English Intent
Reading
Reading is the key to all learning at Glade.
We believe that in order to live a safe, healthy and fulfilling life, reading is fundamental. Reading is not only important in order to function in society, but can also be important to people’s well-being and mental health as a wonderful recreational activity. When they reach high school, a high level of reading ability enables them to confidently access the learning expectations, not only in English but all subjects they are expected to undertake. We believe that successful and confident children have the tools to be able to live life to the full, and reading is key to this.
Reading is the key to learning at Glade.
We therefore put reading at the centre of learning at Glade Academy. A love of reading is shared from their first day at school through daily storytelling sessions. Children are taught to read through systematic, engaging phonics lessons which begin in our reception class on day one. Children then experience a wide variety of texts and genres through many different learning experiences, including storytelling, shared reading, individual reading, drama and digital media. English writing topics are based on stories by well-known authors and the children are given time to immerse themselves in the story and get to know the characters and story format. Children also take home reading books, which are carefully matched to their reading ability, to read and share with their parents and carers. Reading at home is rewarded by the giving of certificates and prizes for achieving various standards.
Writing
Writing is an important life skill for being able to function in society. At high school, clear legible handwriting is expected in order to be able to meet the demands of KS3 work and homework. Successful and confident children are therefore able to write for many different purposes.
It is our vision that every child will learn to write by being given real and exciting materials and opportunities. We will show and explain everyday occurrences to the children and inspire them to write about them. We will share excellent writing to inspire children to emulate styles. We encourage children to read their work for enjoyment, to read it aloud to others, and we provide audiences for their writing. We want children to have an understanding that writing has a real purpose and that word choice and style can bring about change.
We teach children to follow the writing process:
- Key stage 1: Plan – draft – edit and improve – publish
- Key stage 2: Plan – draft – edit and improve – proofread – publish
Children are encouraged to both self and peer-assess their work, particularly focusing on the next steps they need to improve.
We teach children handwriting at Glade. This begins with print in reception, then moves on to learn to join in year one, and continues through the rest of the school. We believe that a fluent writing script should be developed early as we believe that children with a fluent script are better able to focus on the content rather than the mechanics of their writing, which is why we move to embed this as soon as possible.
English Implementation
At Glade, we believe it is not only important to teach the conscious act of reading or decoding, which is done through phonics sessions in EYFS & KS1 and phonic-based spelling sessions in KS2, but also subconscious comprehension: the links we make with other stories; the predicting that as adults we are familiar with; and reflection on characters and their actions.
We use Fred's teaching reading, 3 times a week, to teach this through high-quality texts and extracts that are engaging and relevant.
To further enhance our children’s love of reading, each class has a selection of books which children choose from and are then read to the children at the end of the day. This gives children opportunities to explore different types of fiction books and transform their understanding through the teachers' skilful performance.
Impact
In lessons:
Pupils are assessed by the class teacher, e.g.:
- Through mini whiteboards during mini plenaries;
- By their responses in games or activities;
- By their responses in written work.
After lessons:
The subject leader monitors the effective delivery of the English curriculum by:
- Evidence gathering through speaking to children about what they have learnt and looking at their books;
- Looking at planning for the medium and short-term;
- Observing children in lessons;
- Completing pupil perception interviews;
- Reviewing PIXL data.
- Analysing the teacher assessments on Pupil Asset, including reading age and reading fluency scores.