CurricuLLM can help you see how your lessons or assessments link to bigger themes that are part of many subjects, like sustainability or intercultural understanding.
Why this matters
Cross-curriculum priorities are meant to show up in lots of subjects, not just one. With CurricuLLM you can:
- Show how your teaching connects to wider important ideas.
- Give students richer learning experiences.
- Make sure you’re covering areas schools often value.
How to use it
- Type your lesson or task into CurricuLLM in simple language.
- Example: “Students will investigate renewable energy sources and present their findings.”
- Ask about cross-curriculum priorities.
- Example: “Which cross-curriculum priorities could this task include?”
- Check the suggestions and decide how to highlight those links in your teaching.
- Example: A science task on renewable energy could link to sustainability. A history task could link to intercultural understanding.
Teacher tips
- Use this when planning new units. It’s easier to include priorities from the start than to add them later.
- Even if your subject doesn’t clearly connect, CurricuLLM can suggest creative ideas.
- Not every lesson has to include every priority. Aim for balance across the term or year.
Easy way to think about it
Cross-curriculum priorities are like threads in a piece of fabric. CurricuLLM helps you see which threads are already in your lesson and which ones you could add.