day –January
graphically and applying in real life situations; drawing graphs of what the consequences
cubic and reciprocal functions; drawing the graph of a circle. of breaking those laws
How the use of
Calculating the area and perimeter of compound shapes; using the Chinese New Year –January are (ICT)
alcohol and drugs can
formula for the area of a trapezium; converting between metric lead to risky sexual
units; finding error intervals, upper and lower bounds; area and Holocaust Memorial Day – 27th Rules and conflict behaviour (Form)
circumference of a circle including sectors and arc lengths; January (History)
calculating the volume & surface area of various 3D shapes.
How to get further
NSPCC number day – 1st Learning about yourself advice, including how
February and staying healthy (PE) and where to access
Foundation confidential sexual
Can I demonstrate competence in applying graphs, ratio and St Valentine’s Day - 14th and reproductive
Caring for others (H&S)
proportion in various contexts? February health advice and
Finding the midpoint of line segments, plotting straight line graphs treatment (Form/RS)
from a table of values, sketching graphs using y = mx + c, finding The court system and
the gradient and equation of a straight line, drawing and using Shrove Tuesday –March the rule of law (Hist)
The facts about
conversion graphs and distance-time graphs, interpreting rate of
reproductive health,
change graphs. World book day –March
including fertility and
Using ratio notation, writing a ratio in the simplest form, solving
various ratio problems including worded problems using bar the potential impact
models, solving ratio and proportion problems including word of lifestyle on fertility
problems, solving proportion problems using the unitary and for men and women
other appropriate methods. (Science)
Can I demonstrate competence in angles, averages and range, Fitness and health
testing (PE)
perimeter area and volume?
· Solving problems using the angle properties of quadrilaterals,
identifying congruent shapes, solving problems involving angles in Laws on domestic
parallel lines, solving interior and exterior angle problems in violence, abortion,
polygons including by forming and solving equations. homosexuality and
· Calculating the mean, mode, median and range for data, hate speech (hist)
estimating the range and mean from grouped frequency tables,
understanding how to sample and the need for it. Food, drink and
· Calculating the area and missing lengths in rectangles, healthy lifestyle
parallelograms, triangles and trapezia; Calculate and solve (German)
problems on the volume and surface area of cuboids and prisms.
Science ICT
Digital Information Technology: Component 1
Chemistry: chemical changes. How are metals we use every day
extracted? Learning Aim B
Students will learn about the various methods of extracting metals
from their ores. They will also learn about the reactions of acids with B1 Project planning techniques
alkalis and metals. - Learners will investigate different planning tools and design
Biology: Homeostasis – Hormones or nerves? methodologies that can be used to plan, monitor and execute
Understand the roles of nerves and hormones. Explain how the nerves projects
work together in the reflex arc and the roles of hormones in the B2 Create a project plan
menstrual and glucose control. - Learners will select suitable project planning techniques to
Chemistry: Endo and exo thermic reactions. How are cool packs develop a project plan for the development of a user
made? interface for a given brief.
Students will learn how to interpret and draw reaction profiles for B3 Create an initial design
endo and exothermic reactions. - Learners will create an initial design using the design
principles listed in section A3.
Describe and explain patterns and trends in data presented in a Skills Covered
variety of tabular or graphical forms Candidates will:
State describe and explain variables select appropriate project planning tools and methodologies
Evaluate methods and determine if the results are valid to create a project plan, including outlining the timescales,
Identify the main hazards in specified practical context possible constraints and risks in their project
produce an initial design for a user interface that meets user,
input, output and accessibility needs. Their initial design
should show the designs for at least four different screens in
their user interface.
Sociology
Component 1
What’s love got to do with it?
3.3 Families
Through this unit you will explore the different functions of families,
including Parsons functionalist perspective. You will consider how
family forms differ in the UK and with a wider context through the
work of the Rapoport on family diversity and different views on
conjugal role relationships from the feminist perspective of Oakley.
This topic continues by exploring the changing relationships within
families over time and the theory of the symmetrical family. You will
explore different criticisms of families and the work of Zaretsky on
developments in families. Finally, you will consider changes in the
pattern of divorce in Britain since 1945.
Skills:
Apply Sociological knowledge.
Critically analyse information and use evidence to make
informed arguments.
Apply knowledge to social structures.
Use sociological theories to understand social issues.
Evaluate sociological methodology.
Make connections between topics.
Health and Social Care (Option B) To understand Process, preparation and production. To look at x3 styles
The Game of Life and x3 plays and evaluate their impact on the performing arts industry.
Investigate how individuals deal with life events Naturalism, Comedy and Musical Theatre, characters, roles and
responsibilities whilst combining their interrelationships together.
Different types of life event. Identify whether the life event is
expected or unexpected and categorise it under a relationship change,
physical event or life circumstance. Process, organisation of the theatre, roles and interrelationships,
Skills: Identifying, explaining, comparing different life stages evaluating skills.
Wider Curriculum
Trip to the Imperial War Museum to see war through the eyes of those who lived it and gain a greater understanding of war (History & English)
Houses of Parliament trip to develop understanding of the British Parliamentary system (Pastoral)
London theatre trip for cultural enrichment (Creative arts)
Poetry Live to experience some of the English texts being performed live (English)
Disneyland Paris three night residential to explore the use of Mathematics at one of the world’s most famous global organisations (Maths)
Crazy golf rewards trip (Pastoral)
Athletics afternoon to support GCSE PE students in their practical skills (PE)
Jack the Ripper tour to understand and experience London at that time in history (History)
Robbie Lea Water Safety event led by local emergency services (Pastoral)
Two night PGL residential for English revision (English)
Extra-curricular clubs during lunch and after school
Careers development
Careers Carousel
Employers from a wide range of backgrounds and industries are invited to the school and students are encouraged to meet with and talk to employers to gain a wider understanding of the what may be involved in their specific industry,
and what entry routes are available
Employability Skills
Start website module:” UNDERSTANDING EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS; What are employability skills?”
Find out what employability skills are, why employers value them so highly and how developing your employability skills will improve your chances of thriving in your career.
Employability Skills
Start website module: USING START'S EMPLOYABILITY TOOLS “Introduction to Employability Action Plan” and “Introduction to your Locker”
Learn why setting goals and action planning is important, and learn how to use your Employability Action Plan to reach your career goals.
Foundation
Can I demonstrate competence in congruence and similarity,
transformations and right-angled triangles in various contexts?
· Translate, reflect, rotate and enlarge shapes on a coordinate
grid, transform and describe combined transformations.
· Applying understanding similarity and congruence to work out
unknown sides and angles in triangles and shapes made from
triangles.
· Applying Pythagoras theorem to problem solving, use the
naming convention for right angled triangles; use the Tangent,
Sine and Cosine ratio to solve problems in a right-angled triangle.
Learning Aim A
Geography (Option A)
Sociology What makes the UK landscapes distinctive?
Eduqas A – Distinctive landscapes including rivers and coastal landscapes
We don’t need no education
What makes the UKs landscapes distinctive
3.4 Education How people effect the UK landscapes and how these landscapes can be
Students will explain the role and function of education and the managed.
functionalist perspective of Durkheim on transmission of norms and Processes that effect the coasts and rivers.
values and Parsons on achieved status and the operation of schools on How these processes create distinctive landscapes in rivers and at the
meritocratic principles. Students will explore different views of the coasts.
correspondence principle on the relationship between education and Factors that affect the landform formation.
capitalism from a Marxist perspective by Bowles and Gintis. Knowledge of geographical locations, concepts and processes (AO1)
In the final part of this topic, students will discuss factors affecting Understanding of geographical concepts, processes and interactions
educational achievement and the work of Halsey on class-based (AO2)
inequalities and Ball on parental choice and competition between Interpreting, investigating and evaluating information to reach
schools and the processes within schools affecting educational conclusion (AO3)
achievement and the work of Ball on teacher expectations and Willis Geographical information and skills (AO4)
on the creation of counter school cultures.
Wider Curriculum
Walton on the Naze Geography field trip to research costal erosion and physical Geography (Geography)
Seaside rewards trip (Pastoral)
Restaurant visit to experience the different aspects of the hospitality sector (Design and Technology)
Globe theatre visit for Shakespeare workshop and performance (English)
Woburn Safari Park trip to explore ecology and conservation (Science)
4 night residential visit to Berlin to visit historical sites and experience German culture (German & History)
Thorpe Park focussing on the science behind the rides (Science)
Extra-curricular clubs during lunch and after school
Sports Day with a difference (PE)
Careers development
CV writing
Students work to prepare their own CV’s and understand how to present them according and what information to include, these are then presented at the mock interview day
Hertfordshire Labour Market Advice
This crucial piece of work happens during form time to ensure students have the most up to date information about the local Labour Market to inform study decisions