Aims
The national curriculum for physical education aims to ensure that all pupils:
- develop competence to excel in a broad range of physical activities,
- are physically active for sustained periods of time.
- engage in competitive sports and activities.
- lead healthy, active lives.
Intent
At BHPS we provide children with a challenging and engaging PE curriculum by offering high-quality teaching and learning opportunities that inspire all children to succeed in physical education and in developing life skills. We believe that Physical Education (PE), experienced in a safe and supportive environment, is essential to ensure children attain optimum physical and emotional development. Children should understand that PE is a significant contributor to good health.
Our curriculum is led by Key Primary Themes, terms and vocabulary providing opportunities to build a shared and consistent understanding. Components of learning are organised to ensure themes are revisited regularly as pupils move through the school. This ensures each unit builds effectively on prior learning and ensures connections are made between different units to help children know more and remember more. Our pupils are able to apply and consolidate understanding as they progress through the school to enable them to become computer scientists of the future.
Our curriculum aims to improve the wellbeing and fitness of all children at BHPS, not only through the key conceptual and procedural knowledge taught, but through the underpinning values and disciplines PE promotes. Pupils are taught P.E. in order to develop a knowledge of:
- Motor Competence – accurate movements, movement patterns, techniques, sequences and Fundamental Movement Skills
- Rules, strategies and tactics – conventions, regulations, strategies that are specific to participation in a particular activity/sport
- Healthy participation – safe practice, how to particate, long- and short-term impacts of participation
We also want to teach children how to cooperate and collaborate with others as part of an effective team, understanding fairness and equity of play to embed the school games values.
The careful selection of systematic teaching of both declarative (conceptual knowledge) and procedural knowledge together underpins what it is to physically education. Both forms of knowledge have individual value, yet are undoubtedly linked, particularly in P.E. Pupils need to be explicitly taught what the links are between the conceptual and procedural knowledge. With the conceptual knowledge of motor movement, rules, strategies and tactics and healthy participation, pupils are not only able to perform physically but they are able to engage fully in the field of sport and physical activity, which will ultimately enrich their experiences.