Summary of Intent |
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At Casterton Primary Academy, History reflects our commitment to promote and encourage a lifelong love of learning. We believe in ambition for all and for all children to achieve their best. We want our children to experience a broad and balanced curriculum, developing understanding of the past with relation to themselves, their families, their communities and the wider world. The history curriculum has been developed to give our children an understanding of how the world we live in has been shaped by the past. We want to give our children opportunities to develop life skills such as thinking, evaluating, analysing, empathizing and communicating; skills that are essential in adult life. We want our children to be able to encounter a rich variety of experiences, develop a lifelong love of learning and to understand the broad range of opportunities that are available to them. We aim for all our children to develop a love of history and to be inspired to know more and to become curious, interested and knowledgeable about the past. We try to develop an understanding of how and why people acted as they did, and the influence that this has on their own lives, developing an understanding of how their current actions will affect and shape the future, as the past has impacted on today. |
What History looks like at Casterton Primary Academy |
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History is about real people who lived, and real events, which happened in the past. At Casterton Primary Academy, we encourage children to think about how people and events in the past have changed the world and influenced the way we live today. Through historical learning experiences, our children develop an understanding of their locality and local community, its place within history and they gain a coherent knowledge about Britain’s past and that of the wider world. Children discover how people’s lives have shaped the nation and how Britain has influenced and been influenced by the wider world. Our teaching and learning should equip pupils to ask perceptive questions, think critically, weigh evidence, sift arguments, and develop perspective and judgement. We teach children a sense of chronology and through this, they develop a sense of identity, and a cultural understanding based on their historical heritage within a social, political, cultural and economic background. History helps our pupils to understand the complexity of people’s lives, the process of change, the diversity of societies and relationships between different groups. It also develops understanding of the key concepts of significance, similarity and difference, continuity and change and cause and consequence. At Casterton Primary Academy our aim is that all children:
In KS1 pupils should develop an awareness of the past, using common words and phrases relating to the passing of time. They should know where the people and events they study fit within a chronological framework and identify similarities and differences between ways of life in different periods. They should use a wide vocabulary of everyday historical terms. They should ask and answer questions, choosing and using parts of stories and other sources to show that they know and understand key features of events. They should understand some of the ways in which we find out about the past and identify different ways in which it is represented. In KS2 Pupils should continue to develop a chronologically secure knowledge and understanding of British, local and world history, establishing clear narratives within and across the periods they study. They should note connections, contrasts and trends over time and develop the appropriate use of historical terms. They should regularly address and sometimes devise historically valid questions about continuity and change, cause and consequence, similarity and difference, and significance. They should construct informed responses that involve thoughtful selection and organisation of relevant historical information. They should understand how our knowledge of the past is constructed from a range of sources. |
How History develops in EYFS and transitions into KS1 |
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In the EYFS, it is crucial that students are presented with opportunities to explore history and culturally based concepts that have an immediate connection to their understanding of their environment and life experiences. This will support them to become accustomed to regularly interacting with these concepts when they move into Key Stage 1, and beyond into Key Stage 2, as here, students will begin to interact with local history in more standalone and distinguished lessons. In EYFS, children are guided to make sense of their world and their community through opportunities to explore, observe and find out about the lives of the people around them and their roles in society. They begin to develop historical knowledge by talking about similarities and differences between things in the past and now, drawing on their experiences and what has been read in class. They will develop vocabulary linked to then and now and begin to understand chronology linked to themselves and their own activities. They will learn about people from the past and read stories about them. They will understand the past through settings, characters and events encountered in books read in class and during their storytelling. They will link learning to celebrations, themselves and their family. Children transferring to KS1 will have a firm foundation of historical skills and vocabulary with a developing knowledge of the past, especially within their own lifetimes |
Planning Expectations |
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Planning is linked to the school’s long-term curriculum plan and history is covered in 3 half terms throughout the year. There is a two-year programme of study. In KS1, this concentrates on units which are linked to the History Programme of Study, using units linked to within living memory, beyond living memory, lives of significant people, important events and local history. In KS2, units should build upon each other, covering the history of Britain and the wider world so that new knowledge builds on previous teaching. This should give children a chronological grasp within their learning and should develop the key concepts.
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Non-negotiables |
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Adapting the (subject) curriculum for children with SEND |
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Children with SEND access the same areas of the history curriculum as their peers:
For some activities, teachers may need to provide a parallel activity for pupils with SEND so that they can work towards the same lesson objectives as their peers but in a different way. For example:
Children Who Require Different Objectives: Some pupils with SEND will have to work on different activities or towards different objectives from their peers.
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Assessment |
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Children will be assessed at the end of each unit through teacher assessment. Teachers will assess the children in each lesson using the learning objective for that lesson. Assessment is continuous and it is recorded against key statements for which pupils attain at, above or below the expectations for the year group on the MTP. These are then used to make the overall subject assessments that are put onto Target Tracker. At Casterton Primary Academy we have three assessment points during the year. Autumn (Dec), Spring (March) Summer (June). However, teachers should update assessments for history at the end of a unit rather than wait until the end of term. |
Curriculum Enrichment |
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All units will include enrichment activities.
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