The Spaghetti Bridge Enterprise Learning approach meets our students where they are and challenges them to reimagine their potential to learn and thrive within an education setting and beyond
The Spaghetti Bridge Enterprise Learning approach meets our students where they are and challenges them to reimagine their potential to learn and thrive within an education setting and beyond
As opposed to a framework that requires students to adapt to the needs of the curriculum, the Spaghetti Bridge Enterprise Learning curriculum creates pathways that begin with student interests and then challenge them to have new experiences, expand their knowledge and skill set and achieve their true potential.
We call our approach “Enterprise Learning”, which captures the sense of discovery, excitement and curiosity that is lacking in many approaches to education today.
Enterprise Learning is the vehicle that exploration and learning takes place. By combining our Relational Approach and Enterprise Projects, students are exposed to a broad and balanced curriculum over 9 Pillars. By incorporating the passions and interests of the young people, staff within our schools devise a curriculum that allows students to feel engaged and part of the learning, with a context and reason for the sessions in which they take part. Enterprise Learning allows teachers to use a range of applications and approaches to support and engage their students, many of whom have found accessing school and learning difficult in the past.
Our Relational Approach allows us to adapt to each student’s programme to their current level of need and sequence all future learning. The Relational Approach works through our Three Phases to ensure that student’s curriculum is individualised and ambitious and that they are supported and challenged at the appropriate level. Students are encouraged to develop their sense of trust, feelings of belonging, and the ability to be and feel safe to access learning. The Relational Approach is part of everything we do at Spaghetti Bridge.
Enterprise Learning Projects are the mechanism by which a broad and balanced curriculum is achieved, and utilises the passions and interests of our young people and staff. The curriculum allows students to feel engaged and part of their learning, with a context and reason for the sessions in which they take part. Projects teach holistically across our 9 pillars by interweaving learning through tasks divided and planned to answer a driving question. This question is either based on a real-world scenario, or around specific skills or training. The answer to the driving question is presented through ‘Beautiful Work’; a high-quality well-articulated product that demonstrates the learning that has taken place.
The intent of the Explore space is to enable students to connect and relate with the school, overcome barriers using our Relational Approach and begin to access a broad and balanced curriculum. Learning is planned and sequenced through our pillars and delivered through our Enterprise Learning projects.
The intent of the Horizon space is to support students to access a rich curriculum that creates new knowledge experiences that helps them to begin to specialise skills based on their interests and new next steps and destinations. Students within Horizon continue to work on Enterprise Projects with our Practitioners and access subject specific sessions both which support the achievement of qualifications.
Our curriculum is structured by the Three Phase Process, which
allows us to adapt each student’s programme to their current
level of need and sequence pathways to future learning.
In Overcoming Barriers, students build relationships with staff and peers, establish a sense of belonging and connection with their school community, and begin to reimagine their potential to learn.
In 21st Century Skills, students build upon their foundation and are further challenged to have new experiences through a broadening and deepening of their curriuclum.
In Community Ready, students explore how their interests, aspirations, and learning connect to the next step in their journey, including embarking on their pathway to continuing education, employment, independent living and community connection.
Our Enterprise Learning curriculum provides students with the experiences that allow them to build a rich and deep knowledge of the world, including vocabulary, factual, conceptual, and procedural knowledge
Through our Relational Approach and Enterprise Projects, students learn the skills that enable them to apply knowledge to real-world situations, creating new and rich understandings of how the world works and preparing them for the world of the future
EHCP outcomes are woven throughout each student’s curriculum, enabling them to overcome their barriers to learning, establish strong and responsible relationships, keep themselves safe, and be healthy and well.
The real-world nature of the Enterprise Learning approach, including work with industry experts, community trips, experience of work environments and practical activities with meaningful outcomes, results in Spaghetti Bridge students being prepared for adulthood throughout their journey. In addition, post-14 students are enrolled in a Pathways to Adulthood curriculum, which supports them to make choices about their post-school life in continuing educaiton, employability, and independent living.
Spaghetti Bridges pathway to achieving accredited learning blends practical, project-based learning with accredited qualifications. Our spiral curriculum allows students to revisit and deepen their understanding of core concepts over time which helps students build confidence, resilience, and employability skills while working towards recognized qualifications.
At Spaghetti Bridge we support students to obtain qualifications which will support them in the next steps of learning or in life. Qualifications offered include but are not limited to a range of GCSEs, Functional Skills and NCfEs in Occupational Studies, Business and Enterprise and Developing Enterprise Skills.
The intent behind the Creative and Aesthetics Pillar at Spaghetti Bridge is to provide students with the framework that will enable them to develop their creative and divergent thinking and challenge them to use their imagination to see the world from new and unexpected perspectives. The curriculum aims to foster critical thinking, problem solving, and resilience as well as nurturing emotional intelligence, wellbeing, and cultural connection through engagement with the arts. It will allow students to build awareness and understanding of their cultural inheritance and how the arts shape the world of today and that of the future and brings in a range of practical and theoretical skills. Students working in this pillar will come to recognise and appreciate the diverse nature of human self-expression through artistic works and to explore artistic expression in a range of forms, both locally and globally. They will also develop their own artistic abilities and sensibilities as well as gain an understanding of artistic techniques and styles in which they can express their creativity. On a different level, the curriculum will both nurture an understanding of the conceptual framework of aesthetics through concepts such as beauty, and ground their own experience of the world.
The intent of the Human and Social Pillar at Spaghetti Bridge is to ensure that each student’s curriculum provides them with the opportunities to have a broad, rich, balanced and deep experience of our shared social world, both that of today and in the past. Through this pillar, they will increase their understanding of the human world, including its diverse cultures, societies, and environments, and how these change and manifest over time. They will learn about the human experience at the individual and group level within the local, national, and global contexts. As part of this curriculum, they will be provided with opportunities to engage in skillful work using the tools of social scientists and learn the ways in which human societies are characterised, analysed, and celebrated. Each student through this pillar will encounter the rich diversity of the modern and historic world and come to understand the importance of experiencing and celebrating humanity in all its unique expressions. In addition, through this pillar students will engage with challenging and ambitious questions around what it means to be a responsible human being and a contributing member of a community while maintaining the importance of the uniqueness of each individual.
At Spaghetti Bridge, we want our students to have a love of reading, the ability to understand and manage information, and communicate effectively. Our literacy curriculum contains content in five distinct areas: comprehension, word recognition, speaking and listening, spelling, punctuation and grammar, and writing. These content areas are supported by a vibrant reading culture and the fostering of a learning mindset. Literacy is delivered throughout the curriculum, is embedded in Enterprise Projects and is integrated into all subject areas.
Each student has an individualised Reading Plan linked to their relationship to reading.
Our literacy programme is supported by a comprehensive phonics programme based on the Ruth Miskin Trust Fresh Start programme. For students on a phonics programme, their phonics is delivered through a bespoke curriculum, which may consist of 1:1 sessions or be integrated into their wider learning.
Each school has a termly reading curriculum that is linked to the wider curriculum map with links to the PSHE curriculum and the Driving Question for the term.
The Spaghetti Bridge literacy curriculum provides opportunities for accredited learning, including GCSE and Functional Skills exams.
Spaghetti Bridge schools do not follow the National Curriculum in literacy, but instead have adapted this curriculum into our Literacy Pillar, which allows us to assess, plan, scaffold and sequence each student’s individualised curriculum.
Spaghetti Bridge has developed our literacy curriculum in collaboration with the Cornerstones English Hub and the Right to Read Programme.
Mathematics is about so much more than simply getting the answer right. Instead, we believe that mathematics can facilitate a new perspective on the world and foster creative and analytical thinking, a growth mindset, and confidence in one’s ability to learn. Therefore, our mathematics curriculum contains three areas: mathematical content, mathematical thinking, and mathematical mindset.
Mathematical content consists of the twelve areas of learning that form the conceptual structure of a mathematics curriculum.
Mathematical mindset is about how students relate to mathematics, are resilient in the face of mathematical challenges, view themselves as capable of mathematics, and see mathematics in a positive light.
Mathematical thinking is the way in which students use logic, reason, and divergent thinking to solve mathematical problems and how they apply their mathematical learning across the wider curriculum.
Spaghetti Bridge schools deliver mathematics both as part of Enterprise Projects and through discrete mathematics sessions. We believe in teaching mathematics across the curriculum as a key part of all subjects.
Spaghetti Bridge schools do not follow the National Curriculum in literacy, but instead have adapted this curriculum into our Mathematics Pillar, which allows us to assess, plan, scaffold and sequence each student’s individualised curriculum.
All students have the opportunity to pursue accredited mathematics outcomes, including GCSE and Functional Skills exams.
Spaghetti Bridge has developed our approach to mathematics through collaboration with the Jurassic Maths Hub.
The intent of the Physical Education Pillar at Spaghetti Bridge is to promote the overall physical, mental, and emotional wellbeing of students, including supporting their acquisition of the skills, knowledge and understandings that will enable them to maintain their own and others’ wellbeing. This pillar combines sports and outdoor and adventure in order to integrate multiple areas that contribute to students’ wellbeing. The curriculum in this pillar is designed to help students develop their physical competence, improve their health and fitness, and support their acquisition of essential movement skills. In addition, the Physical Education Pillar enables students to participate in and learn about sports and games from different cultures and social groups. Students will also learn the conceptual framework around sports and games and their role in wider society. The Physical Education Pillar is constructed to enable students to participate in outdoor and adventure activities within the natural and built environments and to challenge themselves to navigate these spaces. The aim of this area of the curriculum is to foster in students an appreciation for and respect of the natural and human world, to develop personal skills alongside developing an awareness of emotional intelligence, mindfulness and managing their mental health.
The unique nature of Enterprise Learning, with its focus on real-world learning through a project-oriented curriculum that includes community activities, Industry Experts, and experience of work-environments, means that students are prepared for life beyond school throughout their time at a Spaghetti Bridge school. All students are also provided with Independent Advice and Guidance throughout their Spaghetti Bridge journey.
However, as they approach the time of their transition to a post school destination, it is important that our students’ curriculum begins to focus more on deciding and preparation for a specific post-school destination through our “Pathways to Adulthood” programme.
While each student’s wider curriculum continues, an interwoven Pathways to Adulthood programme focuses on students’ development of specific skills and knowledge in the areas of Continuing Education and Employment and Independent Living. At this stage, each student also has a transition plan that details the steps needed to successfully transition to their life after leaving school.
Our intent is to inspire students to develop a lifelong curiosity and interest in the sciences. We want the students to have a love for learning and a thirst for knowledge. We want them to be inquisitive and creative and develop an enhanced picture of ‘self’, where they develop a better understanding about their own passions and abilities. Science changes our lives and is vital to the world’s future prosperity, that is why at Spaghetti Bridge we aim to ensure that all students are taught essential aspects of the knowledge, methods, processes and uses of science. We want students to appreciate the achievements of science in showing how the complex and diverse natural world can be.. We aim to ensure that all students develop scientific skills and understandings as well as their knowledge through the specific disciplines of biology, chemistry and physics.
We aim for them to develop understanding of the nature, processes and methods of science through different types of science enquiries to answer scientific questions and we aim for them to be equipped with the scientific knowledge required to understand the uses and implications of science, today and for the future.
The intention behind the Technology and Design Pillar at Spaghetti Bridge is to prepare students for the rapidly evolving technological world of the present and near future through providing them with the knowledge, skills and understandings that will enable them to thrive in this environment. A central aim of this area of the curriculum is to provide students with a challenging and rich programme centred on fostering an understanding of how the physical and digital world works, as well as supporting them to develop the critical thinking, problem solving, creative, and practical skills to be able to responsibly and effectively engage with and navigate these worlds. The Technology and Design Pillar will also stress the importance of understanding how our modern environment came to be through an emphasis on the decisions and values that informed this process and how these decisions have had impact on the lives of all of us in the present and will continue to do so in the future.Students will engage in hands-on, project-based learning, exploring technology, design, programming, and robotics. They’ll develop problem-solving, teamwork, and leadership skills while considering ethical, environmental, and safety aspects of digital and physical tools, including food technology.
The Spaghetti Bridge Three Phase curriculum and our Relational Approach ensures that PSHE, SMSC, RSE, and FBV are integrated throughout each student’s curriculum in an individualised and student-centred manner. In addition, we have developed a yearly PSHE and RSE curriculum, consisting of termly and weekly themes, a bespoke target cache, and group and individual sessions.
In order to ensure that our students develop their cultural capital, each school has a cultural calendar which links PSHE and SMSC themes to events and activities in their community.
In addition to GCSEs and Functional Skills exams, Spaghetti Bridge students are offered a number of accredited occupational qualifications. These include NCFE Enterprise Skills, Business and Enterprise, and Occupational Studies for the Workplace qualifications and AQA Project Qualifications
The unique nature of Enterprise Learning, with its focus on real-world learning through a project-oriented curriculum that includes community activities, Industry Experts, and experience of work-environments, means that students are prepared for life beyond school throughout their time at a Spaghetti Bridge school. All students are also provided with Independent Advice and Guidance throughout their Spaghetti Bridge journey.
However, as they approach the time of their transition to a post school destination, it is important that our students’ curriculum begins to focus more on deciding and preparation for a specific post-school destination through our “Pathways to Adulthood” programme. While each student’s wider curriculum continues, an interwoven Pathways to Adulthood programme focuses on students’ development of specific skills and knowledge in the areas of Continuing Education and Employment and Independent Living. At this stage, each student also has a transition plan that details the steps needed to successfully transition to their life after leaving school.
The Spaghetti Bridge Three Phase curriculum and our Relational Approach ensures that PSHE, SMSC, RSE, and FBV are integrated throughout each student’s curriculum in an individualised and student-centred manner. In addition, we have developed a yearly PSHE and RSE curriculum, consisting of termly and weekly themes, a bespoke target cache, and group and individual sessions.
In order to ensure that our students develop their cultural capital, each school has a cultural calendar which links PSHE and SMSC themes to events and activities in their community.
Mathematics is about so much more than simply getting the answer right. Instead, we believe that mathematics can facilitate a new perspective on the world and foster creative and analytical thinking, a growth mindset, and confidence in one’s ability to learn. Therefore, our mathematics curriculum contains three areas: mathematical content, mathematical thinking, and mathematical mindset.
Mathematical content consists of the twelve areas of learning that form the conceptual structure of a mathematics curriculum.
Mathematical mindset is about how students relate to mathematics, are resilient in the face of mathematical challenges, view themselves as capable of mathematics, and see mathematics in a positive light.
Mathematical thinking is the way in which students use logic, reason, and divergent thinking to solve mathematical problems and how they apply their mathematical learning across the wider curriculum.
Spaghetti Bridge schools deliver mathematics both as part of Enterprise Projects and through discrete mathematics sessions. We believe in teaching mathematics across the curriculum as a key part of all subjects.
Spaghetti Bridge schools do not follow the National Curriculum in literacy, but instead have adapted this curriculum into our Mathematics Pillar, which allows us to assess, plan, scaffold and sequence each student’s individualised curriculum.
All students have the opportunity to pursue accredited mathematics outcomes, including GCSE and Functional Skills exams.
Spaghetti Bridge has developed our approach to mathematics through collaboration with the Jurassic Maths Hub.
At Spaghetti Bridge, we want our students to have a love of reading, the ability to understand and manage information, and communicate effectively. Our literacy curriculum contains content in five distinct areas: comprehension, word recognition, speaking and listening, spelling, punctuation and grammar, and writing. These content areas are supported by a vibrant reading culture and the fostering of a learning mindset. Literacy is delivered throughout the curriculum, is embedded in Enterprise Projects and is integrated into all subject areas.
Each student has an individualised Reading Plan linked to their relationship to reading.
Our literacy programme is supported by a comprehensive phonics programme based on the Ruth Miskin Trust Fresh Start programme. For students on a phonics programme, their phonics is delivered through a bespoke curriculum, which may consist of 1:1 sessions or be integrated into their wider learning.
Each school has a termly reading curriculum that is linked to the wider curriculum map with links to the PSHE curriculum and the Driving Question for the term.
The Spaghetti Bridge literacy curriculum provides opportunities for accredited learning, including GCSE and Functional Skills exams.
Spaghetti Bridge schools do not follow the National Curriculum in literacy, but instead have adapted this curriculum into our Literacy Pillar, which allows us to assess, plan, scaffold and sequence each student’s individualised curriculum.
Spaghetti Bridge has developed our literacy curriculum in collaboration with the Cornerstones English Hub and the Right to Read Programme.
Every student at Spaghetti Bridge Schools has an Education, Health, and Care Plan (EHCP) and this forms an integral part of their curriculum. Our schools take a student’s EHCP outcomes and break these down into achievable termly targets as part of each student’s Individual Learning Plan. These targets are then integrated into the student’s projects and wider curriculum and assessed on a termly basis.
Children and young people today have inherited a world in which they have access to more knowledge than ever before; however, the knowledge curriculum is often delivered without context or sense of purpose. We have instead designed our knowledge-rich curriculum using Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy to support students to not just gain but apply and create knowledge. Our curriculum map covers the subjects of science, human and social, creative and aesthetic, physical, and technology and design education, with termly topics in each area. The curriculum spirals every three years, ensuring that students revisit and build on prior learning through a sequence of three progressive tiers of knowledge for each topic.
This curriculum structure allows us to build individualised pathways for each student that support ambitious progress across the curriculum in line with their individual strengths and needs.
In addition to our knowledge curriculum, our pillars also focus on skills and understandings. Skills are specific abilities that are linked to a particular subject and understandings concern the role that a specific subject plays in our world. Our skills and understandings are sequenced vertically and horizontally as part of our curriculum map and built into Enterprise Projects.
As much as possible, our curriculum is delivered in the form of Enterprise Projects. In these projects, each student creates a piece of Beautiful Work of which they are proud. The projects are oriented around a shared Driving Question, which makes them meaningful, and will have a real-world meaning, skill or focus. Project Steps, (such as brainstorming, making a draft, field work, and presentation) form the backbone for completion of projects, and provide the structure of enquiry for the students to progress and gain both the Subject Pillars and transferable life skills (timekeeping, budgeting, communication of ideas etc). Projects are supported through collaboration with Industry Experts, who are professionals within a particular field and support our students to complete their Beautiful Work according to industry standards.
It is helpful to look at Enterprise Projects as the vehicle through which learning is delivered. For example, in designing and building a garden, students can learn any number of topics, such as botany, engineering, mathematics, etc. Where possible, Reading and Maths are woven into projects through interconnected sessions that work towards the Driving Question and completion of the Beautiful Work. Projects also enable students to work toward their EHCP outcomes by enabling any number of areas of learning, such as teamwork and cooperation, emotional resilience, executive functioning, and creative thinking.
Enterprise Projects give students a sense of purpose in their learning and build strong connections with their community, both within and outside the school.
Our curriculum is structured by the Three Phase Process, which allows us to adapt each student’s programme to their current level of need and sequence all future learning.
Overcoming Barriers – students develop their sense of trust, belonging, self-image as a student, and sense of their own potential.
21st Century Skills – each student’s curriculum broadens to focus more on the skills, knowledge and understandings that will enable them to thrive in the 21st century.
Community Ready – the student’s curriculum prioritises more the steps that need to be taken in order to successfully transition to their life beyond school.
The Three Phases Process ensures that each student’s curriculum is individualised and ambitious and that they are supported and challenged at the appropriate level on the way to becoming themselves and changing the world.
Our curriculum is structured by the Three Phase Process, which allows us to adapt each student’s programme to their current level of need and sequence all future learning.
Overcoming Barriers – students develop their sense of trust, belonging, self-image as a student, and sense of their own potential.
21st Century Skills – each student’s curriculum broadens to focus more on the skills, knowledge and understandings that will enable them to thrive in the 21st century.
Becoming Community Ready – the student’s curriculum prioritises more the steps that need to be taken in order to successfully transition to their life beyond school.
The Three Phases Process ensures that each student’s curriculum is individualised and ambitious and that they are supported and challenged at the appropriate level on the way to becoming themselves and changing the world.