The National Curriculum
The National Curriculum for England is to be taught in all maintained schools.
The curriculum contains the programmes of study and attainment targets for all subjects, at all key stages.
All maintained schools in England must start teaching these programmes of study from September 2014, with the following exceptions:
The New National Curriculum
The School Curriculum in England (Information from the Department For Education)
Every state-funded school must offer a curriculum which is balanced and broadly based1 and which:
- promotes the spiritual, moral, cultural, mental and physical development of pupils at the school and of society, and
- prepares pupils at the school for the opportunities, responsibilities and experiences of later life.
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The school curriculum comprises all learning and other experiences that each school plans for its pupils. The national curriculum forms one part of the school curriculum.
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All state schools are also required to make provision for a daily act of collective worship and must teach religious education to pupils at every key stage
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Maintained schools in England are legally required to follow the statutory national curriculum which sets out in programmes of study, on the basis of key stages, subject content for those subjects that should be taught to all pupils. All schools must publish their school curriculum by subject and academic year online.2
All schools should make provision for personal, social, health and economic education (PSHE), drawing on good practice. Schools are also free to include other subjects or topics of their choice in planning and designing their own programme of education.
To find out more about the New Curriculum and Programmes of Study then go to the following website:
Key stage 1 and 2
Compulsory national curriculum subjects at primary school are:
- English
- Maths
- Science
- Design and Technology
- History
- Geography
- Art and Design
- Music
- Physical education (PE), including swimming
- Computing
- Modern foreign languages (at key stage 2)
Schools must provide religious education (RE) but parents can ask for their children to be taken out of the whole lesson or part of it.
We also teach:
- personal, social and health education (PSHE)
- citizenship
- modern foreign languages (at key stage 2)

