Skip to content

Thinking

Thinking Pathway – Curriculum Overview

The Thinking Pathway is our formal curriculum, designed for children who are ready to access learning from the National Curriculum. Unlike a traditional age-based model, children on this pathway learn at the level that is developmentally right for them. This ensures that learning is ambitious yet achievable, giving every pupil the opportunity to make meaningful progress and experience success.

Children learn through structured lessons, practical activities and cross-curricular projects that build independence, problem-solving, communication and academic confidence. Staff adapt tasks, resources and expectations to meet each pupil’s individual needs, strengths and learning style. The Thinking Pathway prepares children to apply their knowledge in real-life situations and equips them with the skills needed for secondary education and beyond.


Thematic Learning

The Thinking Pathway is taught through a two-year rolling programme of rich, cross-curricular themes. These topics make learning meaningful, engaging and memorable, allowing children to make links across subjects and deepen their understanding.

 

Cycle 1

Cycle 2

Autumn

Spring

Summer

Autumn

Spring

Summer

Year 1

Fire, Fire!

Penguins, Possums & Pigs

Growth & Green Fingers

Family Album

Robots

The Great Outdoors

Lead subjects

History, DT, Music

Geography, Science, Art

Science, DT, Art

History, Art, Geography

Science, Music

Science, Geography, DT

Year 2

Fighting Fit!

 

Explorers

 

Buckets & Spades

 

The Place Where I Live

 

The Farm Shop

 

All Creatures Great & Small

(Wind in the Willows)

Lead subjects

Science, Art, Music

History, Geography, DT

Science, History, Art

History, Geography, Art, Music

Science, DT

Science, Geography, DT, Music, Art

Year 3

No Place Like Home

Healthy Humans

Romans

The Iron Man

Rock & Roll

How Does Your Garden Grow?

Lead subjects

Geography, History

Science, DT, Art, Music

History, Geography, Art

DT, Science, Music

Science, History, Geography, Art

Science, DT

Year 4

 

Sparks Might Fly!

The Art of Food

Water, Water Everywhere

The Great Plague

Hunted

Passport to Europe

Lead subjects

Science, DT, Music

Science, Art, Geography

Science, Geography, History, Art

History, Geography, Art

Science, DT, Geography

Geography, DT, Music

Year 5

A Kingdom United

Food, Glorious Food!

Earthlings

Amazon Adventures

Inventors & Inventions

Faster, Higher, Stronger!

Lead subjects

Geography, Music, History

Geography, DT, Science

Science, Music, Art

Geography, Science, DT, Art

History, DT, Science

History, Science, Art, Music

Each topic includes clear learning outcomes based on the National Curriculum and is carefully adapted to ensure accessibility for all learners. Activities may include experiments, outdoor learning, creative arts, investigations, role play, problem-solving and practical projects.

Why a Thematic Curriculum?

✔ Helps children make connections across subjects
✔ Builds motivation and curiosity
✔ Allows for repetition and reinforcement of key skills
✔ Supports long-term memory through meaningful contexts
✔ Provides exciting real-world opportunities for learning

A two-year cycle also allows pupils to revisit key knowledge and skills more than once, strengthening understanding and memory while boosting confidence.


Areas of Learning

Children on the Thinking Pathway access all areas of the National Curriculum, including:

English

Children explore reading, writing, spelling, phonics, handwriting, speaking and listening. They learn through stories, poetry, information texts and real-world writing tasks, building vocabulary, comprehension and independence.

Mathematics

Pupils develop skills in number, calculation, fractions, shape, measure and problem-solving. Practical resources, hands-on learning and visual strategies help children deepen their understanding and apply skills in everyday situations.

Science

Children learn to ask questions, investigate, observe, test ideas and draw conclusions. Topics include materials, plants, animals, electricity, forces, light, sound and more, taught through practical experiments and real-world exploration.

History & Geography

Pupils learn about the world, past and present, through maps, artefacts, timelines, visits, research and enquiry. Topics may include Romans, Explorers, local geography, weather, continents and historical events.

Design Technology & Art

Children develop creativity, design, problem-solving and practical skills through making, building, construction, drawing, painting, sculpture and crafts linked to their theme.

Music

Children explore instruments, rhythm, singing, sound and composition in fun, accessible and creative ways.

PE

Physical development includes team games, dance, athletics, movement, balance and coordination skills. Children learn to be active, healthy and confident in physical challenges.

Computing

Pupils learn early coding, internet safety, digital communication, using technology for learning and exploring safe online behaviour.

PSHRE

Personal development continues to be central. Children learn about emotions, relationships, safety, independence, healthy choices and life skills through Thrive, myHappymind and structured PSHRE lessons.


How Progress is Measured

Children on the Thinking Pathway are assessed against National Curriculum expectations, adapted to match their developmental level. Progress is monitored through:

  • Lesson observations and daily feedback

  • Termly assessments linked to National Curriculum objectives

  • Personalised learning plans and EHCP targets

  • Regular progress reviews shared with families

Where needed, children also receive targeted interventions for communication, literacy, numeracy, behaviour, sensory needs and emotional regulation.


What Makes the Thinking Pathway Special?

✔ Follows the National Curriculum at the right level for each child
✔ Thematic topics make learning exciting, relevant and memorable
✔ Builds independence, problem-solving and academic confidence
✔ Allows for over-learning and repetition to support long-term memory
✔ Prepares pupils for secondary learning and life beyond school
✔ Adapted and differentiated so all children can achieve success
✔ Offers a clear progression route from the Doing or Being Pathway