Learning Pathways

Learning Pathways and the College Curriculum

At Camphill Wakefield, our curriculum is carefully designed to offer personalised and purposeful educational Journeys for young adults with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). Each of our curriculum pathways, Communication, Independence and Employability, responds to the diverse learning needs, strengths, and aspirations of our students. Rather than following a linear progression, these pathways are bespoke and dynamic, ensuring that every learner receives a meaningful and appropriate education, aligned with their individual goals and potential.  

Communication Pathway

The Communication curriculum supports our students to become confident, responsible and empowered communicators. It helps them develop the skills to express themselves, understand others and communicate with the wider world with confidence and emotional resilience.
Intent, Implementation and Impact

We want every young person to become confident, responsible, and able to communicate well with others. Our Communication curriculum supports learners to express themselves, manage their emotions, and become more independent as they prepare for adult life. 

We make learning personal and meaningful by: 

  • Teaching useful everyday communication skills such as listening, confidence, problem-solving, empathy and self-control 
  • Modelling positive communication throughout the day 
  • Linking learning to each learner’s interests and EHCP outcomes 
  • Giving real life experiences, workshops, case studies and practical activities 
  • Helping learners build a portfolio so they understand what they are working towards and celebrate progress 
  • Offering qualifications such as PSD, Functional Skills, Arts Award and Duke of Edinburgh where appropriate 

Learners will: 

  • Communicate their wishes and needs more clearly 
  • Keep themselves safe at home and / or in the community 
  • Become more confident and resilient 
  • Develop independence skills 
  • Make progress towards EHCP outcomes 
  • Gain meaningful qualifications that support future goals 

This curriculum helps learners grow into young adults who can take part successfully in their community, relationships, and future pathways. 

Independence Pathway

The Independence Pathway curriculum prepares our students to become responsible, confident, and empowered adults. It helps them build the independence and work‑related skills they need to take part in the wider world with confidence, emotional resilience, and a strong sense of ownership over their future.

Intent, Implementation and Impact

The intent of the Independence curriculum is to develop responsible, accountable and empowered young adults who can apply essential independence and work-related skills confidently and with emotional resilience. The curriculum aims to ensure that every learner develops the practical, social and cognitive skills needed to navigate real world situations, make informed choices, problem solve effectively, and take increasing ownership of their future pathways, both in life and employment.‑related skills confidently and with emotional resilience. The curriculum aims to ensure that every learner develops the practical, social and cognitive skills needed to navigate real‑world situations, make informed choices, problem‑solve effectively, and take increasing ownership of their future pathways, both in life and employment.

The curriculum is ambitious for all learners and provides highly personalised opportunities that prepare them for adulthood, community participation and progression into work or volunteering.

The Independence curriculum has been designed with a wide scope for differentiation and extensive reasonable adjustments so that every learner is challenged, supported and able to succeed. Learning is embedded in meaningful, real world contexts to help learners combine knowledge and skills into powerful composite outcomes.‑world contexts to help learners combine knowledge and skills into powerful composite outcomes.

Implementation is driven by the following key approaches:

  • Embedding transferable life and work skills—communication, listening, confidence, self-control, empathy, responsibility, humour, selfawareness, a positive attitude and finding solutions—in every session.‑control, empathy, responsibility, humour, self‑awareness, a positive attitude and finding solutions—in every session.
  • Staff modelling of independence skills continuously across the curriculum and wider college day.
  • Curriculum links to individual interests to promote engagement, relevance and ownership of learning.
  • Developing cultural capital to broaden horizons and equip learners for future success.
  • Challenging thinking and strengthening problem‑solving, encouraging learners to reflect, reason and plan.
  • Providing practical workshops, real‑life tasks and hands‑on experiences across all subjects.
  • Supporting understanding through ILP portfolios, using visual and physical evidence to help learners recognise what they are working towards, why it matters and how they are progressing.

Learners have access to personalised qualification pathways including Skills for Living and Work (Entry 1–Level 2), Functional Skills English and maths, Arts Award, and the Duke of Edinburgh Award. Unit plans and accreditation routes are tailored to each learner according to their EHCP outcomes, interests, previous achievements and aspirations.

The impact of the Independence curriculum is that learners:

  • develop the practical independence skills required to navigate everyday life safely and confidently
  • make meaningful progress towards their EHCP outcomes and ILP targets
  • build emotional resilience, self‑identity and confidence in their own abilities
  • apply problem‑solving skills in varied, real‑world situations
  • communicate their needs, choices and preferences clearly
  • contribute positively to their community through work, volunteering or social participation
  • demonstrate readiness for adult life, including employment pathways, relationships and independent living
  • achieve relevant qualifications that reflect their personalised learning journey

The curriculum empowers students to lead more independent, safe and fulfilling lives, equipped with the skills, knowledge and resilience needed for adulthood and future success.

Employability Pathway

The Employability curriculum prepares our students to understand their future options, make informed choices, and feel confident about the steps ahead. It helps them prepare for successful transitions into positive destinations, including employment, further learning and supported independent living.

Intent, Implementation and Impact

The intent of the Employability curriculum is to empower students to understand their future options, exercise meaningful choice, and make successful transitions into positive destinations including employment, further study, volunteering, and supported independent living.

The curriculum aims to prepare learners for the realities of the labour market by helping them develop the behaviours, attitudes, skills and resilience required to thrive in modern workplaces. Learners are supported to understand their aspirations, recognise their strengths, and plan clear steps toward sustainable employment and independent adulthood.

The Employability curriculum is designed with extensive differentiation and reasonable adjustments so that all students can be stretched, supported and challenged appropriately. Teaching embeds work-related knowledge within real-life contexts to help learners build strong, practical employment competencies.

Implementation of the Employability Curriculum is done through:

  1. Growth Mindset & Employability Behaviours
  • Embedding growth mindset, resilience, responsibility, and professional conduct into every session
  • Staff consistently modelling workplace behaviours such as punctuality, communication, teamwork and self‑management
  • Regular reflection and personal goal-setting to build confidence and strengthen intrinsic motivation
  1. Real‑World, Contextual Learning
  • Frequent use of real-life case studies, lived experiences and employer examples
  • Linking learning to students’ employment interests and pathways
  • Exploring cultural capital and the local/regional labour market
  • Connecting learning to real workplaces through visits, employer encounters, and vocational experiences
  1. Core Employability Skills

Students build transferable skills essential to employment:

  • collaboration
  • communication
  • self‑management
  • creative problem solving
  • dealing with barriers and challenges
  • making informed decisions about work and life

These are continually practised across the curriculum and on work placements.

  1. Work Placement & Job Coaching

At least 30% of the Employability curriculum is delivered through high‑quality work placements with employers aligned to student’s aspirations and work preferences. Students are supported by college job coaches to develop workplace competence, independence, and confidence.

  1. Personalised Qualifications

Students may work towards:

  • Skills for Living and Work (E1–L2)
  • Functional Skills English and maths (E1–L2)
  • Duke of Edinburgh Award (Bronze–Gold)

Unit plans are personalised and directly linked to:

  • Students’ employment aspirations
  • Vocational profiles – skills, attributes, needs and preferences
  • EHCP outcomes
  • Prior qualifications
  • Individual strengths and interests
  1. ILP Portfolio Development

Students develop ILP portfolios containing visual and physical evidence of:

  • what they are working towards
  • why they are working towards it
  • how they are progressing

This supports reflection, self‑awareness and readiness for post‑college destinations.

The impact of the Employability curriculum is that students become empowered, informed and work‑ready young adults who understand how to pursue meaningful employment and independent living.

Students will be able to:

Employment

  • understand local labour market opportunities
  • make informed decisions about work, training and future pathways
  • demonstrate workplace behaviours such as reliability, communication and teamwork
  • progress into part-time employment, supported internships, apprenticeships or further vocational study
  • overcome barriers and advocate for their needs in professional contexts

Independent Living

  • understand their options for supported independent living
  • demonstrate confidence travelling independently or accessing travel support
  • keep themselves safe at home, at work, online and in the community

Community Contribution

  • engage with their community through volunteering, work placements and employer partnerships
  • respectfully celebrate differences and demonstrate cultural awareness
  • connect meaningfully with others in social and professional settings

Personal Growth & Motivation

  • develop intrinsic motivation needed for lifelong progression
  • recognise their strengths and future potential
  • set realistic goals and take responsibility for achieving them

Positive Destinations

Students leave the Employability pathway ready to transition to next steps that are meaningful to them, including:

  • part-time work
  • supported internships
  • vocational programmes
  • further employment-focused study
  • supported independent living
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