Humanities

Geography

The Geography curriculum starts in Year 7 with an in-depth study of the earth - its structure, atmosphere and landscapes. Moving from this, pupils then start to learn about how people interact with the world. 

Over time, the curriculum then develops key themes in both physical and human geography - natural hazards, rivers, coasts, ecosystems, population, migration, development and sustainability.

Pupils are taught case studies and in-depth country studies to wider their understanding of geographical concepts. By the time they sit the Edexcel GCSE Geography qualification in Year 11, pupils will have visited each key concept at least three times, each time spiralling through the content to deepen their knowledge and understanding.

Year 7

Autumn 1

Unit 1 – What is a Geographer

Autumn 2

Unit 2 - Development

Spring 1

Unit 3 - Rivers

Spring 2

Summer 1

Field work

Summer 2

Unit 4 – Middle East

Year 8

Autumn 1

Unit 1 – Tectonics

Autumn 2

Unit 2 – Population

Spring 1

Unit 3 - Coasts

Spring 2

Summer 1

Unit 4 Ecosystems

Summer 2

Year 9

Autumn 1

Unit 1 – Life in an emerging country

Autumn 2

Unit 2 – Living with hazards

Spring 1

Unit 3 – Issues of urbanisation

Spring 2

Summer 1

Unit 4 – Energy Consumption

Summer 2

Unit 4 – Energy Consumption

Year 10

Autumn 1 Hazardous Earth - Tectonic Hazards
Autumn 2 Development Dynamics
Spring 1 Hazardous Earth - Tropical Cyclones
Spring 2 Urbanising World

Summer 1

Physical Landscapes & River Landscapes

Summer 2

Human Landscapes - Urban Areas + Fieldwork Enquiries - Urban & Rivers

Year 11

Autumn 1

Physical - Coastal Landscapes & Human - A named UK city

Autumn 2

People and the Biosphere and Forests Under Threat

Spring 1 Consumption of Energy Resources

Spring 2

Summer 1

Exam Preparation

History

The History curriculum seeks to provide pupils with the ability to take part in important and interesting conversations about British history and beyond, and about how British history has impacted on and been impacted on by the wider world.  

In Years 7 to 9, the curriculum is sequenced chronologically, with bredth and depth studies, so that pupils can understand the sweep and scale of historical study and understand both the causation and consequences of key historical events from before the Battle of Hastings up to World War Two and beyond. 

From Year 10 onwards, pupils study towards the Edexcel GCSE History qualification, covering British medicine since 1250, the American west, Henry VIII and his ministers and Germany 1918-1939.

Year 7

Autumn 1

Unit 1 Worldviews in 1000

Autumn 2

Unit 2 The Norman Conquest

Spring 1

Unit 3 Religion in the Middle Ages

Spring 2

Unit 4 Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

Summer 1

Unit 5 14th Century Mali

Summer 2

Unit 6 The Renaissance

Year 8

Autumn 1

Unit 1 The Reformation

Autumn 2

Unit 2 The Elizabethans

Spring 1

Unit 3 The English Civil War

Spring 2

Unit 4 Transatlantic Slave Trade

Summer 1

Unit 5 The Industrial Revolution

Summer 2

Unit 6 The British Empire

Year 9

Autumn 1

Unit 1 World War I

Autumn 2

Unit 2 Suffrage

Spring 1

Unit 3 World War II

Spring 2

Unit 4 The Holocaust

Summer 1

Unit 5 Civil Rights (US and UK)

Summer 2

Unit 6 Post-war Britain

Year 10

Autumn 1

Paper 1: Renaissance & 18th-19th Centuries

Autumn 2

Paper 1:  1900- Moders & Western Front

Spring 1

Paper 3: Weimar Republic

Spring 2

Paper 3: How Hitler Became Chancellor

Summer 1

Paper 3:  Nazi Germany

Summer 2

Paper 2: Origins of the Cold War

Year 11

Autumn 1

Paper 2: Escalation of the Cold War

Autumn 2

Paper 2:  End of the Cold War

Spring 1

Paper 2:  Elizabeth I

Spring 2

Paper 2:  Elizabeth I

 Religious Education

The Religious Education curriculum addresses big questions about life, philosophy and ethics, highlighting inspirational figures of world religions so that pupils gain a breadth of knowledge and understanding in a multi-cultural and global society.

It takes a chronological approach to  the study of religion, covering early Eastern religions and Abrahamic faiths in Year 7. and continuing through Islam, Sikhism and Humanism in Year 8.

From Year 10 onwards, pupils studying towards the WJEC GCSE Religious Education qualification cover the beliefs and practices of two religions and study four ethical and philosophical themes - relationships, life and death, good and evil and human rights.

Year 7

Autumn 1

Origins of Abrahamic Faith

Autumn 2

Spring 1

Judaism

Spring 2

Summer 1

Christianity

Summer 2

Year 8

Autumn 1

Islam

Autumn 2

Spring 1

Philosophy of Religion

Spring 2

Summer 1

Atheism

Summer 2

Year 9

Autumn 1

Life and Death

Autumn 2

Spring 1

Equality

Spring 2

Summer 1

Extremism

Summer 2

Year 10

Autumn 1

Christian Practices

Autumn 2

Human Rights

Spring 1

Good and Evil

Spring 2

Life and Death

Summer 1

Human Relationships

Summer 2

Revision: Islam

Year 11

Autumn 1

Revision: Christianity

Autumn 2

Revision: Themes

Spring 1

Exam: Themes

Spring 2

Exams: Christianity & Islam