Principles for the Design of the Curriculum

 

 

Seven principles that underpin the eventual shape and delivery of the curriculum are defined:

Challenge and Enjoyment

Young people should find their learning challenging, engaging and motivating. The curriculum should encourage high aspirations and ambitions for all.

 

At all stages, learners of all aptitudes and abilities should experience an appropriate level of challenge, enabling individuals to achieve their potential. They should be active in their learning and have opportunities to develop and demonstrate their creativity. There should be support to enable young people to sustain their effort.


Breadth

All young people should have opportunities for a broad, suitably weighted range of experiences. The curriculum should be organised so they will learn and develop through a variety of contexts within both the classroom and other aspects of school life.


Progression

Young people should experience continuous progression in their learning from 3 to 18 within a single curricular framework. Each stage should be built upon earlier knowledge and achievements.

 

They should be able to progress at a rate which meets their needs and aptitudes, and keep options open so that routes are not closed off too early.


Depth

There should be opportunities for young people to develop their full capacity for different types of thinking and learning. As they progress, they should develop and apply increasing intellectual rigour, drawing different strands of learning together and exploring and achieving more advanced levels of understanding.


Personalisation and Choice

The curriculum should respond to individual needs and support particular aptitudes and talents. It should give each young person increasing opportunities for exercising responsible personal choice as they move through their school career.

 

Once they have achieved suitable levels of attainment across a wide range of areas of learning the choice should become as open as possible.

 

There should be safeguards to ensure that choices are soundly based and lead to successful outcomes.

 

Coherence

Taken as a whole, children’s learning activities should combine to form a coherent experience. There should be clear links between the different aspects of young people’s learning, including opportunities for extended activities which draw different strands of learning together.

 

Relevance

Young people should understand the purposes of their activities. They should see the value of what they are learning and its relevance to their lives, present and future.

 

A Curriculum for the Future

A Curriculum of Excellence

Influences and Factors