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English

Phonics

 

As soon as the children join us in Nursery, they are exposed to a wide range of Phase One phonic activities that focus on general sound discrimination, rhythm and rhyme, alliteration, voice sounds and oral blending and segmenting. This prepares them for the next stage of the phonics journey. In Reception and Key Stage 1 we follow the GES Simply Letters and Sounds synthetic systematic phonics programme with daily phonics sessions enabling children to learn quickly, building on and consolidating prior knowledge day-by-day. We provide daily ‘keep up’ sessions for children who have found that day’s learning tricky. In the early stages of learning to read, children take home fully decodable reading books that are carefully matched to their phonic knowledge and mirror their progression through the scheme.

 

Through our GES Simply Letters and Sounds, children experience systematic, synthetic phonics taught with fidelity, consistency and continuity through EYFS to Year 2. The daily phonics session in each year group follows the review, teach, practice and apply method of teaching, providing opportunities for children to recap and over learn phonics to embed long term learning. 

 

Clear term-by-term expectations of progress from Reception to Year 2, provide opportunities for class teachers to assess pupils’ letter-sound knowledge and word reading skills, enabling targeted intervention to take place to close gaps quickly. Children are well-versed in the use of technical vocabulary in learning using words such as phoneme, digraph, trigraph and grapheme linking directly into our focus on oracy. Phonics lessons are taught daily, with the opportunity for children to read a decodable text in every lesson, right from the very beginning of phonics teaching. 

 

Phonics lessons are of the highest standard. Staff training takes place regularly to ensure high quality teaching and aim to reduce the amount of extra support needed. Lessons ensure those who may be falling behind are identified immediately and receive daily targeted support from their class teacher, within the lesson as well as extra daily practice. Children read texts and books both at home and at school that closely match the letter-sound correspondence taught. Children transfer their phonics and reading skills in all areas of the curriculum. In line with National Curriculum requirements, children are encouraged to re-read texts to build fluency and practice reading books at home that they have read at school. Once pupils are able to confidently read unfamiliar words children are encouraged to read wider literature. 

 

Children will have a clear love of reading and confidence in reading unfamiliar words, applying these skills to all areas of the curriculum. Through carefully implemented learning activities, pupils will develop reading expertise to decode confidently and to derive meaning through written word. Through phonics, children will become life-long readers and develop a love of reading, having been exposed to a wide range of texts including instructions, non-fiction texts and stories during the reading a decodable text section of phonics lessons. 

 

Pupil’s reading skills and vocabulary knowledge, when assessed by the class teacher as part of an ongoing process, throughout lessons and more formally on a half-termly basis, will show that they build on their developing phonics knowledge to decode unfamiliar words. Use of Essential Letters and Sounds assessments enable the class teacher and curriculum lead to measure impact and adapt phonics intervention and support where necessary.

 

Long term plans, showing the progression of skills and knowledge and the content taught in Phonics and Early Reading can be found below: 

Blend: 

To draw individual sounds together to pronounce a word. Blending is a skill used for reading.

 

Segmenting: 

To split up a word into its individual phonemes in order to spell it: for example, the word ‘cat’ has three phonemes c/a/t. Children are asked to count the individual sounds in the word to help them to spell it. Segmenting is used for writing.

 

Phoneme: 

The smallest single identifiable sound in a word. For example, in the word 'cat' there are three phonemes c/a/t.

 

Grapheme: 

The written representation of a sound. 

 

Grapheme-Phoneme-Correspondence (GPC): 

The relationship between sounds and the letters which represent those sounds; also known as ‘letter–sound correspondence’.

 

Digraph: 

Two letters making one sound. For example, /sh/ in the word 'shop'. 

 

Trigraph: 

Three letters making one sound. For example, /igh/ in the word 'night'. 

 

Split digraph: two vowel letters split but are split by one or more consonants. For example, /a-e/ in the word 'cake'.

 

Decoding: Extracting meaning from symbols. In the case of reading, the symbols are letters, which are decoded into words.

 

Encoding: Writing involves encoding: communicating meaning by creating symbols (letters to make words) on a page. 


Harder to Read and Spell Words: Words that children will find harder to read and spell as they will not have been taught the relevant GPCs. Sometimes these are Common Exception (I, the, no, go, int

English Curriculum

 

Intent, Implementation and Impact

Intent

 

At St Paul’s Church of England School, we intend to promote a love of reading and the English language that is long lasting and effectively prepares our children for adulthood and the world beyond our school.

Staff aspire for all children to read fluently by the end of Key Stage One, in order for them to build their basic skills as they progress through Key Stage Two. Our chosen phonics scheme, Essential Letters and Sounds – which is government validated (www.essentiallettersandsounds.org), is taught daily in Reception, Year 1 and Year 2 and gives children regular opportunities to access decodable texts that are matched to their growing phonics knowledge.

At St Paul’s, we have introduced the CLPE English curriculum, which places rich and diverse texts at the centre of our children’s learning: texts that act as a catalyst for purposeful and creative writing opportunities across a variety of genres. Teachers use the scaffolding provided by the CLPE to design creative and innovative units of work that allow children to read, gather content, plan, write and edit pieces of work that showcase skills that spiral upwards from entry.

Our daily English curriculum is supplemented with events throughout the year that celebrate reading, oracy and seek to enrich our children’s cultural capital and knowledge and understanding of the world in which they live.

 

Implementation

Teachers at St Paul’s are committed to designing inspiring and inclusive units of work that reflect the ever changing needs of our children.

We have introduced the CLPE curriculum to provide our teachers with the scaffolding to innovate, using a variety of texts as a starting point.

Our teaching sequences are broken up into four distinct parts: Immersion, Gathering content, planning and writing. Each part aims to build on the last, developing skills and ending in a published piece of writing that reflects national curriculum objectives.

In the immersion phase, children will be introduced to a text and will read, sequence, act out explore and analyse the different features that each genre contains. Our children will participate in drama, poetry recital and performance utilising a selection of CLPE teaching approaches.

Children gather content by practicing the key skills needed for success in their main piece of writing. This will often include shorter writing opportunities such as character and setting descriptions, couplets and rhyming words. A key priority of the school is to develop children’s vocabulary and standard English. Teachers explicitly teach key vocabulary throughout the immersion and gathering content phases.

Using the content that the children have brought together, they will enter the planning phase where children will be exposed to a number of different planning structures and formats. As they progress through their school journey, staff aspire for children to make planning choices independently, based on the genre and purpose of the text. During the planning phase, teachers will utilise a variety of teaching techniques such as shared writing and joint composition to model high quality writing outcomes.

Children then enter a phase of writing which includes drafting, re drafting and editing their work, responding to a combination of teacher and peer feedback. 

Work is then published and shared with their peers when it is displayed around our school and in their classrooms. The diagram below shows the sequence overview that teachers use.

 

Teachers use the national curriculum to ascertain what content children will learn to utilise. As children progress through the school, teachers build on the skills that have been previously taught (spiral) in order to deepen the children’s understanding.

Impact

Children produce high quality pieces of work at the end of each teaching sequence and teachers clearly show what work has been completed independently. They use a range of assessment for learning techniques to ascertain children’s understanding. Children will show their understanding in a variety ways including written work, debate, performance and pupil voice. Teachers listen to children read on a regular basis and promote a love of reading by sharing a class text daily. Teachers encourage children to discuss their reading with enthusiasm in order to create and scholarly and studious approach that makes the world accessible to all.