Maths
INTENT
We follow a mastery approach to the teaching of the objectives laid out in the National Curriculum. This means that all pupils are taught the same objective at the same time, with differentiation for support and challenge used to account for differences in rates of learning. Mastery teaching fits with the belief that all pupils can achieve and succeed in maths, a subject that causes anxiety for many, with this being an issue within society as a whole.
In a mastery teaching model, pupils will develop conceptual understanding, number fluency, and the ability to apply their understanding within reasoning and problem solving contexts. In doing this, learning is broken into small steps and scaffolded to support cognition, with difficulty increasing as pupils move towards independence and deeper levels of understanding.
IMPLEMENTATION
As part of our Covid-recovery planning, we are using the disruptions of the past couple of years as the impetus to switch to the NCETM Spine as a lesson-planning resource. The NCETM (National Centre for Excellence in the Teaching of Mathematics) is a government initiative to improve the teaching of mathematics across England. The Spine is a sequenced curriculum that provides pedagogical guidance and lesson resources.
In the wake of Covid, NCETM has produced a ‘prioritisation’ Spine that focuses on the key learning that pupils should cover to support future growth in the subject. Although it is sequenced in a slightly different way to our previous curriculum resource, we know that Covid disruptions have greatly disturbed any sense of the sequencing that was in place. Furthermore, the units have clear guidance to ensure that teachers cover any prior learning that is needed, with these linking to a set of essential ‘ready to progress’ criteria.
Although the Spine is the main focus of teaching, we have developed an overarching structure to ensure general teaching approaches are applied to each unit of work to fit the cognitive model we adhere to. These will ensure that spaced practice and retrieval take place systematically (linked to recall and application of basic facts and the revisiting of prior learning through deeper thinking tasks). The structure also provides a raft of pedagogical strategies that will support teachers’ planning and pupils’ learning.
To help implement the changes, INSET at the start of the year will focus on the Spine and strategies set out within the REMAT structure. We plan for further training across the year, with this being led by two ‘Primary Mastery Specialists’ who work within the Trust and have undergone NCETM training In addition, schools will receive further support through being part of the ‘Mastery Readiness Programme’ and all have their Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 teachers enrolled on a Mastering Number Programme.
A key feature of the mastery approach is the belief that pupils should not be labelled or have their learning capped. Instead, the Spine offers a finely-tuned breakdown of learning through small steps, with teachers being responsive to pupils’ needs so that all get the chance to work at their optimum level in any given mathematical topic. Teachers will provide appropriate support (e.g. worked examples, concrete resources, differentiation, adult intervention) while challenge comes in the form of activities to deepen understanding.
Covid Adaptations:
As stated above, we believe that the move to the NCETM Prioritisation Spine is the best way for us to combat the disruptions to pupils’ learning. It is a move that we have previously discussed, but the impact of Covid now provides the best reason to switch. The micro-steps within the planning guidance and the focus on key mathematical concepts will support pupils’ learning in the return to school and provide the best means of securing their on-going journey.