Early Years Curriculum
During their first year at St Augustine's Catholic Primary School, the children follow the Early Years (under 5s) Foundation Stage Framework. The curriculum is planned to ensure that we are developing the children’s personal and social areas of learning as well as their emotional well-being.
The EYFS profile is intended to provide a reliable, valid and accurate assessment of each child’s attainment at the end of the EYFS. It is made up of an assessment of the child’s attainment in relation to the 17 early learning goal (ELG) descriptors.
To ensure our pupils are immersed in the best possible learning experiences, we value the development of the characteristics of learning and promote all our children's development in these three key areas:
Playing and Exploring
- Finding out and exploring
- Using what they know in their play
- Being willing to have a go
Active Learning
- Being involved and concentrating
- Keeping on trying
- Enjoying achieving what they set out to do
Creating and Thinking Critically
- Having their own ideas
- Using what they already know to learn new things
- Choosing ways to do things and finding new ways
Intent
It is in the Blossom classroom that, through careful teaching and learning, our children make a great start to their education with us. Children are encouraged to become independent, inquisitive and happy learners. We recognise children’s prior learning and various starting points are all different, therefore we intend to create an holistic curriculum that maximises cross-curricular links and builds strong foundations for their future. Our EYFS curriculum is specifically designed, and continually evolves, to provide children with important foundational skills and knowledge that will later be enhanced and embedded in KS1.
Every child is recognised as a unique individual. We acknowledge and promote children’s interests to provide them with the opportunities to follow their imagination and creativity. Through vibrant continuous indoor and outdoor provision, the development of the characteristics of effective learning is promoted. Recognising parents as first educators, we work in close partnership with parents and carers throughout the year to support their learning and to encourage children to reach their full potential. We also aim to promote a smooth transition from EYFS to KS1 by providing children with the knowledge, skills and attitudes they need to succeed throughout their education.
Implementation
Pupils learn through a balance of child-initiated and adult-directed activities and challenges. The weekly timetable is carefully structured and regularly so that children have rigorous directed teaching in English, mathematics and phonics every day. Whole class, group and individual work then follows and provides children with many and varied opportunities to engage in ‘active learning' through a variety of experiences, which are carefully planned to engage and challenge.
Reading is at the heart of our curriculum. We have chosen high-quality texts from which all topics are launched. Children enjoy reading a variety of books inside and outside of school through quality guided reading sessions and independent reading with adults. Children are sent home with fully decodable phonics reading books that are tailored and suited to their individual phonics level. Regularly, children’s reading attainment is assessed and gaps are addressed quickly and effectively. Phonics Bug is our systematic, synthetic phonics programme that we commit to.
Our mathematics programme adopts a mastery approach; we follow the WhiteRose scheme of learning but supplement the materials from a variety of other sources, all with an emphasis on deepening understanding in the key skills of number, calculation and shape. The prioritisation of mathematical language is clear in our pedagogy. Pupils creatively learn through games and tasks using concrete manipulatives which are then rehearsed and applied in their own learning during exploration and in adult-directed activities. These collaborative and practical mathematical experiences are carefully designed to help pupils remember the content they have been taught and to support them with integrating their new knowledge across the breadth of their experiences and into larger concepts. Teaching mathematics in this way supports our children to become logical problem solvers that can demonstrate resilience and justification when learning. This approach to teaching maths ensures children gain progressive mathematical knowledge and skills as they continue their journey through KS1.
Class teachers make ongoing individual observations and sometimes capture children’s learning and play and interests through photographs. These formative assessments inform potential next steps for each child and include careful consideration of children with SEND, vulnerable or disadvantaged. Children's progress towards meeting the Early Learning Goals is rigorously monitored and reviewed.
Impact
The impact of our EYFS curriculum is good and all children make progress from their starting points.
In 2025, 77.5% of our 40 children achieved a Good Level of Development, the national picture showed that 68.3% of all EYFS children met this standard. We are proud to consistently achieve higher than the national standards.
Our children are confident to learn and ask questions. It is in the EYFS where they begin to build upon their personal toolkit of skills, knowledge and success. Our EYFS staff have a good understanding of how ELG’s link to the National Curriculum, and, through our robust planning and delivery across the spectrum of subjects – both core and foundation - children leave the EYFS stage with the skills, knowledge and confidence to continue their journey as scientists, historians, artists and geographers. We have clear starting and end points we plan from, these are sequential and ordered to meet the needs of our children as part of their journey towards achieving the ELGs. Our termly checkpoint document is attached at the bottom of this page for you.
Our children's success is very much a result of the strong relationships between home and school. Here are a few ideas and resources to help you help your child at home. Here is an explanation for parents of what to expect in this crucial time at school: What is the Foundation Stage? Help for parents.
- Book Trust Book List for 4-5 Year Olds
- Tutor Bot Maths Games - Practise games for those key facts.
- Topmarks - Having fun with numbers!
- Oxford Owl - Developing a love of reading.
- Busy Things - Learning Through Play.
- Phonics Play - Getting to grips with phonics.
- Fun with Spot - Making stories about feelings.
- Sebastian Swan - Great for reading about the world around us.
- Dinosaur Discovery - For all little dinosaur fans, find out some interesting facts.
- ICT Games - A range of games for numeracy and literacy.
- Big Eyed Owl - Songs, Rhymes and Activities
- Alphabet Songs
- Learning Conversations and Telling Stories: 3 to 5 Years
Curriculum maps each half term:
Autumn 2025