Thursday, 27 February 2014

The Foundation Stage- A Parent's View


I have been thinking a great deal about the Foundation Stage, which might be a little odd as my son is now in Year 1. Actually it is only with perspective that I am able to see the true nature of the Foundation Stage and how it really does what it says on the box– lay the foundations for future learning.

I am the sort of middle class parent who might be expected to want a quite formal learning environment. I am certainly the type of parent Mr Gove has in mind when he wants the traditional teaching brought back into schools. This is because my son is very able and exactly the sort who needs a great deal of challenge to keep him happy and learning.

We have been incredibly lucky with schooling so far. My son attended a wonderful outstanding Nursery school. He spent much of his first year there dressed up, either as Spiderman or Batman, or in a princess dress. The staff told me in no uncertain terms they were not going to teach him to read. In fact they did teach him to read, but not in any formal way at all. My son’s interests actually lay in writing so they taught him really excellent motor skills.  He’s a left hander so might be expected to be poor at handwriting like his mother! My mother was called into school when I was seven to be told I still could not use scissors and I was the last person in my class to be allowed to use a pen. My son will have no such difficulties due to the excellent motor skills he was given at Nursery. Also because he was so interested in writing the staff showed him how to form letters correctly and when he asked what letters were, they told him. They never sat him down and forced him to write, he chose to do it and consequently has remained a very keen writer; he entirely understands why writing is useful and enjoys it.  It also meant that by the time he started Reception he had a good idea of most of his letters and had done such good Phase 1 work he was easily orally blending  and segmenting.

Reception was another wonderful experience for him. The staff described him as being busy all the time. Of course that was because he was allowed to be busy all the time. He often planned what he was going to do that day on the way to school and the amount of work he undertook was amazing. We saw the Learning Journey book and it absolutely captured who he was. It was full of him organising things and playing complex games, sometimes by himself and sometimes with others. It had a detailed observation of him making a cinema. This involved over 80 minutes of sustained concentration (how many Year 4 children do you know who can do that?) while he arranged the chairs after negotiating the space with other children. Then he made tickets, using both his reading and writing skills and maths– he decided how many tickets he would need and how many he still had to make. He also made a clock to show when the film would start and accurately worked out how many minutes time it would be.  This was not an isolated event, he often undertook projects of this nature, using such a variety of skills I joked he could run the class.

Other learning opportunities included making a car park for all the bikes, using spacial awareness, numbers and large quantities of chalk. He also wrote little notes, all the time. We regularly got notes shoved under the door on the weekends, mainly asking when we were going to get up. He wrote (and still writes) every day, for choice. He wrote lists, always adding to my shopping list at home, as well as lists of things at school. He put labels everywhere, including on the front door when  ‘selling’ the soup we had made together. He also did maths all the time– though he would not have known that was what he was doing. When we were out he used to start mentally adding things at the shops, which meant he had no problems turning that into formal written sums. And crucially he actively enjoyed all this work; he was hooked on learning.

I should add at this point we have never been pushy parents, nor did we do any ‘work’ with our son at home. (In fact I’d be perfectly happy if he had no homework now!) All we did is talk to him from the moment he was born, take him regularly to the library, also from babyhood, and read to him everyday; his father as much as me. I know we gave him lots of experiences and vocabulary but I credit the Nursery and school with his academic performance.

The reason I started thinking about his Foundation Stage years was because he is doing so well in Year 1. I have watched him use all those skills he developed in previous years and apply them to what he is doing now. That, I believe, was the true strength in his excellent teachers. They understood that application is the essential element, so often missing from teaching I have observed. My son did phonics every day, but the key to the teaching was the staff enabling him to use his phonics and the same was true of his maths. The casual observer might have thought he was ‘only playing’ but it was really consolidating huge amounts of learning. And he was not the only one– I look at his class now and the majority are reading and writing with confidence.

Whilst I know my son is very bright and loves learning, I do not believe he could have achieved what he has done this year without the teaching he received in Nursery and Reception. For that I thank the staff, because they let him be the person he is, no-one put him off learning or trying out ideas, instead he had what I consider to be the very best start to his education, one that will carry him forward for the rest of his life; truly it is  the foundation stage and he got the best.

Seen in an Outstanding Nursery

I am 3.

I am not built to sit still, keep my hands to myself, take turns, be patient, stand in line, or keep quiet.

I need motion, I need novelty, I need adventure, and I need to engage the world with my whole body.

LET ME PLAY.

(Trust me, I’m learning)

 

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

How do you choose a favourite?

I was in the very lucky position of judging the Prima Baby Awards the week before last.

One of the categories we were judging was books and of course it got me thinking - how do you decide on which book is best? Surely it is a very personal and subjective choice, based on your preferences?

They had some wonderful books but to decide which one was better than the others was for me, completely impossible. I love Hugless Douglas by David Melling but that was up against Debi Gliori Dragon Loves Penguin- how can you possibly decide? (They both got top marks from me!) The only book I did not give top marks to was an alphabet book- which was a lovely book but not phonically correct and I can't help myself; I think phonics have dripped into my blood- sad, I know.

That got me thinking about my favourite books- I could never have just one!

I'm a sucker for gorgeous illustrations as well as wonderful storytelling. Many of my favourite picture books combine both these aspects. I adore Quentin Blake and Lauren Child, not only for their great stories but also the illustrations. I'd love to have prints of their work on my walls.
I can't help myself, I do enjoy Guess How Much I love You by Sam McBratney - it seems to encapsulate my feelings for my children so exactly and the illustrations by Anita Jeram are just lovely. Then there are those picture books that take your breath away with the quality of the art work, like The Whale's Song by Dyan Sheldon and Gary Blythe. In fact my list would be almost endless!

For an older reader, I love the Anne of Green Gables books- the whole set. They are a part of my childhood and I have read them again and again. I have a lovely old set, they were my mother's and aunt's, and they are clearly loved and read-a-lot type of books.

Adult books are harder- one of my favourite authors is Guy Gavriel Kay. These books mix history (one of my great loves) with fantasy and they are always hauntingly beautiful.  'Under Heaven' set in ancient China has remained in my mind for a very long time and I'm looking forward to reading the next one.
I also loved The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay.  I certainly never thought I'd count a book about boxing as one of my favourites! (Don't read the sequel- it's nowhere like as good).

I feel I've barely scratched the surface with this thought- the more I pondered on my favourites the more books sprang to mind that I just had to consider. That lead me to thinking about developing a love of reading in children- one of the elements mentioned in the new National Curriculum. I can't remember anyone actually teaching me to love books, but I can remember many, many visits to the library. I can't remember learning to read but I can remember being read to. What I would want for my own children and for the children I teach, is that they have the same hard time trying to pick favourite books, because they have so many they absolutely love and they have that lasting pleasure in picking up a book and savouring it.

Sunday, 19 January 2014

It's never too young....

It is never too young to start reading. Books should be one of the great joys of life and even really young babies can find that joy. My daughter had her library card at three weeks old. My son, then five, picked her books for her. He was fascinated by the black and white books suitable for really young babies and hunted for them among the shelves. We were lucky- our local library next to his school- has a wonderful selection of board books, picked by a very clued-up librarian. It is only a small library (Osidge Library in Barnet- they deserve a mention) but they have really well stocked shelves.
So my little girl started her reading journey. At first she managed a few seconds, with my son discovering, to his joy, that he could read her books to her. Now, at the grand age of five months she is very interested indeed. Her father reads to her every night and just like her brother she likes 'That's not my train' by F. Watts and R. Wells, as well as the books selected from the library. Unlike her brother she also gets to hear far more advanced material, such as James and the Giant Peach, if she is feeding while I'm reading my son his latest favourite. She also gets to hear him read, not only her library books but his books from school.
I was chatting to my hairdresser about going to the library. She is a lovely woman and a devoted mother, but it had simply never entered her head to take her baby to the library. She had no idea that there was such a wonderful selection suitable for babies, nor that she would get a Bookstart pack. So I wondered if other new parents had any idea about how to go about getting such great free resources. May be this is an opportunity for libraries and Bookstart to think about connecting with parents from birth. They put all sorts of things in the Bounty pack; why not library joining cards? At a time when yet more research shows children who visit the library do better at school, we need to be thinking of ways of getting children into the library and supporting parents to take them there. It seems like a missed opportunity to not grab parents from the word go. I would want every child to have the wonderful reading experiences my children have, because reading really is one of life's greatest pleasures.

Monday, 21 October 2013

Phonics teaching- whole class or ability groups?




There is currently a great deal of debate about how to teach the discrete phonics session. Should you teach whole class or ability groups? The short answer is that either is ok, but my experience is that whole class works better for all children. This conclusion is based on two things– the research and also the experiences of schools who have successfully navigated the phonics maze, both in terms of the Y1 decoding check and OFSTED.
First of all what does OFSTED say about the matter? Actually they shouldn’t mind which way you teach, so long as the lesson is challenging for all children and the quality of teaching and learning is good. They have to abide by their own rules which are stated in their handbook. ‘Inspectors will not look for a preferred methodology but must identify ways in which teaching and learning can be improved.’ Also when judging quality of teaching, ‘Inspectors must not expect teaching staff to teach in any specific way or follow a prescribed methodology.’ So in theory they would not mind if you taught the lesson standing on your head, so long as the children were learning!

The research is particularly compelling and, I find, rather shocking. It comes from the seven year Clackmannan-shire study into the teaching of synthetic phonics, which kick-started the phonics revolution in schools. ‘Slowing down the programme for some slower learning children may be setting them up for reading failure; they may never catch up with their classmates, no matter how much extra practice in reading they get.’ (Teaching Syn-thetic Phonics by R. Johnston & J. Watson 2007) The idea that, with the best intentions, we are creating auto-matic failure for some children, is a rather scary one.


The experiences that schools have had would back this research. For example schools that taught the lower abilities separately and at a slower pace, found that there was no way those children could succeed when it came to the Y1 decoding check. It did not matter how much progress they had made, they simply had not cov-ered all the phonemes required to do the test and so could not hope to pass it. Schools that had taught all chil-dren in a whole class situation, all the phonemes, found that all children could at least attempt the test and some schools got as high at 87-90% passing the check due to this.

I also know schools who ‘undid’ the grouping by ability. It was very difficult to start off with, particularly ensuring that all the children in the lower groups had some sort of catch up to make up for the missed phonemes. What the schools found however, was that the lower ability then made accelerated progress– perhaps it was just a rise in expectations for them or perhaps it was the challenge of being with the more able children. The other thing these schools noticed was the amount of time they had suddenly freed up– in one case it was as much as 3/4 hour each week. In a large school, moving children around for different groups takes up a great deal of time.

The teachers also felt far more confident in their own knowledge of where children were as they were teaching them all the time. This is another big issue around ability grouping. Frequently the Support Staff are used as the teachers for a group and they quite often have not had the same level of training in order to teach the phonics. Grouping has a difficulty around staffing which can really only be solved if Support Staff are involved and teach-ing groups. There are obviously some really outstanding Support Staff, but equally without experience and train-ing it can be a disaster for that group.

Obviously whole class lessons need to be effectively differentiated, which is very easy to do. For example if you are teaching /ee/ in Phase 3 and you have some more able pupils you add in some Phase 4 words such as sleep, creep etc and very able pupils words like cheese. When teaching Phase 5 you always refer to the Phase 3 words covered and your least able group can revise Phase 3 and even Phase 2 as necessary, so long as they are also learning the grapheme for that day. Practice is easy to differentiate by the words given– though always make sure everyone is covering the grapheme for that day and apply you just need to have easier or more complex sentences to read or write, again making sure that all children are applying the grapheme for the day, even if all the rest of the words are only at Phase 2.

Finally, something to think about... On the whole schools do not put children into ability groups and teach them separately rather than whole class, for any other subject, particularly in EY and KS1. So why is it different when it comes to phonics? I don’t think it is different and I would hope schools have high expectations of all their  pupils, giving them equal access to one of the key skills for learning to read.

Tuesday, 4 December 2012

Nonsense words

I've been asked a great deal about nonsense words in the last few weeks. Teachers anxious about the decoding check next June want to know what they should do about nonsense words. They know that the children in their classes will be expected to read 20 nonsense words and being diligent and caring teachers they want to prepare the children as best they can.

My take on the matter is rather different. I want the children to read real words. I want them to be exposed to all the rich and wonderful vocabulary that they could then use in their writing and spoken language. I want them to learn new words and ways of expressing their ideas. to be honest, I don't care if they can decode 'zerb' or 'ock'. I care if they can read and understand 'beware' and 'chaos'.

A head teacher I met had suggested to staff they put up nonsense words around the classroom. I was completely appalled and baffled. What good would this do the children, particularly those who might not know whether they were real or made up words? If you read Letters and Sounds there are so many good words you might want children to use and have understanding, there is no need to make words up. After only a week of phonics teaching Reception children will be able to make the word 'sap'. I doubt many 4 year olds will know that word so there is a great opportunity to extend their understanding. Go outside, find a tree with sap or talk about the term sapping your strength. Who needs nonsense words when there are wonderful words waiting to be understood and used. Words that will enrich children's writing and are perfectly decodable and could be used in a test, if there is insistence that there is one.

I can think of two instances when nonsense words could be used. One of those is when reading. A book like Linley Dodd's, The Dudgeon is Coming! is full of wonderful made up names like the bombazine bear and the stickleback twitch. Matched with imaginative illustrations of these characters it is a delight to read and would test the phonic ability of many children. The other occasion in a game like phonicsplay.co.uk.  The games involve children decoding words and seeing if they are real or nonsense words. As this of necessity involves language comprehension it is a much better use of nonsense words than purely decoding them for the sake of it.

So I say to all those teachers out there, don't teach children nonsense words. Your purpose has to be teaching children to read not just decode. Give them all the wonderful words English has to offer and it will be doing them a far greater service than learning to decode 'blerk'!

Friday, 28 September 2012

Phonics Factor- The Results

So the results are out. Nationally 58% of children 'passed' the decoding check, which means 42% of Year 2 children will have to resit it next summer, alongside SATs.

So what has it actually achieved? I know some people might say nothing, but I'm inclined to be a bit more optimistic and say it has actually had a positive impact, though not in the way the Government quite intended.Whilst I doubt it will change the reading success or otherwise of some children, it has raised expectations and created a bit of competition amongst schools. There is the feeling that if Sunnyville Primary down the road can get 70% passing then so should Totside in the same area- but they only got 30%. It is making schools think about why their children are not achieving as well as they might be able to.

 In fact I suspect much of the data, when broken down school by school, will show just that sort of gap is making up the average. Many Local Authorities will find they have a group of schools who did really well and the other half that did really badly- the data needs to elaborate on the percentages of schools that did well. Surely it is of far more concern if a local authority has schools at extreme ends of the scale with their results, rather than a fairly even spread? Something must be wrong if the former is true; no strategic overview and no coordination.

I was in a very nice middle class school last week that got, what we now know, to be below the national average. They were going on about how many special needs they had. I pointed out that a school I knew, with many very deprived children had scored considerably better than them. They asked what they had done and I said they had not used any excuses.  The only children who had not passed the test were one really special need and a handful who had been in school less than a term. The expectations were so high, but they had been achieved. This sobered the middle class school considerably and they stopped using excuses and turned it around to say, we must do as well as that next year.

As I said, I'm not sure that the test will actually raise reading standards, as it is not about reading but decoding. Many good readers did come unstuck on the nonsense words and did not actually do as well as the careful plodders who need to sound every word out. Also schools will become so fixated on the phonics test they will forget the essential element of language comprehension- they won't be able to help it! I saw this with the CLLD (Communication, Language and Literacy Development) Programme. Schools would get to grips with the phonics to the detriment of understanding- particularly as there is now such a strong requirement to use nonsense words. I worked a lot with schools at the latter end of the CLLD to improve phonics use in reading through real application, for example in guided reading. Schools must not forget to keep up all that good work with language comprehension as decoding alone is completely useless!

The other effect of the phonics test has been what I can only describe as OFSTED terror. Schools due an inspection have become paralysed with fear that OFSTED will march in and condemn them before they can correct the faults shown up in the test. In some cases OFSTED would be right to criticise a school, if for example they had not really got round to teaching phonics properly before this year, which is the case for some schools. Other schools however, merely handled things badly, so keen were they not to pressure children they did not actually teach to the pace required and consequently children had simply not covered the amount of phonemes required to pass the test. I hope that if schools are able to show what they are putting in place to remedy the situation OFSTED will not be the executioner schools are expecting them to be.

So what will happen now the results are out? I think no-one has quite decided and there are probably lots of meetings right now to think about what they can do with the statistics and if it really matters anyway? Lots of teachers have asked me if I think the test will be abandoned; sadly I don't think so.

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

Observations on the phonics check


I went into ‘Lovely Primary School’ yesterday. It is an oasis of cheerful learning in a desert of poverty. Lovely School is in one of the most deprived areas in London, yet I have never heard any of the teachers use that as an excuse. Quite the opposite, they have high aspirations for their pupils, talking to even the youngest pupils about when they go to university.

At Lovely School they teach systematic phonics really well. I’ve seen them teach it and OFSTED agrees with me. They also have a rich culture of language and books. Children not making expected progress are offered support and extra teaching by experienced and well trained staff.  In fact they do everything that is expected of them and more, in terms of teaching children to read. Yet a large percentage of children in Year 1 will apparently be failing this week.

Lovely School estimate around 50% of their pupils will fail the phonics test. They see the test for what it is- a very crude and blunt instrument that tells them nothing they don’t know already and does not in any way measure progress or achievement. The 50% failure rate will not show how far some children have come in a short time, nor that some have only arrived at the school this term. It will not show the sheer effort and determination of some children to have a go at reading challenging words, nor the time their teachers have spent supporting them, both academically and emotionally.

The test will not show John’s achievements. He was a very young class member, who cried throughout Reception as he’s never left his mother before. He also refused to speak until recently. This term, however, John is not only speaking but showing that he knows many digraphs and trigraphs and is starting to read. The test will not show that he is very immature and how rapid his progress has been this term as he finally copes with the pressures of school life. It will merely show that he has failed. The test takes no account of age which at five is of huge significance. Some children will have had a year longer of living than others, yet they are all expected to reach the same level at the same time. Would we expect them to be the same height too?

The test will not show Susie’s achievements. She arrived at the beginning of the academic year, having never been to school before and speaking little English. Until recently she too was a reluctant speaker but has suddenly understood, not only how to communicate in a new language but how to read and write as well. She got 19 out of the required 40 words, which for her is showing enormous progress. The teacher does not want to tell her parents she has failed, as no-one sees this as a failure, such effort and determination to be successful is not a failure.

The test will not show Thomas’s achievements. A few weeks ago the staff were wondering whether to even enter him for the test as he appeared to have learning difficulties and was not remembering any phonemes. Thomas had one to one teaching with a Teaching Assistant, which catered to his needs through using very active learning and ICT. Yesterday he was able to blend and segment and recognised many digraphs as well as single letters. He will still appear to fail; the test does not allow for children to develop later.

The test will not show Obe’s achievements. He arrived from Africa ,having never been to school before, at the beginning of this term. He is recognising most letters that he has covered in five weeks. He is able to blend and segment, though he had difficulty sounding out the nonsense words as they sounded incorrect to him and he kept trying to make them sound right. He had not covered alternative spellings of common digraphs as he has not been in school long enough, but he is clearly bright and capable and trying incredibly hard. He will still be a failure in terms of this test.

The test will also not show Rachel’s achievements. She is on the autistic spectrum but has picked up the ‘code’ of phonics. She does not read for meaning but can easily do the phonics test. She did however hit herself on the head with the book after every word she read. She passed the test with flying colours but may never be a true reader. The test will also not show how Princess looked at the practise word ‘sum’ and thought they had got it wrong as it is spelt ‘some’! It won’t show that David read the whole lot right but struggled with the pseudo words as it was a retrograde step for him to be reading nonsense.

Learning phonics is a really useful tool, but it is not a magic potion that will cure all the ills in education. What will make a difference will be teachers like the ones at Lovely School. That is so long as they remain in the profession, before getting fed up of the dictatorial nature of central government. Good teaching by good teachers makes the difference; decoding nonsense words does not.