KS2
There are three clearly progressive core strands of teaching and learning over the four years of KS2:
- Oracy (Speaking and Listening) (O)
- Literacy (Reading and Writing) (L)
- Intercultural Understanding (IU)
Oracy: Listening and responding
Children should be taught how to listen carefully and discriminate sounds, identify meaning and develop auditory awareness. Teachers should use the following activities:
- respond on hearing a certain word(s), structures or phrases, e.g. put up hands, hold up an object, picture or word card, stand up;
- listen and respond to songs, poems or stories, and listen for certain details, information, repeated words or rhyming words;
- play games that require concentration on listening, such as 'Simon says', 'bingo' or 'true or false';
- respond to what they hear by performing an action or answering a question;
- pick out specific details from longer passages of familiar language, e.g. name, place, cost;
- listen to audio, videotape or CD-ROM and note down information;
- listen to and attempt to retain a sequence of numbers, letters or words which children then repeat, e.g. Je vais à Paris, elle va à Lille, il va à Nantes.
Oracy: Speaking
The focus should be on correct pronunciation and intonation.
Activities might include:
- reinforcement activities using visual aids (see ‘Teaching and Learning Styles’)
- joining in with songs, poems and rhymes and then learning them by heart
- integrating previously learnt language with newly learnt language;
- manipulating language, e.g. using vocabulary and structures for a range of purposes and in a range of different contexts, changing the person of verbs, using plurals, forming negatives and questions;
- taking part in pair and group work, e.g. finding out and exchanging
- information, devising sketches and role plays;
- recording onto video- or audiotape, e.g. poems, songs, information about school, town, sketches, presentations;
- preparing for a presentation/assembly.
Literacy: Reading and responding
Techniques used and developed during children's work in literacy should be used. Activities should include:
- replacing visual cues gradually with text cues;
- reading new words by sounding out and blending their separate parts;
- sounding out syllables in words to help memory;
- grouping similar sounds together;
- playing word games, e.g. word and picture dominoes, matching pairs; sorting and dictionary work;
- shared reading of short fiction and non-fiction texts including different text types e.g. newspaper reports
Literacy: Writing
Activities might include:
- finger writing in the air;
- writing new words by combining the spelling patterns of their
- sounds;
- communicating real messages by writing and sending e-mails;
- writing down personal information as it is learnt to create a pen
- portrait;
- making labels and posters;
- acrostic poetry, shape poetry;
- creating and extending sentences using familiar language;
- using a familiar structure as a framework for creative writing;
- preparing text for a wall display or presentation.