Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being. By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being. By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
https://adnoddau.canolfanpeniarth.org/legends-wales/index_en.html
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
https://weathermap.netatmo.com/
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teachers
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teachers
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teachers
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teachers
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teachers
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
• Discussion on what it means to be Welsh in the 21st century.
• Promoting fitness and health by walking along footpaths in the locality.
• Discussion on the importance of language and respecting each other’s cultures and traditions.
• Designing a walking treasure hunt for the family.
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Researching into the origin of the Welsh and Celtic Languages.
• Creating a historical timeline of key events relating to the Welsh language.
• Researching into the history of the Welsh National Anthem.
• Investigation into famous and influential famous Welsh people.
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
• Discussing the importance of safe cycling and bike maintenance.
• Writing a letter of thanks following receiving a voucher for a surfing lesson.
• Evaluating the work of living, contemporary Welsh artists.
• Discussing the benefits of outdoor sports, fitness and health for children of all ages and abilities.
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
• Calculating the distance from home to your nearest surf school facility.
• Calculating the total distance in miles of all the cycle tracks in Brechfa Forest.
• Calculating the total distance of a bike ride undertaken within your local community.
• Planning the costs of a surf party to celebrate your birthday!
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
• Designing and creating a new bike saddle bag.
• Creating a new logo for a local cycling club.
• Investigating the power of advertising to promote Techniquest in Cardiff Bay.
• Designing a new product for the Techniquest centre.
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
• Designing and creating your own surfboard design.
• Composing a piece of music to express your emotions whilst surfing on the waves.
• Composing a work of art based on the work of Luned Rhys Parri.
• Creating a video diary of your day cycling.
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
• Discussing with your child the meaning of a healthy body, healthy mind.
• Considering opportunities to volunteer in the local community.
• Discussing with their child feelings and emotions linked to the work of Luned Rhys Parri.
• Discussing how your local community could inspire you to design a local mural.
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
• Discussing with your child the various outdoor cycling tracks available across Wales.
• Discussing the history and evolution of the bicycle as a mode of transport.
• Researching when surfing was introduced to Wales.
• Discussing how recreational outdoor sports and the natural landscape can work in harmony.
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Comparing and contrasting the pieces of work within the Luned Rhys Parri collection.
• Writing a letter to invite a local cycling association member to come and discuss their work.
• Writing a soliloquy or diary entry of your day out on a mountain bike cycling trail.
• Investigating and presenting information on the artist Luned Rhys Parri.
• Presenting an argument for the benefits of electric assisted bikes.
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Calculating the total distance of the coast of Wales in miles and kilometres.
• Calculate the radius of wheels of different sized bikes linked to distance and speed.
• Calculate the distance of the Tour de France route.
• Consider creating your own surf shop. Plan all costs – profit and loss spreadsheets.
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Designing and creating a work of art replicating the techniques used by Luned Rhys Parri.
• Creating a poster to advertise a special event at the Caswell Bay surf school.
• Designing a new exhibit for the Science Discovery Centre.
• Investigating the properties of waterproof materials.
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Creating a digital marketing campaign for the Llangennith family run surf school in Gower Peninsula.
• Creating a composition of music which reflects your day out on the mountain bike trail in Brechfa Forest.
• Creating a video diary of your day surfing.
• Creating a short film on the benefits of outdoor recreation within the landscape of Wales.
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Discussing emotions linked with DIY SOS The Big Build Surfability project in Caswell Bay.
• Discussing why is it important for outdoor sports to cater for the needs of all abilities and ages.
• Discussing the importance of healthy body / healthy mind linked to the natural landscape of Wales.
• Inviting a charitable organisation to the school and working with them on a local project linked to your community.
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
• Discussing Techniquest’s mission, history and how they are funded.
• Investigating the history behind the work of the artist Luned Rhys Parri.
• Investigating the needs of communities linked to requirements. i.e., ‘Surf Snowdonia’
• Investigating how landscapes, locations and past industries plays a pivotal role for attracting tourists to Wales.
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
Opportunities within the theme include:
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parents
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Support your child by:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
This issue tries to convey a “love of learning” in terms of a young person finding facts out for themselves. Parents could encourage children to do the same rather than “teaching” directly.
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Support your child by:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Support your child by:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities in this issue include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Support your child by:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Support your child by:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Support your child by:
Teacher
Teachers might introduce the scenario of Sofia owning her own enquiry as she finds out more for herself about radio communication, its history and its drawbacks as a positive example of a young person in Wales wanting to find out more and more and possessing a “love of learning” with a sense of awe at the past and the present.
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within this issue include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within this issue include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within this issue include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within this issue include:
Health and Well-being
Opportunities within the issue include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within this issue include:
Parent
Again much of the content in this Issue is written in a way to stimulate learners to consider the content from a first person point of view. This document outlines just some ideas parents may wish to use this as somewhere to start in terms of using this issue of the magazine.
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy, the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Teacher
Again much of the content in this Issue is written in a way to stimulate pupils to consider the content from a first person perspective. This document outlines just some ideas – teachers will think of many more and will tailor planning and coverage to suit their own cohort of learners.
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Parent
Languages, Literacy and Communication (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities (Curriculum statement based on statutory area of learning)
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Teacher
Languages, Literacy and Communication
Languages connect us with people, places and communities. Clear and effective communication through spoken and written language is an important life skill. It calls for the ability to use and adapt language in a range of roles, genres, forms, media and styles. Learners should be given opportunities to speak and write in order to be effective as they interact, explore ideas, express viewpoints, knowledge and understanding and build relationships.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Mathematics and Numeracy
The development of mathematics has always gone hand in hand with the development of civilisation itself. A truly international discipline, it surrounds us and underpins so many aspects of our daily lives, such as architecture, art, music, money and engineering.
What is more, numeracy – the application of mathematics to solve problems in real-world contexts – plays a critical part in our everyday lives, and in the economic health of the nation.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Science and Technology
Developments in science and technology areas have always been drivers of change in society, underpinning innovation and impacting on everyone’s lives economically, culturally and environmentally.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Expressive Arts
The dynamic nature of the expressive arts can engage, motivate and encourage learners to develop their creative, artistic and performance skills to the full.
Expressive Arts spans five disciplines: art, dance, drama, film and digital media and music. Although each discipline has its own discrete body of knowledge and skills, it is recognised that together they share the creative process.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Health and Well-being
The fundamental components of Health and Well-being are physical health and development, mental health, and emotional and social well-being.
By developing learners’ motivation, resilience, empathy and decision-making abilities, they can be supported to become ambitious, capable learners, ready to learn throughout their lives.
Opportunities within the theme include:
Humanities
The Humanities curriculum seeks to awaken a sense of wonder, fire the imagination and inspire learners to grow in knowledge, understanding and wisdom. This Area encourages learners to engage with the most important issues facing humanity, including sustainability and social change, and help to develop the skills necessary to interpret and articulate the past and the present.
Opportunities within the theme include: