Title: Early Reading Development Sheila Hentall Kym Scott
1Early Reading DevelopmentSheila HentallKym
Scott
- Wednesday 18th October 2006
- Friday 20th October 2006
2Early Reading Development
3Aims
- Update on recent developments.
- Clarify expectations on pace and progression
- Secure high quality learning and teaching of
phonics. - Support strategic leaders in planning for the
effective implementation of the recommendations
of the Rose Review
4The Rose Review
- It is no surprise to find that the main
ingredients for success in the teaching of
beginner readers are - a well trained teaching force
- well designed, systematic programmes of work that
are implemented thoroughly - incisive assessment of teaching and learning,
- and strong, supportive leadership
5Rose on Leadership
- Time and again, successful improvement within
schools and high standards of work are shown to
depend on the strength and quality of leadership
- Therefore, it is very important for all settings
and schools to make sure that at least one senior
member of staff is fully able to take the lead on
literacy, especially phonic work. - Among other things, this must include an
overview, well informed by monitoring, of the
total provision for literacy that can be drawn
upon to tackle inconsistent practice and deploy
resources to best effect.
6Beginning systematic phonics teaching
- Engaging young children in interesting and
- worthwhile pre-reading activities paves the
- way for the great majority to make a good
- start on systematic phonic work by the age
- of five.
- All that said, the introduction of phonic work
should always be a matter for principled,
professional judgement based on structured
observations and assessments of childrens
capabilities.
7Formal Phonics
- The term formal in the pejorative sense in
which phonic work is sometimes perceived is by no
means a fair reflection of the active,multi-sensor
y practice seen and advocated by the review for
starting young children on the road to reading.
8Letter names
- The teaching of letter names is often left
until after the sounds of letters have been
learned in the belief that it can be confusing
for children to have to learn both together.
However, research indicates that children often
learn letter names earlier than they learn letter
sounds and that five year olds who know more
letter names also know more letter sounds.
9Decodable Books
- Such books can help children develop confidence
and an appetite for reading. - The simple text in some recognised favourite
children's books can fulfil much the same
function as that of decodable books. Thus it may
be possible to use these texts in parallel, or in
place of them. - The use of decodable books should certainly not
deny children access to favourite books and
stories at any stage. - Much turns on the quality of the decodable books
available.
10Pace
- The sequence should be such that children have
every opportunity to acquire rapidly the
necessary phonic knowledge and skills to read
independently. - Most of the letter-sound correspondences,
including the consonant and vowel digraphs, can
be taught in the space of a few months at the
start of their first year at school.
11On Best Practice
- teaching relatively short, discrete daily
sessions, designed to progress from simple
elements to the more complex aspects of phonic
knowledge, skills and understanding. The best
teaching seen during the review was at a brisk
pace, fired children's interest, often by
engaging them in multi-sensory activities, drew
upon a mix of stimulating resources, and made
sure that they received praise for effort and
achievement.
12Multi-sensory work
- Multi-sensory activities featured strongly in
high quality phonic work - Multi-sensory approach almost always captured the
interest of boys as well as girls. A common
feature of the best work was that boys progress
and achievement did not lag behind that of girls
13Conclusions
- the review has concluded that the case for
systematic phonic work is overwhelming and much
strengthened by a synthetic approach.
14The Simple View of Reading
- A Conceptual Framework to Inform the Teaching of
Reading
15The searchlight model
Phonics (sound and spelling)
Grammaticalknowledge
Knowledge ofcontext
Text
Word recognition and graphic knowledge
Slide 5
16The Simple View of reading two distinct
processes
- Word Recognition
- a process by which words on the page can be
recognised and understood - time limited
- Learning to read
- Language comprehension
- a process by which both texts and spoken language
are interpreted and understood - continues throughout life
- Reading to learn
17The Simple View of reading
- Word Recognition
- to develop automaticity
- in reading words children
- Master the alphabetic code
- Apply their phonic knowledge and skills to de
code and encode - Develop a store of familiar words.
- Word recognition is set alongside
- Speaking and listening
- Phonemic awareness
- Vocabulary development
- Language comprehension
18The Simple View of Reading
19- The Early Reading Development Pilot
20Early Reading Development Pilot
- Carried out by PNS alongside Rose Review
- Involved 180 schools in 18 LAs
- Trialled new approaches to using Playing With
Sounds - Focused on increasing the pace at which phonics
is taught, with a view to progressing phonics
more effectively in the Foundation Stage - Focussed not just on phonics, but on
- improving provision for Communication,
- Language and Literacy in general within the
pilot - schools.
21Findings of the final national review of the
early reading development pilot (as given at
national conference 3/7/06)
- Children made greater than expected progress in
phonics and reading - Positive impact on childrens Personal, Social
and Emotional development - Evidence of impact on writing
- Evidence of boys being more involved in
self-initiated writing as a result of real and
purposeful activities
22- EAL children making good progress in phonics and
reading and significantly in vocabulary extension
- Teachers in pilot were more knowledgeable and
confident about how to teach and apply phonics in
reading and writing activities - Improved Assessment for Learning practices
- More opportunities being given to children to
apply their phonic knowledge - Children made significant progress where there
was Head Teacher support and effective
Foundation Stage practice in place
23- As a result schools have reviewed and raised
their expectations of progress in phonic
development, including the impact on children at
risk of underachievement and those with SEN - Practitioners reported that it is possible to
focus on childrens development without
compromising the wider principles underpinning
the Foundation Stage curriculum - The phonic audit to identify priorities for early
reading development, and the emphasis placed on
tracking pupils progress to match provision to
need, were welcomed and seen as strengths in the
design of the pilot
24- These findings and those from the Rose Review
support the conclusion that it is possible to
start early phonic work whilst still giving
children access to the full range of learning and
development opportunities in the Foundation Stage - Pilot will continue this year, under name CLLD.
10 schools in Lewisham will be part of this.
25- Using findings of the ERDP and Rose to support
practice
26- High quality, systematic phonic work should be
taught discretely. In practice this means
teaching relatively short, discrete daily
sessions, with the time distributed as judged
best by the practitioner - It should include a variety of related activities
that advance learning incrementally. - Phonic work for young children should be
multi-sensory in order to capture their interests
and sustain motivation and reinforce learning - Rose Review 2006
27The best teaching seen during the review was at
a brisk pace, fired childrens interest, often by
engaging them in multi-sensory activities, drew
upon a mix of stimulating resources, and made
sure that they received praise for effort and
achievement. Rose Review 2006
28Discuss in pairs
- How does the teaching of phonics within
- your school already incorporate the
- following points
- Multi-sensory
- Firing childrens interests
- Drawing upon a mix of stimulating resources?
29- The ERDP pilot found that successful discrete
phonics sessions incorporated these elements - REVISIT AND REVIEW
-
- TEACH
-
- PRACTISE
-
- APPLY
- PNS July 06
30- REVISIT AND REVIEW
- Recently and previously learned phoneme
- grapheme correspondences, or blending
- and segmenting skills as appropriate.
- This should be a very brief recap of recently
- learned skills and knowledge
31TEACH
- New phoneme-grapheme correspondences
- Skills of blending and segmenting.
- A brief, interactive game or activity to
- introduce new skills and knowledge
32PRACTISE
- New phoneme-grapheme correspondences
- Skills of blending and segmenting.
- Another brief game or activity which
- provides an opportunity to practise these
- skills and knowledge
33APPLY
- New knowledge and skills while
- reading/writing
- A brief experience which provides an
- opportunity for children to see how the new
- learning can be applied and contextualised eg
- by the practitioner writing a short sentence
- that includes a CVC word, or by children reading
a - phrase or short sentence that is phonically
decodable.
34DVD example of a direct teaching session
- While watching the DVD, note where the adult
does each of the four elements with the children - Revisit and Review
- Teach
- Practise
- Apply
35- Practitioners and teachers must exercise
professional judgements about organising teaching
groups to provide optimum conditions for
learning. In these respects, good practice in
phonic work simply reflects good practice in
general - Rose Review
36- Paving the way
- Getting ready for phonics
37The introduction of phonic work should always
be a matter for principled, professional
judgement, based on structured observations and
assessments of childrens capabilities Rose
Review March 2006
- Practitioners who know the children they teach
are able to judge whenchildren are able to
distinguish between sounds sufficiently to do
some direct teaching of letter/sound
correspondence (phonics) - Draft EYFS Framework May 2006
38Discuss in pairs
- What knowledge and skills need to be in place in
order for a child to be ready to begin on a
structured phonics programme?
39-
- Obviously, developing childrens positive
attitudes to literacy, in the broadest sense from
the earliest stage is very importantexploiting
play, story, songs and rhymes and providing lots
of opportunities , and time, to talk with
children about their experiences and feelings - Rose Review
40- Far more attention needs to be given, right
from the start, to promoting speaking and
listening skills, to make sure that children
build a good stock of words, learn to listen
attentively and to speak confidently and clearly - Rose Review
41- Learning and Teaching Communication, Language and
Literacy in the Early Years Foundation Stage
42Phonological awareness
- Ability to hear and discriminate general sounds,
speech sounds and patterns - Awareness of rhyme, rhythm and alliteration
- Understanding that words are composed of
sounds/phonemes - THROUGH
- Singing songs
- Responding to music
- Listening to rhymes
- Playing listening, rhyming, rhythmic and
alliterative - games
- Hearing rhyming, rhythmic and alliterative
stories - General speaking and listening experiences
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45- Training day 29th November
- Linking sounds to letters the early
- stages
- Pack from this training available
- Games to support phonological
- awareness
46Assessing childrens phonics skills and knowledge
47Practitioners should assess, in meaningful ways
- Recognition of letters (and groups of letters,
such as digraphs) - The ability to sound out phonemes
- The ability to hear and blend phonemes
- The reading of phonetically regular words
- The reading of some irregular words
- Teaching should then be adapted to take account
of the outcomes of this assessment.
48- Assessment during the Foundation Stage should
take full account of well informed observations
of childrens early language development - Rose Review 2006
49- Schedules, routines and activities MUST flow
with the childs needs, with practitioners
planning for individual children using sensitive
observational assessment. - THERE MUST BE NO TESTS FOR CHILDREN AT ANY STAGE
WITHIN EYFS. -
- Draft Early Years Foundation Stage Framework
- May 2006
50Assessment for learning is most effective when
- it takes account of the importance of learner
motivation - it is sensitive and constructive
- effective feedback is provided to children
- it develops learners capacity for
self-assessment - teaching is adjusted to take account of the
results of assessment
51Example of an assessment sheet for direct
teaching session
- Practitioners should continue to make both
spontaneous and planned observational jottings
around childrens significant achievements - This sheet should be used for direct teaching
(adult focus) sessions only - It should be used to help to plan the next steps
in learning for each child and may feed into a
class progress tracking sheet for phonics
52- Progression and pace in the teaching of phonics
- Phases
- Phonic progress tracking sheet
53Discuss in pairs
- Look at the phonic phases within the outline of
progression in your packs, focusing particularly
on phases two and three. - How do these expectations compare with your
schools current end of reception expectations?