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Earlsmead Primary School

Earlsmead Primary School

SUCCESS FOR ALL

British Values

At Earlsmead, British Values are promoted through a variety of channels, such as:

  • Teaching within the curriculum.
  • Special assemblies celebrating diverse religious or cultural themes.
  • Assemblies linking 54 articles from the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child to British Values.
  • The promotion of our school Vision and Values.
  • The implementation of our school behaviour policy and inclusion policy, including a Restorative Justice approach.
  • Pupil Voice surveys.
  • Use of rewards and logical consequence sanctions.
  • School Council.
  • Extended curriculum e.g. trips, clubs, visitors and themed weeks.
  • Responsibilities such as Play Makers, Prefects and Head Pupils.
  • Celebration of work through displays, website, assemblies.
  • Provision of time for reflection and debate e.g. Circle-time.
  • Enrichment activities.

We also promote ‘British Values’ through our spiritual, moral, social and cultural education which permeates through the school’s curriculum and supports the development of the ‘whole child’.

We recognise that such development is most successful when those values and attitudes are promoted by all the staff and provide a model of behaviour for our pupils.

The curriculum in all phases offers broad and balanced opportunities.

The British Values are:

As a result of the promotion of British values, pupils are expected to develop:

  • An understanding of how citizens can influence decision-making through the democratic process;
  • An appreciation that living under the rule of law protects individual citizens and is essential for their wellbeing and safety;
  • An understanding that there is a separation of power between the executive and the judiciary, and that whilst some public bodies such as the police and the army can be held to account through Parliament, others such as the courts maintain independence;
  • An understanding that the freedom to choose and hold other faiths and beliefs is protected in law;
  • An acceptance that other people having different faiths and beliefs to oneself (or having none) should be accepted and tolerated, and should not be the cause of prejudicial or discriminatory behaviour.
  • An understanding of the importance of identifying and combatting discrimination.