Intent
Our writing curriculum has been specifically designed and planned to meet the context of our school which is underpinned by a Catholic education based upon the life and teaching of Jesus, in which Gospel values permeate all aspects of school life. The writing curriculum is coherently planned and sequenced allowing pupils to further deepen their knowledge, skills and understanding in their writing journey. Co-operative learning is a key feature within teaching and we believe that working together helps children to deepen their understanding and also promotes tolerance and mutual respect, equipping our pupils with the necessary skills to live in modern Britain.
St Malachy’s RC Primary School puts writing at the heart of the curriculum. We believe that writing is an essential life skill. We want all children to be able to confidently communicate their knowledge, ideas and emotions through their writing and reach their full potential.
Our aims are to:
Guide and nurture each individual on their own personal journeys to becoming successful writers.
Provide exciting writing opportunities and experiences that engage and enhance all pupils.
We want all children to acquire a wide vocabulary and to be able to spell new words by effectively applying the spelling patterns and rules they learn throughout their time in primary school.
We want all children to have a solid understanding of grammar and apply it effectively to their writing.
We want them to write clearly, accurately and coherently, adapting their language and style in and for a range of contexts, purposes and audiences.
We believe that all children should be encouraged to take pride in the presentation of their writing, in part by developing a legible, joined up, individual handwriting style by the time they move to secondary school.
We want every child to have a good knowledge of phonics to enable children to becoming fluent writers.
To plan a progressive curriculum to build upon previous teaching, with regular assessment to ensure each child’s needs are met to reach their full potential.
Our writing curriculum is designed to be broad and balanced, providing all pupils with the opportunity to master their learning and deepen their knowledge. We believe it is vital for children to make sense and give purpose as to why we carry out writing based learning. We aim to deliver a curriculum which is accessible to all and what will maximise the outcomes for every child so that they know more, remember more and understand more.
We plan our writing sessions using the National Curriculum and Pathways to Write, this has helped to develop our progression grids.
Implementation
At St Malachy’s RC Primary, writing is taught 5X per week across the whole school following our Pathways to Write lesson plans and mastery keys. Each class studies two different high-quality texts, lasting the half-term. One poetry book and one other book (mixed between fiction and non-fiction).
Long, medium and short term planning and the use of progression maps ensure that a variety of genres are progressively taught and built upon both throughout the year and throughout the school. Writing is also a key focus in the wider curriculum, especially in ‘Topic’ lessons. Children are given the opportunity to transfer and build upon their knowledge of a genre studied during English lessons and apply this learning to a topic focus. Through the writing process, children will acquire and learn the skills to plan, draft and refine their written work over time and are encouraged to develop independence in being able to identify their own areas for improvement in all pieces of writing. Within each unit of work, sequenced lessons ensure that prior learning is checked and built upon and that National Curriculum objectives are taught through a combination of approaches/opportunities.
Handwriting: It is paramount that children are rigorously taught correct letter formation from the very beginning of their time in school. Handwriting is taught through our scheme ‘Kinetic Letters.’ This is a whole school approach.
Kinetic Letters is a unique handwriting programme that believes good, fast and fluent handwriting underpins success in every curriculum area. It is based on a physical programme where children learn handwriting and letter formation through movement and multisensory experiences, developing core body strength.
The children are taught to sit properly in order to have the correct posture for writing, hold a pencil in the correct position and develop a legible handwriting style.
Teachers are expected to role model the school’s handwriting style when marking children’s work, writing on the board and on displays around the school.
Spellings: From Year 2, classes follow a progressive spelling scheme from ‘Rising Stars.’ Through exploring spelling patterns and rules, we aim to create confident and proficient spellers using a discrete teaching approach underpinned by phonics.
Impact
Outcomes in Literacy books and across the curriculum, evidence a broad and balanced writing curriculum and demonstrate the children’s acquisition of identified key knowledge.
We aim to:
Use assessment as an integral part of the teaching and learning process and link it clearly to the children’s next steps.
Formative assessment WILF’s (statements taken from progression map
Constructive marking with ‘next steps’ and ‘modelling’ where appropriate.
Teachers leave next steps in books when marking to ensure that children know exactly what they need to do next to make progress in their writing and children are encouraged to respond to this in green pen
The impact on our children is that they have the knowledge and skills to be able to write successfully for a purpose and audience. With the implementation of the writing sequence being established and taught across all key stages, including EYFS, children are becoming more confident writers and have the ability to plan, draft and edit their own work. By the end of key stage 2, children have developed a writer’s craft, they enjoy sustained writing and can manipulate language, grammar and punctuation to create effect. As all aspects of English are an integral part of the curriculum, cross curricular writing standards have also improved and skills taught in the English lesson are transferred into other subjects; this shows consolidation of skills and a deeper understanding of how and when to use specific language, grammar and punctuation
Reading Curriculum
Intent.
St Malachy’s RC Primary School puts reading at the heart of the curriculum. We believe that reading is an essential life skill and we are committed to enabling our children to become lifelong readers. At the heart of our planning is our drive to foster a love of reading, both in school and at home, enriching children’s learning through carefully designed teaching activities that utilise imaginative stories and thought provoking texts.
Reading is a skill that enables children to develop their learning across the wider curriculum and lays the foundations for success in future lines of study and employment. We recognise the importance of taking a consistent whole school approach to the teaching of reading in order to close any gaps and to target the highest possible number of children attaining the expected standard or higher.
We aim to have pupils leave St Malachy’s RC as lifelong readers, who have an instilled love for reading in them. In order to do this, children are encouraged to read widely and are exposed to a variety of genres. Reading across all subjects within the curriculum will prepare pupils for life beyond the Primary Classroom, where they will be taking with them the skills required for in-depth reading and analysing.
Our Reading curriculum is designed to be broad and balanced, providing all pupils with the opportunity to master their learning and deepen their knowledge. We believe it is vital for children to make sense and give purpose as to why we carried out reading based learning. We aim to deliver a curriculum which is accessible to all and what will maximise the outcomes for every child so that they know more, remember more and understand more.
We plan Reading using the National Curriculum. We enhance the curriculum using the comprehension scheme, Read, Write, Inc, reading gems and RAMP reading. All of these scheme have helped to develop our progression grids. We then use our progression grids to develop our long- term planning. Then teachers use these long-term plans to plan units of work and deliver individual lessons.
Implementation
Early reading is prioritised in EYFS and KS1. It is underpinned by a coherent and systematic phonics scheme. Read, Write, Inc, which is taught daily. All teaching staff throughout school have received high quality training in the teaching of phonics and members of staff have the opportunity to share good practice amongst each other to ensure consistency and the same high standards are met across the key stages.
Group phonics sessions are taught daily from Nursery-Year 2, with those who are struggling to grasp key elements taught receiving additional phonics sessions. These are carried out as part of our early bird intervention sessions. These run Tuesday-Thursday’s every week. This is to ensure all pupils receive equal exposure to teaching material for their age group and are given the same opportunity to learn.
At St Malachy’s RC, along with listening to readers and assessing their reading fluency, we will also teach different skills to enable children to understand, respond and analyse different texts.
As a school we use RAMP (Reading and Modelled Practice) system when planning and delivering our guided reading sessions. This system has the following features:
Activating prior knowledge
Predicting
Clarifying
Questioning
Grammar
Inference
Summarising
By the end of Year 6, the above skills will be taught in whole class reading lessons through different text types involving both fiction and non-fiction (see progression map for further breakdown).
Impact
Outcomes in Guided Reading books and across the curriculum, evidence a broad and balanced reading curriculum and demonstrate the children’s acquisition of identified key knowledge. We have also received our ‘Gold Reading Award.’
Children review their Age-Related Expectations at the end of each half term. Assessment data is gathered from phonic assessments, PM Benchmarking, independent question activities and GL assessments. Children and are actively encouraged to identify their own target areas, with the support from class teachers. Through the implementation of our curriculum the planned impact is:
Children will know more, remember more, build on prior learning, make links and understand more about reading.
Children will retain their knowledge that is pertinent to reading
Become fluent, confident and independent readers
Read for pleasure and enjoyment as well as information
Read and respond to a wide range of different types of literature
Understand the layout and how to use different text types
Understand and apply their knowledge of phonics and spelling patterns and use this to decode words with accuracy
Build their bank of sight words to enable fluent reading
Develop a rich and varied vocabulary
Understand, respond and appreciate literature drawn from a range of cultures and literary heritage
Have enough experience with books to be able to draw comparisons, find similarities, differences and discuss enjoyment.
The impact and measure of this is to ensure that children at St Malachy’s RC aspire to be fluent, confident and able readers, who can access a range of texts for pleasure and enjoyment, as well as use their reading skills to unlock learning and all areas of the curriculum. We firmly believe that reading is the key to all learning and so the impact of our reading curriculum goes beyond the results of the statutory assessments.
St Malachy's Primary School is committed to safeguarding and promoting the welfare of children and young people and we expect everyone who works in and visits our school to share this commitment. For further information, please see the safeguarding information under Policies.