1. Audit your curriculum for conceptual coherence
Why: Powerful knowledge is systematic, not a list of topics.
Action: Map how key concepts build over time, e.g., “energy” in science or “empire” in history.
Example: In geography, Mark Enser suggests tracing “place” and “scale” from local to global contexts so pupils see how ideas interconnect.
2. Teach disciplinary thinking, not just content
Why: Counsell stresses that pupils must learn how knowledge is made in each subject.
Action: Explicitly teach the methods historians, scientists, or mathematicians use to generate knowledge.
Example: In history, model how historians test evidence; in science, show how hypotheses are falsified.
3. Build knowledge sequences, not isolated lessons
Why: Claire Sealy argues that curriculum should be “a narrative, not a playlist.”
Action: Plan units so each lesson connects logically to the next, revisiting and deepening prior knowledge.
Example: In English, sequence texts to show the evolution of literary forms, from epic poetry to modern novels.
4. Use precise subject vocabulary
Why: Mary Myatt calls vocabulary “the carrier of concepts.”
Action: Teach and revisit key terms systematically; use word walls, etymology, and retrieval practice.
Example: In science, teach “photosynthesis” as a concept network (light, chlorophyll, glucose) rather than a single definition.
5. Make threshold concepts explicit
Why: Tom Sherrington notes that certain ideas transform understanding once grasped.
Action: Identify and teach these “gateway” ideas deliberately.
Example: In maths, proportional reasoning; in history, causation and significance; in art, perspective.
6. Connect powerful knowledge to lived experience, but don’t collapse it into relevance
Why: Counsell warns against reducing curriculum to “what pupils already know.”
Action: Start from familiar contexts, then extend outward to abstract or unfamiliar ones.
Example: In geography, begin with local rivers before exploring global hydrological cycles.
7. Use retrieval and spaced practice to secure long‑term memory
Why: Powerful knowledge must be retained and built upon.
Action: Employ low‑stakes quizzes, cumulative reviews, and concept maps.
Example: In languages, revisit grammar structures across topics; in science, spiral back to atomic theory.
8. Encourage metacognitive reflection on knowledge itself
Why: Pupils should understand how knowledge empowers them.
Action: Discuss why certain knowledge matters; its origins, applications, and ethical dimensions.
Example: In history, debate how interpretations of empire shape identity; in computing, reflect on algorithmic bias.
9. Collaborate across departments to ensure curriculum integrity
Why: Mary Myatt and Counsell both emphasise coherence across subjects.
Action: Share concept maps and progression models; align vocabulary and disciplinary habits.
Example: Link geography’s “climate” with science’s “energy transfer” and English’s environmental literature.
10. Keep curriculum conversations alive
Why: Powerful knowledge is dynamic; teachers refine it through dialogue.
Action: Use departmental CPD to debate what counts as “powerful” in your subject.
Example: In history, discuss whether local history belongs alongside global narratives; in maths, whether problem‑solving is knowledge or application.
