Title: Making Good Progress in KS2 English
1Making Good Progress in KS2 English and
mathematics Level 2 to 4
2Focusing on progression
- Key questions
- In what ways do we track for progression across
the school and in each class? - How is this information used to identify those
children who are making slow progress? - Which children and specific groups of children
are currently identified through our tracking? - What actions are we taking to support these
children?
3National Pupil Progression Chart (Level 4)
4National Pupil Progression Chart (Level 4)
5School Pupil Progression Chart
- Paste from RAISEonline English
- Instruction on adding pupil progression charts
from RAISEonline - Once you have logged onto RAISEonline and found
the Pupil Progression chart you want in your
presentation, you need to - On the select a format drop down menu, choose
Acrobat (PDF) file - Click on Export
- Click on Open
- Once you have the PDF open, click on tools,
select Select Zoom and click on Snapshot
tool. - Using the cursor select the area you want to copy
to your presentation. - When you let go of the left click on your mouse
it should say Selected area has been copied
Click ok. - Go to the power point slide, right-click on mouse
and select paste. - You can adjust the chart size using the circles
in each corner of the image
6School Pupil Progression Chart
- Paste from RAISEonline Mathematics
- Instruction on adding pupil progression charts
from RAISEonline - Once you have logged onto RAISEonline and found
the Pupil Progression chart you want in your
presentation, you need to - On the select a format drop down menu, choose
Acrobat (PDF) file - Click on Export
- Click on Open
- Once you have the PDF open, click on tools,
select Select Zoom and click on Snapshot
tool. - Using the cursor select the area you want to copy
to your presentation. - When you let go of the left click on your mouse
it should say Selected area has been copied
Click ok. - Go to the power point slide, right-click on mouse
and select paste. - You can adjust the chart size using the circles
in each corner of the image
7Discussion (1)
- Consider the national pupil progression charts
for Key - Stage 2 English and mathematics and the schools
- own charts
- How do the schools charts compare to the
national ones? - Who are the children in your class who are
potentially slow moving or falling behind? - What are some of the reasons for these pupils
making slow progress in English and/or
mathematics?
8Investigating progress in English and mathematics
at Key Stage 2 (1)
- The findings presented on subsequent slides arise
from investigations focusing on slow movers in
English and mathematics, identified in terms of
conversion from Level 2 at KS1 to Level 4 at KS2 - The schools involved in the investigations were
selected on the basis of their KS1 to KS2
conversion rates - A relatively small sample of 39 schools was chosen
9Investigating progress in English and mathematics
at Key Stage 2 (2)
- The investigations included
- Focused discussions with approximately 240
children in Year 4 and Year 6 - Discussions with headteachers, subject leaders
teachers - The findings have been cross-checked with
evidence obtained by Ofsted, the National
Strategies and the Training and Development
Agency (TDA) and appropriate actions agreed with
these partners
10Pen portrait of the slow moving children in
English (1)
- The children
- were often boys
- were generally well behaved
- displayed a positive approach to learning
- usually persevered with the task set, especially
when the task set was routine or of limited
challenge - lacked self-help strategies and relied on friends
for guidance or left the task incomplete
11Pen portrait of the slow moving children in
English (2)
- Children struggling to make progress from
- Level 2 to Level 4
- were described by their teachers as invisible
children, with the girls especially being quiet
and undemanding - were often (in the case of boys) bubbly, lively,
keen to respond to questions but unlikely to
reflect or think before doing so - when stuck they put up their hands and waited to
be noticed
12Pen portrait of slow movingchildren in
mathematics (1)
- The children
- were often girls
- were generally well behaved and had a positive
approach to learning - were often described as invisible children
- didnt like answering questions in front of the
class - tended to work on their own
- would sit with their hand up but not always be
noticed
13Pen portrait of the slow moving children in
mathematics (2)
- Children struggling to make progress from
- Level 2 to Level 4
- lacked self confidence
- judged how good they were by the number of ticks
and crosses in their books - usually persevered with the task set, especially
when it was routine and of limited challenge - produced neat work that was set out in the
required way
14Discussion (2)
- Do you have pupils in your class that fit these
profiles? - Which of the characteristics most closely match
those of the children in your class who are
potentially slow moving or falling behind?
15Slow moving pupils starting at Level 2 in
English (1)
- Do you have pupils who
- demonstrate a limited ability to bring together
all elements of writing (e.g. ideas, content,
structure, vocabulary choices, punctuation for
meaning) simultaneously and are generally
insecure in the planning of their writing? - have limited opportunities to engage in oral
rehearsal prior to writing? - have targets which are frequently focused on
simple secretarial skills, such as neat
handwriting? - are unaware that speaking and listening is a
skill that needs to be developed and practised? - Continued.
16Slow moving pupils starting at Level 2 in
English (2)
- Do you have pupils who
- demonstrate a lack of self-help strategies to
support independent learning? - demonstrate limited evidence of application of
literacy targets when working in other areas of
the curriculum? - do not engage with teacher feedback and are often
unclear about next steps for improvement when
moving from one level to the next?
17Slow moving pupils starting at Level 2 in
mathematics
- Do you have pupils who
- struggle to explain their thinking and methods?
- have difficulty in remembering and using
mathematical vocabulary? - lack flexibility with number, for example, they
struggle to identify related facts from those
they know? - tend to rely on one method when calculating and
solving - problems?
- struggle with problems, particularly those that
involve two or more steps? - lack self help strategies?
18Obstacles hindering progression from Level 2 to
Level 4 in English
- Typically pupils
- Tended to rely on a limited range of reading
strategies, for example picture clues and
sounding out - Had not developed wider and more advanced reading
skills, e.g. inference and deduction - Rarely read for pleasure
- Received less targeted intervention in Years 3
and 4 - Had developed an over-reliance on the support of
teaching assistants
19Obstacles hindering progression from Level 2 to
Level 4 in mathematics (1)
- Typically pupils
- were weak at mental calculation - they had few
mental calculation skills and were reluctant to
use them - had difficulty in keeping intermediate
information in their heads - had a preference for using formal written methods
which they considered better than mental methods,
but made mistakes
20Obstacles hindering progression from Level 2 to
Level 4 in mathematics (2)
- Typically pupils
- lacked images and models such as number lines to
help with visualising mathematics - experienced a low level of challenge and tended
to work within their comfort zone - developed a low appetite for risk taking
21Discussion (3)
- Which of the descriptions and obstacles to
progress are most pertinent to the pupils you
teach?
22What all slow moving pupils in Key Stage 2 need
in English (1)
- Direct instruction and modelling of how to plan
their writing within a range of contexts across
the curriculum, through focused teaching using
shared and guided writing approaches - Planned opportunities to develop oral rehearsal
throughout the writing process - High value curricular targets that are
appropriate to need, for example at Level 4, I
can organise my writing into clear sections or
paragraphs considering the purpose and audience - Planned opportunities to develop the conventions
of speaking and listening through a range of
activities that encourage extended talk rather
than one word answers -
continued.
23What all slow moving pupils in Key Stage 2 need
in English (2)
- A learning environment which promotes
independence and supports self help through
targeted and interactive displays, working walls,
etc - Explicit teaching of the range of ways they can
overcome barriers to progress in lessons, for
example by using displays, dictionaries, other
pupils, the internet, etc - An understanding of how targets relate from one
curriculum area to another, for example, a
sentence construction target will apply to
writing across the curriculum - Focused marking and oral feedback that clearly
indicates successes and clear next steps to
progress
24What all slow moving pupils in Key Stage 2 need
in mathematics (1)
- Activities and approaches to help engage pupils
in mathematical thinking - To use mathematical vocabulary and language to
express their explanations and thinking with
other pupils and their teacher in all mathematics
lessons - Confidence and greater flexibility with number
and calculation through shared discussion about
links and how alternative methods work
25What all slow moving pupils in Key Stage 2 need
in mathematics (2)
- To explore and focus on how and why different
methods work rather than just on the answer, e.g.
devising questions for a fixed answer, exploring
when statements are true and false, matching
linked facts - Time and support in developing independent
learning and self-help strategies, e.g. comparing
approaches when stuck, referring to displays,
etc.
26What pupils need to support progression in
English from Level 2 to Level 4
- Opportunities to develop a wide range of reading
strategies, through shared and guided reading, to
tackle unfamiliar texts successfully - Opportunities to develop higher order reading
skills, e.g. inference and deduction, through
targeted questioning and response in whole class
and guided group activities - To see reading as pleasurable and meaningful by
engaging with texts that provide a high level of
interest and appropriate challenge - Targeted and specific intervention at the point
of learning from both the class teacher and
teaching assistants - Opportunities to work independently or in
pairs/small groups without direct adult
supervision
27What pupils need to support progression in
mathematics from Level 2 to Level 4
- A greater focus on the use of mental calculation
strategies - To develop a range of mental calculation
strategies through guided teaching to help them
choose efficient methods - Support in deciding when a mental or written
method is more appropriate and why - To see, use and evaluate different approaches to
solving a problem - To use images and models to help with visualising
mathematics e.g. using number lines more flexibly - A greater level of challenge, including
experience of working in a range of different
groups - Support and encouragement to take risks so that
they are less anxious about always getting the
right answer
28Discussion (4)
- Next steps
- What do you think are the key issues arising from
this session for the school? - How can they be addressed at senior leader,
subject leader and class teacher levels?