All teaching of DT follows the design, make and evaluate cycle. Each stage is rooted in technical knowledge. The design process is rooted in real life, relevant contexts to give meaning to the children’s learning. While making,
children are given choice and a range of tools to choose freely from. During the evaluation process, children are given the opportunities to evaluate their own products against a design criteria. Each of these steps are
rooted in technical knowledge and vocabulary. We work hard to ensure that DT is taught to a high standard, where each of the stages are given equal weight. The DT curriculum is developed to show clear progression across the
key stages as they are passed up through each year group.
In KS1 this looks like:
Design: design should be rooted in real life, relevant contexts to give meaning to the learning.
Planned through appropriate formats: drawing, templates, talking and mock-ups.
Make: Children should be given a range of tools for their projects to choose from.
Children should use a wide range of materials and components: textiles, construction equipment and ingredients.
Evaluate: Evaluate existing projects and evaluate their own products against design criteria.
In KS2 this looks like:
Design: rooted in real life, relevant contexts to give meaning to the learning; researched designs based on functional, appealing products with purpose.
Planned by appropriate methods: annotated sketches, cross-sectional diagrams, prototypes, pattern pieces and computer aided design.
Make: children can select from a wider range of tools than KS1.
Children should use from and select a wider range of materials and components: textiles, construction equipment and ingredients.
2022 DT SUBJECT MAP