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Literacy Workshop

Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

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Page 1: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Literacy Workshop

Page 2: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Areas of Literacy

• Reading• Speaking and Listening • Writing

Page 3: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Reading activity Can you read this?

I cnduo't bvleiee taht I culod aulaclty uesdtannrd waht I was

rdnaieg. Unisg the icndeblire pweor of the hmuan mnid,

aocdcrnig to rseecrah at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it dseno't

mttaer in waht oderr the lterets in a wrod are, the olny

irpoamtnt tihng is taht the frsit and lsat ltteer be in the rhgit

pclae. The rset can be a taotl mses and you can sitll raed it

whoutit a pboerlm. Tihs is bucseae the huamn mnid deos

not raed ervey ltteer by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.

Aaznmig, huh?

Page 4: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Reading‘Children are made readers on the laps of their parents’

Emilie Buchwald

• Teaching reading: phonics

• Shared reading (Big books/SMARTboard)

• Guided reading

• Genres: Fiction, non-fiction, poetry, plays

• Individual reading books

• Library books

Page 5: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

PHONICS

Pupils in Year 1 and 2 are taught phonics for 20 minutes every day

We use the ‘synthetic phonics’ approach

(teach letter sounds then used to ‘decode’ words)Phonics teaching is supported by our

phonics-based ‘Oxford Reading Tree’ reading scheme

Page 6: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

READING AT HOME

As parents, you hold the key to helping your child become a confident, successful reader.

The majority of reading your child does takes place at home and your help can determine how much they progress as readers.

Page 7: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Reading Supporting your child at home …

• Focus on letter sounds and names

• Choose books that are interesting to your child

• Provide a comfortable area for reading enjoyment

• Set a routine time for reading that’s not assigned,

eg. at bed time or after dinner.

• Reading Games

Page 8: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Reading Supporting your child at

home

Give them time, if your child mispronounces do not interrupt immediately, allow time for

self correction. Encourage your child to work out unfamiliar

words by using picture clues, sounding out or reading on to see what word would make

sense. Remember! there is more to being a good reader than just being able to read the words

accurately.

Page 9: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

WHERE DOES PHONICS FIT IN?

Once a child can work out the words (decode) he can then begin to sort out the message (comprehend).

If he can’t decode the words, he can’t begin to understand.

That’s where phonics comes in…

Page 10: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Reading Group role play: Using the text, role play a ‘parent and a child’ with the person next to you. The ‘parent’ will ask each of the five fingers questions to the ‘child’, who answers them based on the story they have just read. Questions: • What happened at the beginning of the story?• Who are the main characters?• What was the problem they needed to solve?• What happened in the story? (Ask about beginning, middle, and end)• How did they solve the problem?

Page 11: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

HIGHER ORDER READING SKILLS

1) Evidence from text2) Sequencing events3) Understanding of vocabulary4) Deduction5) Inference6) Justification7) Recognise authorial choice / voice8) Express opinions / evaluating

Page 12: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Speaking and Listening ‘If you can’t say it, you can’t

write it’ The Teacher Foundation

• Talking partners

• Circle time

• Focused discussion tasks

• Talk homework

• Drama

• Role-play area

• Adult modeling

Page 13: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Speaking and ListeningActivity time …

Talking partners

Turn to the person next to you and discuss the following

question …..

Page 14: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Speaking and Listening Supporting your child at home …

Talk to your child about the following:

• Use Weekly Learning Review to talk about school

• How they are feeling

• What they like

• Events and upcoming plans

• Ask questions and encourage your child to ask

questions.

Page 15: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Writing‘The act of writing brings with it a sense of discovery, of discovering on the page something you didn't know you knew until you wrote it.’

Charles Ghigna

• Teaching writing: mark-making, experiment with letters

• Shared writing

• Guided writing

• Writing for a purpose

• Different genres

• Handwriting

Page 16: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Writing Encouraging your child to write at home …• Adult model writing (Shopping lists, invitations, cards)

• Encourage child to write…

• Encourage use of lower case..

Page 17: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

VCOP

VOCABULARY – Should be ‘ambitious’CONNECTIVES/CONJUNCTIONS – vary sentence

length and complexityOPENINGS – children need to use different ways of

starting sentences and paragraphsPUNCTUATION – from Y1: Introduction to capital

letters, full stops, question marks and exclamation marks to demarcate sentences

Capital letters for names and for the personal pronoun I

Page 18: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Y2

Punctuation continued

Use of capital letters, full stops, question marks and exclamation marks to demarcate sentences

Commas to separate items in a list Apostrophes to mark where letters

are missing in spelling

Page 19: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Y3

Punctuation Continued

Introduction to inverted commas to punctuate direct speech

Y4:Use of inverted commas and other punctuation to

indicate direct speech e.g. a comma after the reporting clause; end punctuation within inverted commas (e.g. The conductor shouted, “Sit down!”)

Apostrophes to mark singular and plural possession (e.g. the girl’s name, the girls’ names)

Page 20: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Y5

Punctuation continued

Brackets, dashes or commas to indicate parenthesis Use of commas to clarify meaning or avoid ambiguity

Y6: Use of the semi-colon, colon and dash to mark the boundary between independent clauses (e.g. It’s raining; I’m fed up)

Use of the colon to introduce a list Punctuation of bullet points to list information How hyphens can be used to avoid ambiguity (e.g.

man eating shark versus man-eating shark, or recover versus re-cover)

Page 21: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

ASSESSMENT

Y1 Phonics ScreeningY2 phonics ScreeningY2 SPAG testY6 SPAG testFormative teacher assessment -

changingStandardised testsSATs and Optional SATs

Page 22: Literacy Workshop. Areas of Literacy Reading Speaking and Listening Writing

Thank you for coming

Any questions?