Intent – What is the purpose of our English curriculum?
At Tranmere Park Primary we aim to develop a love for the English language in its written and spoken forms. We have a rigorous and well-organised curriculum that provides purposeful opportunities for reading, writing and the development of oracy skills. By making these experiences meaningful and exciting, we foster a love of the subject and encourage our children to develop the skills necessary to succeed.
They are taught to: communicate effectively through spoken language and writing, to listen with understanding, and to be enthusiastic, knowledgeable readers. We recognise English as an essential core subject and as a pre-requisite for social and academic progress. We aim to provide an environment which promotes language development, which is stimulating and characterised by high expectations of success for every child.
Through a clear pathway of progression from EYFS to Y6, we aim to ensure all children reach their full potential in English and acquire a secure knowledge-base in preparation for KS3 and beyond. Children’s individual needs and abilities are recognised and developed in a caring and supportive environment, in partnership with parents.
Our Children will: |
Our Teachers will: |
– Read easily, fluently and with good understanding
– Develop a habit of reading widely and often, for both pleasure and information – Develop their oracy skills through the development of spoken language, vocabulary, questioning and collaboration with their peers – Possess highly positive attitudes towards reading, writing and oracy – Write clearly, accurately and coherently – Adapt their language and style for writing in a range of contexts, purposes and audiences -Have high expectations of their own handwriting and presentation of their work |
– Provide a progressive and challenging curriculum- Expose pupils to a wide range of literature/texts that both challenge and inspire the pupils beyond the classroom
– Provide regular opportunities for children to enhance their spoken language skills across the curriculum – Use a range of different question techniques to allow pupils to expand on their own ideas and develop their vocabulary – Provide the children with a rich curriculum of carefully crafted lessons that ensures time for practise and consolidation – Provide opportunities for our children to develop their writing, think creatively, structure their work and use vocabulary in a way that is appropriate to the audience, increase their confidence when presenting work orally, and develop a love of reading beyond the classroom – Model accurate letter formation |
Implementation – How do we do it?
The Learning Journey
Reading At Tranmere Park Primary we recognise that reading is at the heart of a great curriculum, so we ensure our children have many opportunities for reading in school. We follow the Fisher Family Trust (FFT) Success for All Phonics programme, a complete Systematic Synthetic Phonics programme validated by the DFE. This programme is taught daily from the beginning of Reception to the end of KS1. The daily lesson plans follow the ‘review, teach, practise, apply’ approach, and cover all the main Grapheme-Phoneme Correspondences (GPCs) and Common Exception Words (CEWs) to provide children with the phonics knowledge and skills required for success. Daily reading lessons, from ‘Success for All Phonics’ also take place across Reception and KS1 to enable our children to apply their phonic knowledge to the skill of reading. These ‘shared reader lessons’ have been carefully aligned to be used alongside the phonics scheme and allow children to practise new phonics learning as well as the consolidation of previous learning. These texts are sent home on a weekly basis to enable children to consolidate and celebrate their phonics learning at home. In addition to our phonics teachings, EYFS, KS1 and LKS2, children read independently on a regular basis to an adult in school. In UKS2, children who need more individual reading support will receive help on a one-to-one or small group basis. In EYFS and KS1, children access a wide range of books from the Oxford University Press. These include Floppy’s Phonics, Traditional Tales and Project X. These books are finely levelled and phonetically matched, building reading confidence and stamina. The Tree Tops reading scheme is used in KS2 to support their reading journey, as well as a wide range of chapter books for the children to choose from. Whole class reading in Year 1 to Year 6 is taught through weekly reading lessons, also known as RIC sessions (Retrieve, Inference, and Choice). These lessons are linked to a class reading text or the English unit the children are currently working on. In KS1 these lessons will be linked to the weekly ‘Success for All’ shared reader text. RIC lessons may also be linked to other areas of the curriculum such as Topic or Science. The stimulus for the RIC lesson may be taken from a variety of sources including text extracts, film clips and songs. Through RIC lessons key skills of retrieval, inference and identifying the writer’s use of language are modelled and misconceptions addressed. Each classroom is equipped with a reading area containing a broad range of carefully selected texts. These texts are age appropriate, incorporate a range of genres and have been purposely chosen to engage and inspire children’s love of reading. Alongside this, we have invested greatly in reading resources to support and supplement our teaching. These include Pie Corbett reading spine sets, KS2 class sets of books, high quality texts (based on the work of Mary Myatt) to support our Topic teaching, and specific year group books for daily shared class reading from Doug Lemov and ‘The 5 Plagues of a Developing Reader’. This ensures that we are exposing our children to: archaic language, non-linear time sequences, narrative complexity, figurative and symbolic texts and resistant texts. Leeds Library Service also supplement our reading stock; providing us with a broad range of texts that help to foster and develop a love of reading as well as supporting and extending learning across the curriculum. We feel passionately that developing a love of reading from an early age will benefit our children hugely: personally, socially and educationally. “Reading gives us an ocean of knowledge and knowledge is
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Grammar At Tranmere we feel Grammar should be taught intrinsically as part of our writing lessons (e.g. Grammar for a purpose). To ensure progression, each year group has a set of non-negotiable Grammar expectations, which we expect to see evidenced in writing. These can be found in the front of each child’s writing book for them to refer to. Spelling We follow the National Curriculum statutory requirements for spelling from Y1 to Y6. In KS1 we have devised our own spelling scheme for both Y1 and Y2. This provides children with a weekly spelling list to learn, comprising of the specific spelling patterns and high frequency words that children should know by the end of KS1. Children in KS2 also have weekly spellings to revise at home. These spellings may contain specific suffixes, prefixes, high frequency words or topic related words. These spelling words may also link to a specific grammar point being taught during the week. Teachers keep records of children’s progress in their weekly spelling tests and monitor children’s spelling in independent writing. The ‘SirLinkalot’ spelling app has been purchased by school for KS2 pupils to access at home to support their spelling. |
Impact – What knowledge and skills are obtained?
Our children become fluent and confident readers, who display a love of literature and a desire to expand their vocabulary. Having been exposed to a broad range of performance opportunities, both in class and in front of larger audiences, our children leave Tranmere Park as proficient speakers; able to communicate effectively as they continue their educational journey. Our progressive writing curriculum also results in a community of highly accomplished writers, who are able to adapt their writing to suit different audiences and purposes. Cross-curricular writing opportunities ensure that our children are transferring these skills into other subjects; this enables them to develop a deeper understanding of grammar, punctuation and vocabulary. As a result, our attainment in English is above the national expectation at each key stage. It is our aim that children at Tranmere Park Primary School move on from us with highly developed English skills and a passion for literature, enabling them to access the next chapter in their learning journey.
Further to the above, our Curriculum, at Tranmere Park, is designed to ensure that each and every child achieves or demonstrates the following: |
The Team Tranmere Way | |||||
Be Yourself | Be Your Best | Be Team Tranmere | |||
Our children will learn to like who they are; they respect themselves and live their lives in their own way, regardless of the opinions of others. | Our children ‘give it everything they have got’ to achieve their full potential across the curriculum. | Our children are a part of a community and have respect for the resources and people in it and that surround it. | |||
Our Learning Values and Behaviours | |||||
Self-Manager | Effective Participator | Independent Enquirer | Team Worker | Resourceful Thinker | Reflective Learner |
Our children set their own goals and manage their own time, motivation and concentration. | Our children participate in lessons and persuade and encourage others to do so. | Our children set goals for their research with clear success criteria. | Our children understand that we are stronger together and implement this. | Our children are problem-solvers who can adapt to new or difficult situations. | Our children critically analyse their work ensuring future improvements. |