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Choosing the Right Curriculum Book

The right curriculum book is the one that matches how teaching actually happens day to day. Most schools choose between three core formats: exercise books, workbooks, and knowledge organisers. There is no single best option, but there is usually a clear best fit once you define purpose, subject use, and the workload impact.

Why choosing the right format matters?

Curriculum books are not neutral. The format you choose changes classroom behaviour, planning habits, and workload.
Choosing the wrong format usually creates predictable problems:

  • resources that look impressive but are underused
  • increased photocopying and sticking-inbooks that restrict teaching flexibility
  • inconsistency between classes and teachers
  • extra effort maintaining materials that never embed

Choosing well does the opposite. It removes friction.

The three main curriculum book formats

Most schools use one or a combination of:

  • Exercise books: space for pupil work
  • Workbooks: structured tasks plus space for answers
  • Knowledge organisers: reference and retrieval tools

They are not interchangeable. Each format is good at a different job.

When exercise books are the right choice

Exercise books are best when you want maximum flexibility and high daily use.
They suit:

  • daily lesson use
  • subjects with extended writing or working (English, humanities, many practical subjects)
  • teaching approaches where tasks vary lesson to lesson
  • schools prioritising consistency and ease of use over pre-printed structure

Exercise books work best when:

  • layouts are simple and repeatable
  • presentation and marking expectations are clear
  • teachers are not forced into sticking in sheets every lesson

Exercise books are usually the wrong choice if:

  • lessons rely heavily on repeated structured tasks
  • students regularly need guided prompts to reduce variation
  • the goal is to replace worksheets with something cohesive

When workbooks are the right choice

Workbooks are best when you want more structure in lessons and less reliance on worksheets.
They suit:

  • subjects with consistent task patterns or clear progression
  • units where questions and activities repeat across classes
  • teams aiming to standardise delivery without scripting teachers
  • scenarios where workload is inflated by constant printing and reformatting

Workbooks work best when:

  • they replace worksheets rather than add to them
  • there is enough space for real answers, not token boxes
  • content is selective, not textbook-like

Workbooks are usually the wrong choice if:

  • they lock teachers into one pace or one method
  • they become content-heavy and cluttered
  • updating content becomes so painful that nothing gets improved year to year

When knowledge organisers are the right choice

Knowledge organisers are best when the goal is clarity of what pupils must know and consistent retrieval practice.
They suit:

  • subjects where vocabulary, facts, dates, formulas, or key concepts matter
  • schools building routine retrieval across classes
  • trusts or departments aiming for consistent knowledge expectations

Knowledge organisers work best when:

  • they are concise and genuinely selective
  • layouts prioritise clarity over density
  • they are embedded into teaching routines, not handed out and forgotten

Knowledge organisers are usually the wrong choice if:

  • they try to replace teaching or act like mini textbooks
  • they are so crowded that pupils cannot use them independently
  • they are treated as a compliance document rather than a working tool

Common combinations that work in real schools

Most schools do not pick one format forever. Common effective combinations include:

Exercise books + knowledge organisers

  • exercise books capture learning as it happens
  • knowledge organisers support retrieval and revision

This is one of the most reliable setups because it keeps each tool doing its proper job.

Workbooks + exercise books

  • workbooks support structured tasks for a unit or term
  • exercise books take extended writing and flexible work

This prevents workbooks from being forced to do everything.

Knowledge organisers issued separately
Some schools keep organisers as separate booklets for easier updating. This works when:

  • updates are frequent
  • staff want a clean separation between reference and pupil work

The questions schools should ask before choosing

If you answer these honestly, the format usually becomes obvious.

  1. How will this be used in lessons, day to day?
    If the answer is “sometimes” or “when we remember”, the resource will not embed. Choose the simplest option that matches reality.
  2. Is the structure helping, or getting in the way?
    Structure is only good if it removes friction. If it adds steps, it will be bypassed.
  3. Does this replace something, or add to it?
    Workload reduces when curriculum books remove tasks (printing, sticking, reformatting). If the new book sits alongside the old system, workload goes up.
  4. How easy will it be to update?
    If updates are hard, they will not happen. That matters most for workbooks and knowledge organisers.
  5. Will pupils use this consistently without constant explanation?
    If the resource needs repeated explanation, the design is doing too much.

Practical considerations that should influence the decision

Updating content

  • Exercise books: easiest to keep stable
  • Workbooks: harder, because tasks and sequencing change
  • Knowledge organisers: often updated most frequently

Durability and handling

  • Exercise books: daily handling means durability matters most
  • Workbooks: shorter life cycle, but still need to survive use
  • Knowledge organisers: reference-heavy formats benefit from bindings that lie flat

Cost and replacement frequency
Cost is driven by:

  • page count
  • colour usage
  • binding choice
  • how often the book is replaced

A sensible approach is mixing formats so you pay for structure only where it genuinely earns its place.

Where schools usually start and how they evolve

Most schools change incrementally, not in one dramatic redesign.
Starting point (common and valid)

  • generic exercise books
  • photocopied worksheets
  • loose knowledge sheets

Incremental improvements that actually stick

  • custom covers for durability and subject identity
  • one or two high-impact internal pages (feedback, reference, success criteria)
  • short unit workbooks to replace repeated worksheet packs
  • concise knowledge organisers aligned to curriculum sequence

More structured approaches later

  • consistent workbooks aligned to sequencing and assessment
  • trust-wide consistency where it supports coherence
  • controlled variation by subject and phase

The point is not perfection. It is removing friction while the curriculum matures.

Common mistakes when choosing curriculum books

These are the traps that waste time and money.

  • choosing the most “feature-rich” format instead of the most usable
  • forcing one format across all subjects and phases
  • turning exercise books into cluttered pseudo-workbooks
  • creating workbooks that are too dense to complete in real lessons
  • building knowledge organisers that duplicate textbooks
  • ignoring update reality until year two, when everything is outdated

If a resource is hard to use or hard to maintain, it will not last.

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