At Luxulyan School, we use a mastery approach to mathematics in order to help children achieve the three aims of the National Curriculum:
Intent - Why are we teaching this?
At Luxulyan, our curriculum has been planned and implemented to ensure that every child has a sound understanding of mathematics. We aim for children to leave our school equipped with the mathematical skills and knowledge to enable them to thrive in life.
As a mixed-age school we teach the National Curriculum using White Rose Maths to deliver daily mathematics lessons. The objectives in each block are broken down into a series of carefully planned small steps, which the teachers use to recap the learning and move the children on through the curriculum.
By incorporating calculation, reasoning and problem solving into a series of lessons, we ensure that secure links are made and that prior knowledge is being tested and challenged throughout.
Our aspiration is for every child to see themselves as a mathematician - demonstrating a confident attitude towards tackling problems both in and out of the classroom and understanding the importance of maths in the wider world.
Implementation - How is this being taught in the classroom?
We implement the following procedures in order to achieve our desired mathematical outcomes:
Daily mathematics lessons are planned from the White Rose Schemes of work, which break National Curriculum learning objectives down into carefully sequenced, progressive 'small steps'. The vast majority of lessons are delivered using combinations of both resources as appropriate to our mixed-age classes and cohort sizes. This supports the consistent use of models, images and approaches through the school, allowing children to more easily draw on prior learning.
With the possibility of missed learning having an impact upon children’s mathematical understanding our schemes of work also allow for recap and consolidation.
From Year 1 onwards, every class has daily opportunities to practice fluency, core number work and consolidation of prior learning. There is a standard approach across the school using Winning With Numbers (WWN). WWN adopts a similar approach to RWI with daily goals which build upon prior learning.
Our calculation policy has been written to ensure clear progression from the foundation stage to Y6, building upon previously learnt skills. All staff have been involved in its design and each teacher is aware of the mathematical journey the pupils have been on. This is reviewed every year and is also revised with each new member of staff during induction.
Each Friday we have a discrete reasoning lesson matched to the learning taking place during the week. This approach allows us to ensure that all pupils have sufficient opportunity to apply their learning in a different context even if they have had limited exposure to the WRM reasoning questions available that week.
Impact: What is the effect?
Impact of the curriculum in mathematics is monitored through:
At Luxulyan, Teachers use key assessment criteria for each year group, for each subject to support their judgements about the attainment and progress of our children. The criteria supports staff to ask rich questions and probe understanding.
Pages which contain the DFE logo are extracted directly from the National Curriculum for England from September 2014. These outline the expected curriculum content for each year group and key stage.
Pages with the subject logos are a suggested set of criteria for best fit assessment in each year group.