Reading

 

Nursery

In Nursery, pupils develop the building blocks from which they will learn to read. Children are taught the ‘pre-phonics’ skills that they will need before moving on to the Read, Write, Inc. Phonics (RWI) scheme when they are ready. The pre-phonics skills align with RWI and help the children to learn speaking and listening skills; phonological (sound) awareness; and oral blending (being able to join two distinct sounds together). In addition to working on pre-phonics skills, we have a selection of nursery rhymes which are practised daily and learned by heart, as well as having daily story time which we enjoy together as a class.

 

Reception

Reception children build on the key reading skills developed in Nursery by learning to read through the Read, Write, Inc. (RWI) phonics scheme which teaches children phoneme-grapheme correspondence (matching sounds with the letter(s) that make the sound and vice-versa).

As children become more secure with their phonics knowledge, they will begin to practise their reading skills with phonics reading books which will be matched to their level. These books help the children to build on the phonics work that they do in class each day.

By now, the children have a home-reading book which is changed weekly and a ‘home/school’ reading diary where parents and staff can share comments about reading at home and in school.

Key Stage 1

In Key stage one, the good work of Nursery and Reception is continued. Reading is taught through phonics, story time, 1:1 reading and guided group sessions for those who need extra support. There is  still a strong emphasis on phonics (Read, Write, Inc.).

The main reading scheme is Read, Write, Inc and children’s phonic knowledge is assessed regularly.  Children are then given books appropriate to their own phonic level.

The children in Key Stage One also love their story time and guided reading sessions! Texts are selected to engage children, to foster a love of reading, to expose children to a diversity of authors and characters, and to develop reading fluency and comprehension skills.

Children who need additional support with their reading, will be supported through a variety of intervention sessions including additional RWI phonics sessions and Gateshead Reading Fluency interventions sessions – which have been developed by the local authority to develop the reading fluency skills of young readers.

Key Stage 2

In Key Stage Two, pupils have access to a wide variety of books in our school library. Children are given the opportunity to get two home-reader books which they are encouraged to take home daily: a levelled book to practise their reading skills and a reading for pleasure book which pupils can choose for themselves.

Whole class guided reading sessions continue throughout Key Stage Two. The texts used in Key Stage Two cover a wide-range of genres from a variety of authors and expose children to a diverse catalogue of fiction and non-fiction.

Moreover, in Year 5/6, children are able to access a Reading Plus account which helps pupils to improve their reading fluency, speed and comprehension through a range of targeted texts, comprehension quizzes and vocabulary lessons.

Children who need additional support with their reading will be supported in a variety of ways. In Year 3 & 4, children will have access to additional RWI phonics sessions and Gateshead Reading Fluency interventions where appropriate. In Year 5 & 6, children will have access to Better Reading Partnership (BRP) interventions and additional Reading Plus sessions where appropriate. Moreover, Reading Between the Lines is used throughout Key Stage Two to support children whose reading comprehension is weaker than their reading fluency.

Taller or shorter?

Following on from reading the story of ‘Superworm’ in choosing time the children made wands just like the evil lizard. We used our skills of measure and mathematical vocabulary to compare the wands to the size of the worms.

Mystery reader

We loved having our mystery reader in to visit our class, listening to the story ‘The Man on the Moon’. Thank you for sharing your story with us!

Magic beans on toast

The giant from ‘Jack and the Beanstalk’ invited us to his castle cafe for magic beans on toast. We had to take our own beans along to the cafe though, it is a good job we had been on a visit to TESCO the day before.

Freeze framing

We enjoyed reading our new story ‘The Storm Whale’ and freeze framed parts of the story to portray the emotions involved and the scenes the story were set in.

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