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You are the light of the world.
A city built on a hill cannot be hidden. Matthew 5:14

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Heavenly Father please help me to:

  • Respect others and rejoice in their achievements.
  • Endeavour to learn something new every day.
  • Accept and celebrate the differences in others.
  • Continuously rise to every challenge.
  • Honestly reflect on my own actions.
  • In Jesus’ name we pray, Amen.

Computing

Intent

At St Mark’s the computing curriculum prepares pupils for the challenges and opportunities offered by a world where work and leisure activities are rapidly being transformed by technological change.

 

Through computer science, pupils will become skilled in computational thinking to comprehend and change the world. They will understand the ideas and principles that underpin how digital systems work such as abstraction, logic, algorithms and data representation.

 

Through varied and repeated opportunities to apply this knowledge, they will become highly skilled in analyzing problems in computational terms and writing computer programmes in order to solve them. Information technology will give pupils opportunities to develop knowledge, skills and understanding in the application of computer systems.

 

They can use it to solve real-world problems analytically, find things out, create, exchange and share information and evaluate and modify work. Pupils will become digitally literate, able to use technology creatively, safely, respectfully and responsibly; they will be prepared to competently take part in the digital world of the present and the future.

 

Implementation

The implementation of the computing curriculum ensures a balanced coverage of computer science, information technology and digital literacy, which includes e-safety. Children will experience all three strands in each year group and each strand comes with a list of key vocabulary linked to the technical knowledge and skills being taught.

 

Computing knowledge and skills are carefully mapped out and sequenced so that they are built on year by year to enable learning to become more specific, complex and in-depth. For example, children in KS1 learn what algorithms are, which leads them to the design stage of programming in KS2. In KS2, they use their prior knowledge to go on to design, create and debug programmes and logically explain their thinking behind their algorithms. 

 

Computing is taught either through stand-alone lessons or, where possible, it is richly linked to engaging contexts in other subjects or topics so that pupils can apply their computing knowledge and skills. 

 

Children are given opportunities to work with a range of hardware devices and software resources and programs, for a variety of purposes, across the curriculum as well as in discrete computing lessons.

 

At St Mark’s we are committed to developing digital wisdom in our pupils in order to prepare them for life in an increasingly digital world. Therefore, a strong focus is placed on how to use technology safely and responsibly through the teaching of digital skills, of how technology is used and of how pupils can apply the use of technology in contexts that they can relate to. 

 

Impact 

Our Computing curriculum is planned so that pupils have a good understanding of the computing concepts, knowledge, skills and vocabulary that run through the three strands: computer science, information technology and digital literacy. This ensures they achieve age-related attainment at the end of each Key Stage.

 

Upon completion of each project, teachers will assess children against the progression of computing concepts, knowledge and skills document.

Termly assessment will take place to track children’s progress against age-related expectations for Computing.

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