Curriculum Structure
We would love to invite you to explore our curriculum more. You'll find information on each subject intent, what is taught, and some career pathways commonly associated with those subjects.
Explore our curriculum
- Art & Design (Fine Art)
- Art & Design (3D Design)
- Art & Design (Photography)
- Business
- Computing
- Dance
- Design & Technology
- Drama
- English
- Food Preparation & Nutrition
- Geography
- History
- Maths
- MFL
- Music
- PE
- Personal Development
- Religious Education
- Science
Art & Design (Fine Art)
GCSE in Art and Design is designed to provide engaging, challenging, coherent and meaningful learning experiences through a flexible structure that supports the sequential and incremental development of creative practice. Our rewarding and immersive program of study broadens experience, develops imagination and technical skills, fosters creativity and promotes personal and social development. The focus of this curriculum map is to nurture an enthusiasm for Art and to develop critical, practical and theoretical skills that enable students to gain a holistic understanding of a range of practices and contexts in the visual arts.
Character: Engaging all students in learning about visual culture that develops personal creativity, resilience, the willingness to take appropriate risks and the confidence to express feelings, thoughts and ideas: developing a sense of self. Confidently experimenting and exploring ideas and ways of working, being open to asking questions and challenging accepted ideas: developing a sense of wider responsibility. Thoughtfully investigating ideas of equality and diversity: developing a sense of inclusivity.
Competence: Developing student’s ability to use accurately and expressively a variety of skills, techniques and materials with confidence. Enabling them to make well-informed, good choices about their work and to understand and formulate connections between their work and the work of others. Being able to create a personal response through practice and understanding context: nurturing creativity.
Community: Inspiring students to develop a lifelong love, appreciation and understanding of a wide range of creative styles, traditions and contexts through considering the place of visual communication in their world. Improving health and wellbeing of themselves and others through their practice and through sharing their practice in different ways. Contributing to their futures though actively working sustainably and considerately of and for others: promoting ambition.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Year 7 Art here.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Year 8 Art here.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Year 9 Art here.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Year 10 Art here.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Year 11 Art here.
Potential Career pathways
- Art Director
- Art Therapist
- Artist
- Creative Director
- Digital Designer
- Fashion designer
- Gallery Director
- Graphic Designer
- Illustrator
- Interior Designer
- Make-Up Artist
- Marketing and Advertising
- Stage designer- theatre productions
- Stylist for TV shows
- Teacher
- Visual merchandiser
- Window designer for department stores like Selfridges and Harrods
Art & Design (3D Design)
By the end of KS3 students will have a good foundation in the following areas:
- Developing ideas through investigation, demonstrating critical understanding of sources
- Refining work by exploring ideas, selecting and experimenting with appropriate materials, techniques and processes
- Recording ideas, observations and insights as work progresses
- Presenting personal responses that demonstrate an understanding of visual language
Students follow the EDUQAS 3D Design GCSE at KS4, which builds on this foundation to ensure the best possible results
Character: Engaging all students in learning about visual culture that develops personal creativity, resilience, the willingness to take appropriate risks and the confidence to express feelings, thoughts and ideas: developing a sense of self. Confidently experimenting and exploring ideas and ways of working, being open to asking questions and challenging accepted ideas: developing a sense of wider responsibility. Thoughtfully investigating ideas of equality and diversity: developing a sense of inclusivity.
Competence: Developing student’s ability to use accurately and expressively a variety of skills, techniques and materials with confidence. Enabling them to make well-informed, good choices about their work and to understand and formulate connections between their work and the work of others. Being able to create a personal response through practice and understanding context: nurturing creativity.
Community: Inspiring students to develop a lifelong love, appreciation and understanding of a wide range of creative styles, traditions and contexts through considering the place of visual communication in their world. Improving health and wellbeing of themselves and others through their practice and through sharing their practice in different ways. Contributing to their futures though actively working sustainably and considerately of and for others: promoting ambition.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for 3D Design here.
Potential Career pathways
- Art Director
- Art Therapist
- Artist
- Creative Director
- Digital Designer
- Fashion designer
- Gallery Director
- Graphic Designer
- Illustrator
- Interior Designer
- Make-Up Artist
- Marketing and Advertising
- Stage designer- theatre productions
- Stylist for TV shows
- Teacher
- Visual merchandiser
- Window designer for department stores like Selfridges and Harrods
Art & Design (Photography)
Photography is defined here as the practice of creating durable static or moving images by recording light with light-sensitive materials such as photographic film or digitally by means of an image sensor. It includes still photography and other lens-based media. GCSE in Photography is designed to provide engaging, challenging, coherent and meaningful learning experiences. Our rewarding and immersive programme of study aims to actively engage students in the creative process whilst developing their creative, imaginative, and intuitive capabilities. The focus of this curriculum map is to nurture an enthusiasm for photography through exploration of practical and relevant critical and contextual sources such as the work of historical and contemporary photographers and the different purposes, intentions, and functions of photography as appropriate to their own work.
Character: Engaging all students in learning about visual culture that develops personal creativity, resilience, the willingness to take appropriate risks and the confidence to express feelings, thoughts and ideas: developing a sense of self. Confidently experimenting and exploring ideas and ways of working, being open to asking questions and challenging accepted ideas: developing a sense of wider responsibility. Thoughtfully investigating ideas of equality and diversity: developing a sense of inclusivity.
Competence: Developing student’s ability to use accurately and expressively a variety of skills, techniques and materials with confidence. Enabling them to make well-informed, good choices about their work and to understand and formulate connections between their work and the work of others. Being able to create a personal response through practice and understanding context: nurturing creativity.
Community: Inspiring students to develop a lifelong love, appreciation and understanding of a wide range of creative styles, traditions and contexts through considering the place of visual communication in their world. Improving health and wellbeing of themselves and others through their practice and through sharing their practice in different ways. Contributing to their futures though actively working sustainably and considerately of and for others: promoting ambition.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Photography here.
Potential Career pathways
- Art Director
- Art Therapist
- Artist
- Creative Director
- Digital Designer
- Fashion designer
- Gallery Director
- Graphic Designer
- Illustrator
- Interior Designer
- Make-Up Artist
- Marketing and Advertising
- Stage designer- theatre productions
- Stylist for TV shows
- Teacher
- Visual merchandiser
- Window designer for department stores like Selfridges and Harrods
Business
In Business Studies students will be given the opportunity to explore real business issues and understand how businesses work. Students will develop an understanding of the key practical applications of business concepts. This will provide them with a firm foundation for further study at post-16 and post-18 education as well as the philosophy for practical steps and decisions in the world of a Business.
Character: The marketing unit will develop students’ character in terms of inclusion where students will develop an understanding of the diverse society they live in and how all forms of goods and services that are marketed have a segmented target audience which they need to accept. Students show a deeper understanding of how and why a product is marketed even if it may not be for their community.
Competence: Students will develop skills in GCSE Business Studies this knowledge provides them with opportunities in the world of work in design, marketing and advertising in a local, national and international field.
Community: Students develop a deeper understanding of Britain in terms of past and present products and become more accepting of National and Global products and where they come from for a given community.
Potential career pathways
- Enterprise
- Marketing
- Finance
- Economics
- Investment
- Accountancy
- Financial advisory/consultancy
- Law
- Education
- Banking
- Human Resources
- Sales
- Operations/Production
Computing
At Oasis Academy Lord’s Hill, the Computing department aims to:
- Provide an engaging curriculum that encourages active creators of technology.
- Cultivate students' computational thinking and creative problem-solving.
- Promote invaluable digital literacy.
Technology is becoming ever more important in our student’s day to day lives and this trend is likely to increase and even accelerate in the future. We are preparing students for jobs that do not yet exist and to use technology that has not yet been invented. We will do this by ensuring that every student has the opportunity to study and use a wide range of technology building the resilience to both learn to use new technology and solve new problems in a logical algorithmic way. The OCL Computing curriculum will ensure that every student is able to navigate the digital world confidently in a safe and socially responsible manner.
We value character, competence and community in our curriculum:
Character: Enabling students to develop and build solutions to both digital and real-world problems by applying computational thinking.
Students will be able to take complex problems and break them down into manageable chunks and build solutions using skills such as
pattern recognition, abstraction and algorithmic thinking.
Competence: Developing pupils’ digital literacy allowing them to adapt and be active users of the ever-changing technology used in their
future careers and personal lives.
Community: Inspiring students to become active creators of and innovators instead of passive users of technology. Online safety and a solid
understanding of the moral, legal and ethical considerations of technology are embedded at every level of our curriculum to ensure that
students know how to use technology responsibly.
Potential career pathways
- App/Website Developer
- Computer Programmer
- Data Scientist/Analyst
- Finance
- IT
- Software Engineer
Dance
Design & Technology
Design technology is a subject which incorporates elements of Maths, Science, Art and Engineering into a practical context. It is a subject which gives our students the opportunity to apply their knowledge and understanding into a practical context learning how to design, plan, make and evaluate a range of products. Students will cultivate creativity and imagination whilst developing the skills and knowledge needed to solve real and relevant design problems. Students will do this whilst exploring a range of topics and contexts to develop a broad knowledge of the range of disciplines and potential subtopics of design technology. Our Design Technology curriculum enables our students to work independently and collaboratively, develop resilience, solve problems, manage resources and materials and encourages them to become logical thinkers, researchers, creators and makers.
Character: Engaging all students in learning about design culture that develops personal creativity, resilience, the willingness to take appropriate risks and the confidence to express ideas: developing a sense of self expression. Confidently developing and refine ideas through evaluation and self-critique whilst being open to the collaborative ideas of others. Thoughtfully investigating ideas through thorough research and development to successfully solve problems with functional practical solutions that consider the intended audience.
Competence: Developing student’s ability to use accurately and expressively a variety of designing planning, making and evaluative skills, techniques and concepts with confidence. Understanding materials and their properties enabling well[1]informed, positive choices that help to create creative solutions to problems. Students will refine their understanding and knowledge of form and function and how the two interact when designing and creating products.
Community: Inspiring students to develop a lifelong appreciation and understanding of a wide range of design styles, traditions, and contexts. Improving the quality of their own lives and the lives of others by applying creative problem solving into their everyday life. Contributing to their futures though actively working sustainably and considerately of and for others and their environment: promoting the ambition to have a positive impact on the world around them.
Potential career pathways
- Interior Designer
- Structural Engineer
- Architect
- Web Designer
- Model Maker
- Furniture designer
- Production Manager
- Electrical Engineer
- Marine Engineer
- CAD technician
Drama
Drama at OALH is designed to provide students with an opportunity to be successful outside of academia. Drama is typically seen as an impossible subject to access, so showing students the world of theatre on their doorstep is crucial to inspire the next generation of performers. Starting in Year 7 with building confidence, and moving through both devising and script work, the KS3 offering has been designed to equip students with the essential skills and knowledge needed to be both a competent actor, and an even better human. Alongside personal development of acting, students gain transferrable knowledge of teamwork, communication skills, resilience, and determination, allowing them access to the key skills which they will use in all facets of their life.
Character: Students develop skills in group collaboration, leadership, directorial skills, planning and organisation to bring their creativity and originality to fruition, as well as building empathy through the exploration of a wide range of topics covering social and moral aspects of human nature.
Competence: We endeavour to broaden our students’ knowledge and cultural capital to support the demands of adult life: both in the workplace and for further academic studies. By explicit teaching of ambitious performance skills and techniques, students will grow in both confidence and competence in their application and awareness of performance skills – honing their capacity to wield these skills with nuance and finesse in their day to day lives.
Community: The programme is designed so that by the end of key stage 3, students will have a secure knowledge of the Performing Arts, giving them the opportunity to access further study in KS4 and beyond. By having a foundation in text and devising they will develop their knowledge and understanding of how to effectively describe, analyse and evaluate in order to critically appreciate text and performance.
English
The written and spoken word is not only influenced by, but also shapes humanity. The curriculum is therefore sequenced so that students understand, question, critique and create rules, stories and patterns in literature and, more broadly, in society. Mastering English in the OCL Curriculum gives all pupils the power to understand the codes that dictate the conventions of shared language, history, art and culture as well as giving them the power to challenge, break, rebuild and create new realities from the knowledge they have learned. At the heart of our curriculum is the unwavering belief that all young people, no matter what their starting point, can, and will, thrive within a global community. Therefore, through the OCL English curriculum, they will be taught to understand and interact with the voices of others and deploy the power of their own voice. Students will become curious, scrupulous and critical thinkers armed with an extensive, versatile vocabulary and flexible knowledge base, allowing them to communicate with accuracy, precision and flair and access and create excellent, compelling writing.
Character: Giving the students the skills, knowledge, vocabulary, confidence, resilience and curiosity to read, listen, consider, discuss and debate with sensitivity and integrity.
Competence: Developing pupils’ vocabulary, knowledge and skills so that they can communicate with accuracy, precision and, more importantly, autonomy.
Community: Inspiring all pupils to develop a lifelong love, appreciation and understanding of a wide range of literature. Inspiring pupils to use their understanding of literature that has gone before them to become active members of their local and global community and become involved in shaping its future.
Potential career pathways
- Actor
- Art collector
- Banker
- Business founder
- Charity worker
- Civil servant
- Consultant
- Data analyst
- Editor
- Journalist
- Lawyer
- Learning support assistant
- Librarian
- Nurse
- Police officer
- Politician
- Product manager
- Psychologist
- Publisher
- Social worker
- Teacher
- Writer
Food Preparation & Nutrition
At Lord’s hill the food, preparation and nutrition department equip student with understanding and skills required to cook and apply the principles of food science, nutrition, and healthy eating. It encourages learners to cook and enables them to make informed decisions about food and nutrition. This allows them to acquire knowledge to be able to feed themselves and others affordably and nutritiously, now, and later in life.
Value is placed on developing ‘character’ through instilling a love of learning about the culture of Food around the world for all students; establishing ‘competence’ within students’ to be curious learners who can apply their skills and knowledge to the real world in their ‘community’ in the local context, and nationally.
A student’s five-year journey will see them follow a carefully crafted circular curriculum which transports them from the very foundations of cooking, through to advanced skills of cooking. Core concepts intentionally thread together our students ‘journeys, slowly building in depth and breadth so that students’ knowledge is constantly evolving over time.
By studying Food Preparation and Nutrition learners will:
- Demonstrate effective and safe cooking skills by planning, preparing, and cooking a variety of food commodities whilst using different cooking techniques and equipment.
- Develop knowledge and understanding of the functional properties and chemical characteristics of food as well as a sound knowledge of the nutritional content of food and drinks.
- Understand the relationship between diet, nutrition, and health, including the physiological and psychological effects of poor diet and health.
- Understand the economic, environmental, ethical, and socio-cultural influences on food availability, production processes, diet, and health choices
- Demonstrate knowledge and understanding of functional and nutritional properties, sensory qualities and microbiological food safety considerations when preparing, processing, storing, cooking, and serving food.
- Understand and explore a range of ingredients and processes from different culinary traditions (traditional British and international) to inspire new ideas or modify existing recipes.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Food Preparation & Nutrition here.
Geography
The Oasis Geography Curriculum will equip students with a balanced understanding of the physical and human world, as well as an appreciation of how interconnected systems are. It will improve student knowledge of key geographical processes and how human actions impact on these processes. Crucially it will give students the knowledge and skills to become active global citizens and enable them to confidently identify and respond to the complex current issues our planet faces. Students will have opportunities to engage and excel geographical skills through fieldtrips so they are able to personally experience the geography taught in lessons.
Character: the curriculum’s fundamental aim is to instil a love of learning about the world around us for all students. In Oasis we celebrate diversity and the curriculum therefore explores and celebrates a range of global places, cultures and traditions. This relies on the curriculum drawing on accurate, up to date representations of places and cultures in an ever changing world and how changing socio-economic circumstances impact on quality of life and well-being. Students will be developed holistically, encouraged to become the best versions of themselves by emphasising their role in order to better understand how their actions impact on others and the wider environment.
Competence: the Oasis Geography curriculum is an academic and rigorous curriculum, which places a large emphasis on knowledge. It is designed to ensure the very best outcomes for students using the latest research in cognitive science. Central to the curriculum are three core strands:
- Knowledgeable students: We want our students to be curious learners who can apply their knowledge to the real world. To do this, we equip them with the fundamental knowledge that allows them to ask good questions, access a range of scenarios and express themselves eloquently and with confidence.
- Knowledgeable teachers: We want to ensure that all teachers are confident in their subject knowledge and feel secure to take ownership of differentiating lessons for the needs of the specific students they teach.
- Knowledgeable leaders: We want to enable our curriculum leaders to be experts in curriculum delivery – able to develop the pedagogy of their teams through effective CPD, observations and feedback. We also want to ensure that they are confident in tracking the progress of their students, identifying gaps in knowledge and underachievement.
The Oasis Geography curriculum gives students the skills to use this knowledge to think deeply about key Geographical concepts and processes. Central to the curriculum is the application of this knowledge to answer complex questions developing skills of critical thinking, analysis and evaluation. Furthermore, students will develop geographical skills, gaining confidence in interpreting information from maps, graphs, data and photographs. It will ensure students aspire and take the next steps in their education and personal challenges.
Community: the curriculum will help students to understand local, national and global communities. Fundamentally students will be encouraged to study the interconnected nature of our world and look at their role in an ever changing planet. We want Oasis students to be global citizens. The curriculum fosters this through the provision of opportunities for students to take action and become active members of society, championing for sustainable change. We also want our students to have meaningful experiences and see Geography in action through multiple opportunities for human and physical fieldtrips, where they are able to collect and interpret primary data, as well as analyse secondary data.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for Geography here.
You can read more about the Geography Statement of Intent here.
Potential career pathways
- Cartographer
- Environmental consultant
- GIS officer
- International aid/ development worker
- Landscape architect
- Market researcher
- Political risk analyst
- Social researcher
- Surveyor
- Sustainability consultant
- Tourism officer
- Transport planner
- Town planner
History
History is fundamental to empowering students to engage in all manner of conversations and debates. We want to ensure that our students always have something to say and can speak from a position of knowledge rather than one of ignorance. History is uniquely positioned to do this through the breadth and depth of knowledge it offers for students to master. The Oasis Academy Lord's Hill (OALH) history curriculum is designed to provide our students with a firm grasp of the discipline of history in combination with a board, rich and global body of historical knowledge, which they can deploy to understand the world around them and the historical forces that have shaped it. The curriculum aims to develop an enduring curiosity about the past, as well as providing our students with the means to engage in rigorous and academic approaches to ask and answer historical questions, whilst also empowering them to question the nature of historical knowledge itself. The study of history aims to emphasise the strangeness of the past in comparison to our lives today whilst also fore fronting the human stories that still resonate with us.
Character: The OALH history curriculum aims to develop students who are confident in presenting their own arguments and interpretations but willing to listen to and be challenged by others. We aim to teach our students how to frame and answer questions, encouraging curiosity but also developing independence. The nature of history itself, with their very rarely being a simple answer, helps develop resilience as well as ensuring that students are willing to challenge overly simplistic narratives they are presented, both in and outside of the classroom. The OALH history curriculum also aims to ensure students encounter diverse cultures, societies, people and often ‘hidden histories’, ensuring their sense of identity and their perceptions of others are not based on singular representations or misrepresentations.
Competence: The OALH history curriculum aims to ensure students develop a broad body of historical knowledge, chronologically and geographically, from the local scale to global issues. The curriculum is designed to draw out the connected nature of the past, rather than presenting histories in isolation of one another, allowing students to make sense of the world they live in and the events, forces and people who continue to shape it. Students will engage in the processes through which history is written and challenged, aiming to develop student’s understanding of history as a discipline, and therefore as a societal construction rather than an objective narration of the past.
Community: Throughout the curriculum students study numerous different societies and communities as well as the interactions between them, exploring both the bonds that bring people together but also the issues that can cause conflict. Local history gives students the chance to reflect on how their local community has developed overtime and how it is both similar and different to other communities they have explored.
Potential career pathways
- Actor
- Archivist
- Banker
- Civil servant
- Consultant
- Editor
- Entrepreneur
- Historian
- Journalist
- Lawyer
- Learning support assistant
- Librarian
- Novelist
- Politician
- Product manager
- Psychologist
- Publisher
- Researcher
- Social worker
- Teacher
Maths
At Oasis Lord’s Hill, the Maths Department aims to enable our students to develop:
- a deep understanding of numeracy fundamentals and core maths skills
- creativity and curiosity when tackling mathematical problems
- confidence, perseverance and a can-do attitude through the use of real-life applications
The OCL Maths Curriculum is designed in conjunction with Mathematics Mastery. This means that pupils are given a “thorough understanding of mathematical concepts, rather than a set of techniques or routines to get to the right answer” (EEF). We want our students to be curious learners who can apply their knowledge and skills to the real world. We enable them with the powerful knowledge that allows them to acquire fluency in crucial mathematical procedures and means they can master and retain key concepts which in turn will result in all students fulfilling their academic potential in maths.
Character: Our Maths lessons ensure that all students develop confidence in Maths, and identify as “good at Maths”. Through talk tasks to check for understanding, the participation of all students in articulating mathematical ideas is a key feature of our teaching. Students are taught to interact with each other with patience, honesty, and independence through opportunities for structured self-reflection throughout the lesson: in self and peer assessment, exit tickets, and mastery matrices.
Competence: Developing pupils’ competence in Maths is at the heart of our curriculum. We build strong foundations by taking every opportunity to develop our students’ numeracy skills: in lessons, and in structured interventions. In our curriculum, we draw on research from cognitive science to accelerate our students learning. We connect new knowledge to existing knowledge, to expand students’ schemas, and develop their skills in the core concepts of Maths.
Community: Through an engaging, relevant Maths curriculum, students are exposed to the story and history of mathematical ideas. In this way students develop respect for others and an appreciation of diversity and inclusivity, and learn how to challenge and question. Students also have the opportunity to develop their passion, their identity, and their sense of belonging, through success in Maths, and through trips and after-school clubs, in different forms across the trust.
Potential career pathways
- Accountant
- Actuary
- Computer Programmer
- Data Analyst
- Doctor
- Economist
- Engineer
- Finance
- Statistician
- Teacher
MFL
The OCL MFL curriculum believes that a strong foundation for knowledge is essential for language learning. Our curriculum focuses on students mastering and retaining key structures and vocabulary over time that they become confident and spontaneous communicators in another language. We want our students to develop in the following key areas:
Character: We want our students to become confident communicators, who are able to use language flexibly in real-life contexts. Through learning another language our students will be encouraged to have a curiosity and understanding of other cultures. Through exploration of another language they will also learn more about themselves and the world beyond their classrooms. Their language skills should help to inspire a love of language learning and give them the confidence to communicate with speakers of these languages here and abroad. Our curriculum is an inclusive curriculum, where all students are able to achieve, and all are enabled to develop their skills and ability to speak the language spontaneously.
Competence: Students should be able to speak and write with increasing complexity, sponteneity and fluency as they progress in their learning. Vocabulary and grammatical structures are introduced sequentially and interleaved for effective retrieval practice. We also use language beyond the curriculum and expose students regularly to authentic texts, culture and student-led discussion, enabling them to deepen their understanding of the French and Spanish-speaking world.
Community: We want our students to gain an understanding of their local, national and global communities through MFL, by helping them to explore different cultures and communities across the world where the languages are spoken. Our curriculum allows our students to appreciate cultural diversity and discuss complex issues with sensitivity, such as through engaging with social issues. Our goal is that through study, students will gain a sense of global responsibility, respect and tolerance for other cultures.
Potential career pathways
- Art curator
- Copywriter
- Crisis management
- Diplomat
- Editor
- Historian
- International development
- International law
- International relations
- Interpreter
- Journalist
- Magistrate
- Private tutor
- Public relations officer
- Researcher
- Soldier
- Teacher
- Tour guide
- Tour operator
- Training manager
- University lecturer
- Writer
Music
We begin with the assumption that all children are musical and have a right to learn music. Music is fundamental to being human and all can develop their identity, a sense of belonging and their character through rehearsing, playing, singing, creating, appreciating and listening to music. Through the Oasis Music Curriculum our students will grow into adults who enjoy, appreciate and engage with music throughout their lives.
Character: Engaging all pupils in musical learning that develops creativity, resilience and the confidence to express feelings and thoughts, experiment with new musical ideas and grow imaginations.
Competence: Developing pupils’ ability to make music well so that musical outcomes are excellent and aspirations are raised. Ensuring that all are equipped for further musical study if they choose it.
Community: Inspiring all pupils to develop a lifelong love, appreciation and understanding of a wide range of musical styles and traditions. Ensuring all experience the power of music to include, to draw people together, understand others and facilitate positive connection.
You can read the Statement of Intent for Music here.
Potential Career pathways
- Actor
- DJ
- Event Manager
- Music Producer
- Music Talent Agent
- Music Teacher
- Music Therapist
- Performer (singer or instrumentalist)
- Sound Engineer
- Sound technician
- Theatre Stage Manager
PE
Physical education should inspire students to become physically competent in a way which promotes lifelong physical activity. The Oasis Physical Education Curriculum will improve students’ health and wellbeing through a holistic approach that allows them to flourish and become valuable members within their community. Students will be provided with opportunities to develop personally through a wide range of experiences. They will have opportunities to engage and excel in competitive sport, physical activities and leadership, building character and embedding wider core values throughout.
Character: In our curriculum, Physical Education is far more than sport alone. Through our primary focus on developing a depth of physical competency, physical education will embody the reflection of “Who am I and Who am I becoming”. We will create children who understand the values of teamwork and sportsmanship, children who articulate the value of being physically active in our modern society and children who understand that being physically active is more than just playing sport, but is a positive lifestyle decision.
Competence: Our PE curriculum is designed to ensure that children are empowered to master the foundation skills within movement and physical activity. We will create physically literate children who develop a love of physical activity and embrace healthy lifestyles. We will cultivate children to have a deep mastery of the fundamental skills of sport, providing them with the ability to apply these transferable attributes across a range of sports as their lives progress.
Community: Through the power of physical activity, we will cultivate children who understand the position of sport within a local, national and global context. Through sport, children will feel like they belong and will have the opportunity to represent themselves and their communities through local and national events. We will use our physical education programme and extra-curricular offers to provide every child with the opportunity to succeed, the opportunity to become part of a bigger community and the opportunity to experience and understand how sport brings people together.
Potential career pathways
- Gym management
- Personal trainer
- PE Teacher
- Physiotherapist
- Professional athlete
- Sports analyst
- Sports business
- Sports coaching
- Sports journalist
- Sports media
- Sports nutrition
- Sports psychologist
Personal Development
We want our students to develop into rounded young adults who understand their character and play active roles in their communities. The PSHE curriculum has been thoughtfully created to incorporate our Oasis Ethos, Oasis 9 Habits and Character Curriculum to ensure students flourish in a safe school environment. We have met the statutory guidance for RSE, Citizenship and CEIAG as well as providing opportunities for use of the local PHE data to meet the needs of our students. The combination enables students to develop socially, emotionally, culturally, physically, spiritually and eventually having fulfilling lives and careers.
Students will know more about themselves and others; becoming socially literate and emotionally aware and understanding how they are developing, who they are becoming and how to fulfil their potential. With this clear sense of identity, students will understand their place in society and how to achieve their future life ambitions.
Students will then become confident, articulate citizens who are able to effectively debate moral, social, cultural and political issues. We also focus on the fundamental British Values that underpin many other curriculum areas. Crucially, students have a keen awareness of the socio-political landscape and through the exploration of Oasis Hubs locally, nationally and internationally understand the importance of inclusivity, the beauty of diversity and challenge themselves and others to be anti-discriminatory and to be inclusive of all.
Character: Engaging all students to express feelings and thoughts around themselves, who they are becoming and why this is important for their wellbeing and development in modern Britain. Students will have many opportunities to learn and discuss knowledge and skills that will support them to have fulfilled lives.
Competence: Students will be empowered with knowledge about the community, wider Britain and their own life choices to be able to make informed decisions and be able to make a fulfilling life pathway.
Community: Students will discuss and understand their own place within the local, national and global community with particular focus on the Oasis family; understanding the importance of diversity and inclusivity and the rich tapestry that is created through interconnected communities.
We invite you to read our Long Term Plan for PD here.
You can read the Statement of Intent for Personal Development here.
Potential career pathways
- Community development worker
- Councillor
- Nurse
- Occupational therapist
- Policy writer
- Politician
- Psychiatrist
- Psychologist
- Social worker
- Teacher
Religious Education
RE examines what it is to be human in the modern world, engaging directly with the questions at the heart of the Oasis Ethos – Who Am I and Who Am I Becoming. Through the Oasis RE Curriculum our students will develop an appreciation of human diversity and an understanding of the place that belief plays in our all of our lives. They will learn that differences in faith, belief, practice, culture and interpretation bring brilliance and colour to our world – both locally, nationally and globally. It is essential to note here that RE is NOT religious instruction, Bible Study or so-called ‘divinity’. It is a broad discipline which engages with several academic lenses – including theology, philosophy, ethics and the social sciences. It is working within and truly honouring these lenses that provides the subject with its’ unique rigour.
We value character, competence and community in our curriculum, and seek opportunities to meaningfully demonstrate these virtues through a knowledge rich, diverse and inclusive curriculum. Below is a representative (but not exhaustive) list of the myriad of ways in which RE honours the three ambitious intentions of the OCL Curriculum:
Character: Engaging all pupils in a curriculum that develops sensitivity, an understanding of what informs our morality, and a true sense of true tolerance - where diversity is championed and celebrated as the factor which brings colour, brilliance and interest to society. The confidence, composure and philosophical articulacy to engage in meaningful discussion about Big Questions. To contribute to the personal development of pupils by enabling them to explore deep questions of purpose, meaning and human behaviour. To challenge pupils to not only look within and explore the morals that define them, but to also listen to those which define others. In doing these things RE enables pupils to understand important things about themselves as human beings growing into and becoming part of the modern world. Here the 9 Habits provides a foundation and filter through which to examine core content in addition to a mechanism through which to discipline discussion.
Competence: The ability to describe religious practice, explain religious beliefs, teachings and attitudes, and analyse and evaluate responses to questions of meaning, belief, purpose and ethics based upon belief and culture. The OCL RE curriculum will enable pupils to develop critical thinking skills and the ability to debate, discuss and argue about Big Questions of human existence be them theological, philosophical, ethical or social.
Community: An understanding of what it is to be human – a sense of identity and belonging to their local community as well as a sense of being a global citizen. A clear understanding of their own role and responsibilities within their communities, and the ability to see themselves as participants in and champions of the transformation of attitudes – which in turn will transform communities. An understanding of the role that faith, belief and practice play in shaping the identity of both citizens and communities. An understanding of how religion and faith unite global communities and positively contribute to the development of individual and communal character. An understanding of how to participate within their community on a positive and meaningful level to create cohesion.
Potential career pathways
- Advice worker
- Archivist
- Chaplain
- Charity fundraiser
- Civil Service administrator
- Community development worker
- Counsellor
- Higher education lecturer
- International aid/development worker
- Mediator
- Newspaper journalist
- Police officer
- Primary school teacher
- Secondary school teacher
- Youth worker
Science
At Oasis Lord’s Hill, the Science Department aims to enable our students to develop:
- Enthusiasm in science to discover the world around them.
- Knowledge and understanding allowing them to make informed personal judgements.
- Skills which can be applied and utilised in real life situations enabling a more rewarding and healthy future.
The Oasis Science Curriculum will equip students with the knowledge of the key scientific principles that allow us to make sense of the world around us and the disciplinary knowledge which enables them to be good scientists in their lives – providing opportunities to investigate scientific theories and unpick evidence to derive their own conclusions that will enable them to make good choices for themselves, their families, community and our planet.
Character: the curriculum aims to ensure that students feel successful during their science education, that they feel knowledgeable and that they have become curious, critical thinkers that are able to make well informed decisions that they can communicate and justify effectively.
Competence:
- Knowledgeable students: We want our students to be curious learners who can apply their knowledge to the real world. To do this, we equip them with the fundamental substantive and disciplinary knowledge that allows them to ask good questions, evaluate information, access a range of scenarios and communicate their ideas and conclusions effectively and with confidence.
- Knowledgeable teachers: We want to ensure that all teachers are confident in their subject knowledge and potential student misconceptions across all three discipline and that they feel secure in taking ownership of differentiating lessons for the needs of the specific students they teach. We also want to provide lots of opportunities to ensure that our teachers know what their students have mastered and which areas need to be revisited later in the students learning journey. Our teachers are knowledgeable about the science of learning and are therefore empowered to make impactful decisions in the classroom. We know that student attention and focus is essential for learning to take place, so creating a calm and purposeful learning environment comes first. Our consistent approach to lesson structure and assessment allows teachers to focus on planning and practising excellent expositions, responding to errors and misconceptions and supporting students regardless of starting point to experience an ambitious curriculum.
- Knowledgeable leaders: We want to enable our curriculum leaders to be experts in curriculum delivery – able to develop the pedagogy of their teams through effective subject specific CPD, observations and feedback. We also want to ensure that they are confident in tracking the progress of their students, identifying gaps in knowledge and underachievement and putting in place effective support to ensure that every child is successful in their science education.
Community: Our curriculum ensures that our students understand the impact of their decisions on themselves, their families, local communities and our planet. It demonstrates the complexity of these decisions and the importance of individual decisions on the collective. It will encourage students to be advocates for diversity, access to healthcare and a more sustainable way of living.
You can read the Statement of Intent for Science here.
You can read our Long Term Plan for our new Science curriculum here. (This sequence is taught to our current year 7 and 8s).
You can read our Long Term Plan for our current Science curriculum here. (This sequence is taught to our current year 9, 10, and 11s).
Potential career pathways
- Doctor
- Electrician
- Engineer
- Food Technologist
- Government Advisor
- Laboratory Assistant
- Laboratory Technician
- Microbiologist
- Midwife
- Nurse
- Oceanographer/Marine Biologist
- Physiotherapist
- Radiologist
- Research Scientist
- Science Writer
- Software Developer
- Sports Scientist
- Surgeon
- Sustainability Consultant
- Teacher
- Veterinary Medicine
- Web Developer