French Key Groups

All areas of our curriculum at Boldon School, is successfully adapted, designed and developed to be ambitious and meet the needs of all students. Each subject area develops their knowledge, skills and abilities to apply what they know and can do this with increasing fluency and independence.

Our teachers check pupils’ understanding systematically, identify misconceptions accurately and provide clear, direct feedback. They respond and adapt their teaching as necessary without unnecessarily elaborate or individualised approaches. This is to get the very best outcomes for our students whether they are SEND, disadvantaged or to challenge our higher ability students. This will ensure that students are ready for their next stage of education, employment or training to gain qualifications that allow them to go on to destinations that meet their interests and aspirations and the intention of their course of study.

How the french Curriculum supports our SEND students:

The Department for Education states, ‘Children and young people with SEND all have learning difficulties or disabilities that make it harder for them to learn than most children and young people of the same age. These children and young people may need extra or different help from that given to others.’

Boldon School is an inclusive school where every student is encouraged to develop a thirst for knowledge, to enjoy their curriculum and feel valued as a member of our school community. We are committed to the progress, inclusion and resilience of each student and support the learning journey that they require. Our curriculum is successfully adapted, designed or developed to be ambitious and meet the needs of pupils with SEND, developing their knowledge, skills and abilities to apply what they know and can do with increasing fluency and independence across all subject areas.

Students with SEND are supported in Specific approaches which are used within the curriculum areas including:

Seating to allow inclusion

Differentiation activities to stretch and support in all lessons

Resources are accessible yet challenging

Displays and visual learning tools are used where necessary

Where appropriate support from additional adults is planned to scaffold students learning

Group work and discussion

Clear teacher/student communication

Feedback that allows students to make progress, whether written or verbal

Independent study/homework.

Intervention when required

How the french Curriculum supports our disadvantaged students:

How the French Curriculum supports our disadvantaged students:

The Secretary of State for Education set out the government’s national plan to support children and young people to reach their full potential, regardless of their backgrounds. With an overarching goal and aim of improving social mobility through education, and delivering better educational and career outcomes more evenly across England.

At Boldon School we have 50% of our students with high levels of deprivation, but strive to raise the attainment and aspirations of all students regardless of social background. We have a robust allocation system of pupil premium funding to obtain the most successful outcomes for our students and to narrow the gaps in attainment across all subject areas.

Disadvantaged students are supported in MFL by:

working to identify barriers, interests and what might help each pupil

Retrieval booklets issued to each year groups each half term to set as homework.

pupil make the next steps in learning using lead practitioner research and actions to support.

provide targeted support for under-performing pupils during tutor time and after school.

lesson time, such as targeted questioning, live marking and seating, in addition to revision lessons and intervention outside school hours.

use strategies best suited to addressing individual needs

ensure there are opportunities for students to make use of resources and gain homework support outside of lesson time through the use of Google classroom. Paper copies are provided for people who may not access the internet.

provide students with revision materials to reduce financial burden on families

How the french Curriculum supports our higher ability students:

How the French curriculum supports our higher ability students:

HM Chief Inspector stated, If we are going to succeed as an economy and as a society, we have to make more of our most able young people. We need them to become the political, commercial and professional leaders of tomorrow. 

At Boldon school we aim to nurture scholastic excellence through a challenging curriculum where the work given to students is demanding and matches the aims of the curriculum in being coherently planned and sequenced towards cumulatively sufficient knowledge. We recognise the need to stretch and challenge all students but especially our MAT and higher ability students to obtain maximum progress.

Higher ability students are supported in MFL by:

Gold and Platinum tasks for extra stretch and challenge, whereby our higher ability pupils are encouraged to make independent, creative and more complex use of the target language, to show their ability to manipulate structures and grammar, to express and justify their own thoughts and opinions and to deduce meaning from authentic, literary texts.

Opportunities to debate and question the opinion of others with regard to the extracts being studied, to evaluate and draw conclusions.

Develop thinking and problem solving skills by learning how to identify common patterns in English and the target language, to use verbal and cultural context to identify meaning, to recognise cognates, near cognates and ‘false friends’.

Enrichment opportunities such as events held at Newcastle  University (Beat the Rat Race), cultural language events at the Tyneside Cinema (Film Study Workshops).

Currently in development we have an MFL trip to France. We aim to offer our students the opportunity to participate in real-life language practice, to experience a lifestyle and culture similar to yet different from their own and to enthuse them for language learning.