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Message: Hello! I saw this Tried & Tested Review on Teach Primary Magazine's website and thought you might like it - please find an excerpt below: The Creative Learning Journey If you want to read the full article, please visit: https://www.teachprimary.com/tried_and_tested/view/the-creative-learning-journey Thanks!
Message: Hello! I saw this Tried & Tested Review on Teach Primary Magazine's website and thought you might like it - please find an excerpt below: The Creative Learning Journey It’s time to get a skills based creative curriculum that covers and tracks all the National Curriculum - with the evidence. Having returned from a course on how to make learning ‘irresistible’ to children, two teachers from Brooklands Infant School, Hertfordshire were convinced. “We have to write our own curriculum,” they told headteacher Debbie Hoy. “Hang on!” said the enthusiastic, yet practical, head. “Where are we going to find the time to produce our own curriculum from scratch and make sure that it covers everything it’s supposed to?” Which is when Debbie remembered the Creative Learning Journey flyer she’d stored away two years before. Digging the leaflet out, she confirmed that it was just the solution she was looking for: a skills based curriculum that runs from the FS through to Y6 and suggests schools teach themed topics on a termly basis. A few years later, following its most recent Ofsted inspection, the school has been deemed ‘Outstanding’ with inspectors making specific reference to the fresh teaching framework: “The newly revised curriculum has enthused pupils who report that they thoroughly enjoy lessons and the way they are encouraged to develop their learning further at home.” The Creative Learning Journey (CLJ) is organised into six areas of learning, which match those identified in the Foundation Stage. This encourages a cross curricular approach, which can be linked to the existing and new curriculums, and provides continuity for children progressing from the Early Years into KS1. As a curriculum framework, it does not prescribe each lesson in minute detail; which is what, in part, attracted Debbie to the resource. “We didn’t want to be spoon fed,” she explains. “The staff are creative and like to have ownership of what they’re teaching.” One of the main planning tools provided by the CLJ is a set of wheels. Each wheel is used to structure a different termly topic. The six areas of learning are placed around the outer edge, leaving space in the middle for teachers to note down the activities that will help children to learn these skills. When you purchase the CLJ, a set of three wheels, complete with suggested topics and activities, are provided for each year group. However, Debbie and the rest of the staff decided to start from scratch using the blank wheels they were able to access by subscribing to the CLJ’s online planning tools. Using this resource, the staff were also able to access 1000s of topic wheels created by other CLJ schools, as well as share their own good… If you want to read the full article, please visit: https://www.teachprimary.com/tried_and_tested/view/the-creative-learning-journey Thanks!