Design Technology and Food

Good design is innovative. Good design must be useful. Good design is aesthetic design. Good design makes a product understandable. Good design is honest. Good design is unobtrusive. Good design is long-lasting. Good design is consistent in every detail. Good design is environmentally friendly. And last but not least, good design is as little design as possible.” Dieter Rams  

“Good design is like a refrigerator - when it works, no one notices, but when it doesn’t, it sure stinks.” Irene Au  


Curriculum Principles

We aim to have acurriculum which will allow students to becomeself motivatedandconfidentlearners,who can workindependentlyand aspart of a team. Our main aim is toensure that studentsdeveloptechnicalandpracticalcompetencies,as well as the widersoftskills valued by employers.Ourpriority is for students to be problem solvers who arenot afraid of making mistakes.  We hope our students will become responsible citizens who make a positive contribution to society. Food enables pupils to develop a love of food, understanding where food comes from, how to cook a range of dishes safely and hygienically and to apply their knowledge of healthy eating and nutrition to their own lives.  


Curriculum Features   

We firmly believe that students learn best bydoingand by allowing them to experiment and take risks, in a safe and positive learning environment.This is achieved through imaginative teaching that embraces new technologies and resembles modern industrial processes, whilst retaining the best of traditional practices. At the heart of this, is the desire to deliver a curriculum in which studentsexpress creativity through designsandproducehigh quality outcomes.Students must learn aboutdesigners and their work, especially British designers. They also learn about the importance of managing materials and ingredients to become more established food practitioners and technologists.  

Students areable to improvise, adapt and overcome problems. Students feel supported and secure in making mistakes, while they aim for excellence students are supported and do not feel they have failed if problems occur.  Consistently good numbers of students select courses in technology and food at GCSE and we have enoughhigh-qualitystudents to offer courses at KS5.   

We enable students to combine their designing and making skills with knowledge and understanding, in order to design, make, analyse and evaluate products of high quality. Students express their own creativity through their making activitiesand are moresocially confident to give their opinions. Collaborative skills are honed so they can work with a client.   

Opportunitiesto useother subjects in Design and Technology such as Maths,Science,Business Studies,History as well asotherextra-curricular clubs such as Young Designers, Textile design orSTEMclub.  The Design and Technology curriculum allows students to develop a set of transferable skills they can enjoy in school and use in their future working lives. 

Rossett - DT - 2024 (6)Career Relevance   

The study of Design & Technology opens doors to many different career opportunities.  Employers across many industries value the skills learnt working through the design process.  These skills of independent research, problem solving, modelling, CAD, workflow and resilience used in Design & Technology also help students to work confidently as they work through university and college courses.  

There are many future careers links – engineering, architecture, product design, graphic design, fashion design, animation, creative director, theatre design, food technologist, food photography, dietician, chef, events planner, food product development, food scientist. 

DT and Food Curriculum Sequencing Rationale


Curriculum Maps

Year 7 DT and Food

Year 7 DT and Food

Year 9 DT and Food

Year 10 DT and Food

Year 11 DT and Food

Year 12 DT and Food

Year 13 DT and Food

Rossett - Food Tech - 2024 (3)

Rossett - Home Economics - 2023 (4)