WHY CURRICULUM BREADTH MATTERS: The Benefits of Claremont’s Through School Approach Matthew Jelley, Head of Claremont’s Junior School (pictured right), explores why curriculum breadth throughout the learning journey is central to pupil success, drawing on what pupils say and what sets Claremont’s through school approach apart.
“Claremont is a school where girls and boys begin in pre-nursery at the age of two and grow, learn and thrive together all the way through to sixth form, and it is an incredibly exciting place for all of us to be: For me, my team of dedicated teachers, and most importantly, for the children. We are part of a seamless journey filled with opportunity, curiosity and limitless potential. Claremont has a longstanding commitment and successful history of delivering a forward-thinking, child centred education where we nurture the girls and boys in our care. We are passionate about offering a rich and diverse range of opportunities that extend well beyond the classroom, building the foundations for confidence, curiosity and success at every stage of school life and beyond. Our families consistently highlight the nurturing environment, our range of academic subjects on offer and the richness and variety of our co-curricular programme 38
as defining strengths of the school*. The parental view is important, but I wanted to hear directly from our junior school pupils about what they value most in their learning experiences at Claremont, and to reflect on what it is about our approach that makes this possible. So, I asked some of our current Year 6 pupils to reflect on what had defined their journey throughout their younger years at Claremont - the junior school educates children from age 2 - 11and what they are most looking forward to as they prepare for the transition into Claremont’s senior school later this year. What struck me was the consistency in their responses…
“What have you enjoyed?” “… the range of subjects we can study and the clubs we can be involved in.” “What are you looking forward to?” “… to get our teeth into new subjects and clubs offered in senior school”. I’ve long believed that busy children are happier children (even if sometimes they disagree when the alternative is homework or chores…!) Engagement and purpose are essential for healthy self esteem and a wider feeling of contentment, and the spinoff benefits are numerous, with the development of interpersonal skills and communication that can come about naturally through collaborative activity.
*RS Academics Parent Survey 2026. Features compared to benchmarks from other day schools.
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And that’s why schools, particularly at primary level, need to develop a culture of busy-ness - in lessons, at recreational time, even in the school holidays, and evidently from our Year 6 feedback, the children wholly endorse this approach too! This is why, at Claremont, we believe in a curriculum – and for us the curriculum encompasses all activity that we organise from the time children enter the school site to the time they leave, not just “lessons” – that is underpinned by the aim to be “broader for longer”. Parent feedback places both our junior and senior schools above other independent day schools for the range of academic subjects offered*, underlining the strength and continuity of our throughschool curriculum. What does this look like in the academic curriculum at Claremont for younger children? Here, children benefit from subject specialist lessons in art, design, music, drama, dance, French, Spanish, computing, PE and sport, Forest School and science in their time through junior school with many of those subjects delivered to our youngest children from the age of 2. The junior co-curricular programme is equally broad – designed for children of every age, ability and interest, children can find something to excite and enthuse and provide meaningful engagement – go-karting club, lacrosse, music composition, podcast-
ing, gardening, running, swimming, crafting, debating, stretch and challenge. The list goes on... So, why does the broader for longer mantra matter and where’s the evidence behind the strategy? In 2025, Claremont achieved its strongest A
level results to date, alongside impressive value added at GCSE, with pupils performing almost a full grade above nationally standardised predictions per subject. We believe this is closely linked to sustaining a broad and rich curriculum for as long as possible. Developing in pupils a sense of purpose, happiness and cultivating a mindset where busier = happier and more successful. While the education system often narrows as children move through the stages, at Claremont we are committed to preserving variety for as long as possible, inspiring pupils to explore widely and discover their ‘thing’. In an AI world where transferable skills matter, Claremont challenges the view that early test preparation is the best route through the transition from primary to secondary school. Instead, we prioritise a rich, balanced curriculum that favours depth and discovery over prepping our children to jump through the hoops of testing at 11+. We believe this approach
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provides the strongest foundation for future academic success, and the evidence supports it. And as a through school, there is additional benefit. Through our carefully managed transitions to the senior school, and with a thorough understanding of each and every child, staff support the journey from early years into key stage one, to two, and beyond, genuinely getting to know each child and fostering within them a love for learning. We can seek out and deliver those wow moments knowing “what makes them tick”, to inspire and fill our children with a sense of awe and wonder, and to develop a sophisticated and secure understanding of self, others and the world in which we live.
Thames Ditton
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