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Title: LITERACY IMPACT!


1
LITERACY IMPACT!
Literacy Across the Curriculum Maintaining the
Momentum
Geoff Barton November 13, 2020
All resources can be downloaded at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
2
LITERACY IMPACT!
  • 1 Where are we with literacy the Strategy?
  • 2 Evaluating your literacy strategy what impact
    have you made so far, and how do you know?
  • 3 What are the essentials for colleagues
  • In reading?
  • In writing?
  • In spelling?
  • In grammatical knowledge?

and how will you achieve it?
3
LITERACY IMPACT!
2 strands
LITERACY
YOUR ROLE
4
LITERACY IMPACT!
L.O.
  • By 3pm you should
  • Be clearer about your own role
  • Know the priorities for your school
  • Have learnt some useful literacy knowledge
  • Be happier, wiser, and re-invigorated

5
LITERACY IMPACT!
SECTION 1 Where the heck are we?
6
LITERACY IMPACT!
The story so far
7
LITERACY IMPACT!
AIMS
  • An inclusive education system within a culture of
    high expectations
  • The centrality of literacy and numeracy across
    the curriculum
  • The infusion of learning skills across the
    curriculum
  • The promotion of assessment for learning
  • Expanding the teachers range of teaching
    strategies and techniques
  • No child left behind
  • Reinforcing the basics
  • Enriching the learning experience
  • Making every child special
  • Making learning an enjoyable experience

8
English Review 2000-05
9
October 2005 Key findings
English is one of the best taught subjects in
both primary and secondary schools.
10
October 2005 Key findings
  • Standards of writing have improved as a result
    of guidance from the national strategies.
    However, although pupils understanding of the
    features of different text types has improved,
    some teachers give too little thought to ensuring
    that pupils fully consider the audience, purpose
    and content for their writing.
  • Schools also need to consider how to develop
    continuity in teaching and assessing writing.

11
October 2005 Key findings
  • Schools do not always seem to understand the
    importance of pupils talk in developing both
    reading and writing.
  • Myhill and Fisher quote research which argues
    that spoken language forms a constraint, a
    ceiling not only on the ability to comprehend but
    also on the ability to write, beyond which
    literacy cannot progress. Too many teachers
    appear to have forgotten that speech supports
    and propels writing forward.
  • Pupils do not improve writing solely by doing
    more of it good quality writing benefits from
    focused discussion that gives pupils a chance to
    talk through ideas before writing and to respond
    to friends suggestions.

12
October 2005 Key findings
  • The Progress in International Reading Literacy
    Study (PIRLS), published in 2003, found that,
    although the reading skills of 10 year old pupils
    in England compared well with those of pupils in
    other countries, they read less frequently for
    pleasure and were less interested in reading than
    those elsewhere.
  • An NFER reading survey (2003), conducted by
    Marian Sainsbury, concluded that childrens
    enjoyment of reading had declined significantly
    in recent years.
  • A Nestlé/MORI report highlighted the existence
    of a small core of children who do not read at
    all, described as an underclass of non-readers,
    together with cycles of non-reading where
    teenagers from families where parents are not
    readers will almost always be less likely to be
    enthusiastic readers themselves

13
October 2005 Key findings
The role of teaching assistants was described in
the report as increasingly effective. Many of
them are responsible for teaching the
intervention programmes and this work has
improved in quality as a result of improvements
in their specialist knowledge.
14
October 2005 Key findings
  • The Strategy has improved some teachers
    understanding of the importance of pupils
    literacy in developing their subject knowledge
    and to some effective teaching, especially in
    writing and the use of subject-specific
    vocabulary. Despite this, weaknesses remain,
    including
  • the stalling of developments as senior
    management teams focus on other initiatives
  • lack of robust measures to evaluate the impact
    of developments across a range of subjects
  • a focus on writing at the expense of reading,
    speaking and listening.

15
LITERACY IMPACT!
From To Departmental strategies
Whole-school strategy Departmental development
School improvement National launch Local
consolidation / embedding Directed
training Selected training and support
16
Key principles of Literacy Across the Curriculum
  • Good literacy skills are a key factor in raising
    standards across all subjects
  • Language is the main medium we use for teaching,
    learning and developing thinking, so it is at the
    heart of teaching and learning
  • Literacy is best taught as part of the subject,
    not as an add-on
  • All teachers need to give explicit attention to
    the literacy needed in their subject.

17
Consistency in teaching literacy is achieved when
  • Literacy skills are taught consistently and
    systematically across the curriculum
  • Expectation of standards of accuracy and
    presentation are similar in all classrooms
  • Teachers are equipped to deal with literacy
    issues in their subject both generically and
    specifically
  • The same strategies are used across the school
    the teaching sequence for writing active reading
    strategies planning speaking and listening for
    learning
  • Teachers use the same terminology to describe
    language.

18
Ofsted suggests literacy across the curriculum is
good when
  • Senior managers are actively involved in the
    planning and monitoring
  • Audits and action planning are rigorous
  • Monitoring focuses on a range of approaches, e.g.
    classroom observation, work scrutiny as well as
    formal tests
  • Time is given to training, its dissemination and
    embedding
  • Schools work to identified priorities.

19
LITERACY IMPACT!
20
Literacy strategy The next phase
Self-evaluation So where are you up to in your
school?
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
21
Literacy strategy The next phase
Headteacher Your role Senco Teachers Teaching
assistants Governors
3
0
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
22
Literacy strategy The next phase
Key player Progress rating Priority
Head
You
SENCO
Teachers
Teaching assistants
Governors
23
Literacy strategy The next phase
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
24
Literacy strategy The next phase
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
25
Literacy strategy The next phase
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
26
Literacy strategy The next phase
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
27
Literacy strategy The next phase
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
28
Literacy strategy The next phase
0
3
5
NO PROGRESS
GOOD PROGRESS
29
KS3 IMPACT!
? Talking Point ?
  • What have been the successes in your own school?
  • What do you need to do next?

30
LITERACY IMPACT!
SECTION 2 (re)Motivating the key players?
31
Focus relentlessly on TL
Standards are raised ONLY by changes which are
put into direct effect by teachers and pupils in
classrooms Black and Wiliam, Inside the Black
Box
Schools are places where the pupils go to watch
the teachers working (John West-Burnham)
For many years, attendance at school has been
required (for children and for teachers) while
learning at school has been optional. (Stoll,
Fink East)
32
Key players
Librarian
Strategy manager
Working party
Headteacher
Governors
Teaching assistants
Subject leaders
Students!
33
Key players
Strategy manager
Focus, tailor, customise See as professional
development rather than delivery Differentiate
training Emphasise monitoring more than
initiatives Use pupil surveys for learning
teaching
34
Essential literacy rooted in professional
development An example
35
Headteacher
Must be actively involved as head TEACHER Eg
monitoring books, breakfast with students,
feedback to staff Must be seen in lessons Must
be reined in to prioritise
36
Librarian
Key part in improving literacy Include in
training Part of curriculum meetings Library
should embody good practice - eg key words,
guidance on retrieving information, visual
excitement Active training for students, breaking
down subject barriers Get a library commitment
from every team Then sample to monitor it
37
Governors
Visit library, get in classrooms, talk to
students Clearly signal the literacy
focus Emphasise s/hes discussing
consistency Sample of students and feedback Part
of faculty reviews on (say) how we teach writing
38
Working party
Maintain or disband? Less doing and more
evaluating - questionnaires, looking at handouts,
working around rooms, talking to students Asking
questions What do teachers here do that helps
you to understand long texts better? Work
sampling Creating a critical mass
39
Students
Tell us how were doing Build into school
council Small groups work with faculty teams to
guide and evaluate Audit rooms for key words, etc
40
Teaching Assistants
Make them literacy experts Let them lead
training Make their monitoring role
explicit Publish their feedback
41
Subject leaders
Help them to identify the 3 bits of literacy that
will have the biggest impact Prioritise one per
term or year Join their meetings at start and end
of process Help them to keep it simple Provide
models and sample texts Evaluate Build literacy
into their teams performance management
42
LITERACY IMPACT!
  1. Dont call it literacy - call it good learning
    teaching, or writing, or reading
  2. Build it into lesson observation sheets
  3. Build it into performance management
  4. Keep it in the public eye
  5. Emphasise increased student motivation
  6. Talk to your Head about core skills for all
    teachers

43
LITERACY IMPACT!
7 Show before after models 8 Dont focus on
grammar knowledge needed by staff 9 Show its
part of a whole-school strategy 10 Celebrate
every small-scale success 11 Quote students
feedback 12 Make it fun! .
13 Make it non-negotiable
44
KS3 IMPACT!
? Talking Point ?
  • What have been the successes in your own school?
  • What do you need to do next?

45
LITERACY IMPACT!
SECTION 3 Evaluating and planning
(We should measure what we value, not value what
we measure John MacBeath)
46
Staff
47
Yes No
48
(No Transcript)
49
Student
50
Book sampling
51
(No Transcript)
52
(No Transcript)
53
(No Transcript)
54
KS3 IMPACT!
? Talking Point ?
  • What evaluation have you done?
  • What could you do next?

55
Literacy strategy The next phase
IMPACT!
56
Literacy strategy The next phase
Your Head of History wants to focus on
whole-school literacy in a Year 9 project on
medicine. How might you help
in identifying key areas of literacy? in
planning? in training? in evaluating impact?
57
LITERACY IMPACT!
Literacy Across the Curriculum Maintaining the
Momentum
Geoff Barton November 13, 2020
All resources can be downloaded at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
58
LITERACY IMPACT!
The 13 most important bits of literacy knowledge
needed by effective teachers
59
LITERACY IMPACT!
Teaching sequence
Key conventions
WRITING
Connectives
Sentence variety
60
LITERACY IMPACT!
Subject-specific vocabulary
Approaches to reading
READING
Active research process, not FOFO
Using DARTs
61
LITERACY IMPACT!
Having 4 approaches
Mnemonics
SPELLING
Starters
Word webs
Rules
62
LITERACY IMPACT!
Teaching sequence
Key conventions
WRITING
Connectives
Sentence variety
63
LITERACY IMPACT!
1
  • Know the writing sequence
  • Establish clear aims
  • Provide examples
  • Explore conventions of the text
  • Define the conventions
  • Demonstrate how it is written
  • Compose together
  • Scaffold first attempts
  • Independent writing
  • Draw out key learning

64
LITERACY IMPACT!
2
Know the dominant text-types for your
subject Purpose What is its purpose? Who is it
for? How will it be used? Text level Layout?
Structure? Sequence? Sentence level Viewpoint?
Prevailing tense? Active/passive? Sentence types
and length? Cohesion devices? Word level Stock
words and phrases? Specialist vocabulary?
Elaborate or plain vocabulary choices?
65
LITERACY IMPACT!
3
Know your connectives Adding and, also, as well
as, moreover, too Cause effect because, so,
therefore, thus, consequently Sequencing next,
then, first, finally, meanwhile, before,
after Qualifying however, although, unless,
except, if, as long as, apart from,
yet Emphasising above all, in particular,
especially, significantly, indeed,
notably Illustrating for example, such as, for
instance, as revealed by, in the case
of Comparing equally, in the same way,
similarly, likewise, as with, like Contrasting
whereas, instead of, alternatively, otherwise,
unlike, on the other hand
66
LITERACY IMPACT!
4
  • Encourage sentence variety
  • Start with an -ing verb (Reaching 60 these days
    is ..)
  • Start with an -ed verb (Frustrated by .)
  • Start with an adverb (Well-done chicken leads to
    )
  • Start with a preposition (Within the city limits
    you will )

67
LITERACY IMPACT!
5
Students must see you writing
68
LITERACY IMPACT!
So
What have you done? What are you going to do?
69
LITERACY IMPACT!
Subject-specific vocabulary
Approaches to reading
READING
Active research process, not FOFO
Using DARTs
70
LITERACY IMPACT!
6
  • Subject-specific vocabulary
  • Identifying
  • Playing with context
  • Actively exploring
  • Linking to spelling

71
LITERACY IMPACT!
7
  • Approaches to reading
  • Scanning
  • Skimming
  • Continuous reading
  • Close reading
  • Research skills, not FOFO

72
LITERACY IMPACT!
8
  • Using DARTs
  • Cloze
  • Diagram completion
  • Disordered text
  • Prediction

73
LITERACY FOR LEARNING
CHRONOLOGICAL Versus NON- CHRONOLOGICAL
74
LITERACY FOR LEARNING
  • Fiction is more personal. Non-fiction has fewer
    agents
  • Holidays were taken at resorts
  • During the 17th century roads became straighter

75
LITERACY FOR LEARNING
Childrens fiction tends to be chronological.
Fiction becomes easier to read non-fiction
presents difficulties all the way through
76
LITERACY FOR LEARNING
Non-fiction texts rely on linguistic signposts -
moreover, despite therefore, on the other hand,
however. Learners who are unfamiliar with these
will not read with the same predictive power as
they can with fiction
77
LITERACY FOR LEARNING
Non-fiction tends to have more interrupting
constructions The agouti, a nervous 20-inch
rodent from South America, can leap twenty feet
from a sitting position Asteroids are lumps of
rock and metal whose paths round the sun lie
mainly between Jupiter and Mars
78
LITERACY FOR LEARNING
Fiction uses more active verbs. Non-fiction
relies more on the copula (Oxygen is a gas) and
use of the passive Some plastics are made by
rather than We make plastics by
79
PREDICTION FUN
  • Brian Moore, Cold Heaven

80
1
  • The wooden seats of the little pedal boat were
    angled so that Marie looked up at the sky. There
    were no clouds. In the vastness above her a gull
    calligraphed its flight. Marie and Alex pedalled
    in unison, the revolving paddles making a
    slapping sound against the waves as the pedal
    boat treadmilled away from the beach, passing
    through ranks of bathers to move into the deeper,
    more solitary waters of the Baie des Anges. Marie
    slackened her efforts but Alex continued
    determinedly, steering the pedalo straight out
    into the Mediterranean.

81
2
  • Lets not go too far, she said.
  • I want to get away from the crowd. Im going to
    swim.
  • It was like him to have some plan of his own, to
    translate idleness into activity even in these
    few days of vacation. She now noted his every
    fault. It was as though, having decided to leave
    him, she had withdrawn his credit. She looked
    back at the sweep of hotels along the Promenade
    des Anglais. Today was the day she had hoped to
    tell him. She had planned to announce it at
    breakfast and leave, first for New York, then on
    to Los Angeles to join Daniel. But at breakfast
    she lacked all courage. Now, with half the day
    gone, she decided to postpone it until tomorrow.

82
3
  • Far out from shore, the paddles stopped. The
    pedalo rocked on its twin pontoons as Alex eased
    himself up from his seat. He handed her his
    sunglasses. This should do, he said and,
    rocking the boat even more, dived into the
    ultramarine waters. She watched him surface. He
    called out Just follow along, okay? He was not
    a good swimmer, but thrashed about in an
    energetic, erratic freestyle. Marie began to
    pedal again, her hand on the tiller, steering the
    little boat so that she followed close. Watching
    him, she knew he could not keep up this pace for
    long. She saw his flailing arms and for a moment
    thought of those arms hitting her. He had never
    hit her. He was not the sort of man who would hit
    you. He would be hurt, and cold, and possibly
    vindictive. But he was not violent.

83
4
  • She heard a motorboat, the sound becoming louder.
    She looked back but did not see a boat behind
    her. Then she looked to the right where Alex was
    swimming and saw a big boat with an outboard
    motor coming right at them, coming very fast.

84
5
  • Of course they see us, she thought, alarmed, and
    then as though she were watching a film, as
    though this were happening to someone else, she
    saw there was a man in the motorboat, a young man
    wearing a green shirt he was not at the tiller,
    he was standing in the middle of the boat with
    his back to her and as she watched he bent down
    and picked up a child who had fallen on the
    floorboards. Hey? she called. Hey? for he
    must turn around, the motorboat was coming right
    at Alex, right at her. But the man in the boat
    did not hear. He carried the child across to the
    far side of the boat the boat was only yards
    away now.

85
6
  • Alex, she called. Alex, look out. But Alex
    flailed on and then the prow of the motorboat,
    slicing up water like a knife, hit Alex with a
    sickening thump, went over him and smashed into
    the pontoons of the little pedal boat, upending
    it, and she found herself in the water, going
    under, coming up. She looked and saw the
    motorboat churning off, the pedal boat hanging
    from its prow like a tangle of branches. She
    heard the motorboat engine cut to silence, then
    start up again as the boat veered around in a
    semicircle and came back to her. Alex?

86
7
  • She looked saw his body near her just under the
    water. She swam toward him, breastroke, it was
    all she knew. He was floating face down,
    spread-eagle. She caught hold of his wrist and
    pulled him towards her. The motorboat came
    alongside, the man in the green shirt reaching
    down for her, but, No, no, she called and tried
    to push Alex toward him. The man caught Alex by
    the hair of his head and pulled him up, she
    pushing, Alex falling back twice into the water,
    before the man, with a great effort, lifted him
    like a sack across the side of the boat, tugging
    and heaving until Alex disappeared into the boat.
    The man shouted, Un instant, madame, un instant
    and reappeared, putting a little steel ladder
    over the side. She climbed up onto the motorboat
    as the man went out onto the prow to disentangle
    the wreckage of the pedalo.

87
8
  • A small child was sitting at the back of the
    boat, staring at Alexs body, which lay face-down
    on the floorboards. She went to Alex and saw
    blood from a wound, a gash in the side of his
    head, blood matting his hair. He was breathing
    but unconscious. She lifted him and cradled him
    in her arms, his blood trickling onto her
    breasts. She saw the boat owners bare legs go
    past her as he went to the rear of the boat to
    restart the engine. The child began to bawl but
    the man leaned over, silenced it with an angry
    slap, the man turned to her, his face sick with
    fear. Nous y serons dans un instant, he
    shouted, opening the motor to full throttle. She
    hugged Alex to her, a rivulet of blood dripping
    off her forearm onto the floorboards as the boat
    raced to the beach.

88
PREDICTION FUN
  • Brian Moore, Cold Heaven

89
Jake began to dial the number slowly as he had
done every evening at six oclock ever since his
father had passed away. For the next fifteen
minutes he settled back to listen to what his
mother had done that day
It was on a bright day of midwinter, in New York.
The little girl who eventually became me, but as
yet was neither me nor anybody else in
particular, but merely a soft anonymous morsel of
humanity this little girl, who bore my name,
was going for a walk with her father. The episode
is literally the first thing I can remember about
her, and therefore I date the birth of her
humanity from that day.
Urquhart castle is probably one of the most
picturesquely situated castles in the Scottish
Highlands. Located 16 miles south-west of
Inverness, the castle, one of the largest in
Scotland, overlooks much of Loch Ness. Visitors
come to stroll through the ruins of the
13th-century castle because Urquhart has earned
the reputation of being one of the best spots for
sighting Loch Nesss most famous inhabitant
90
LITERACY IMPACT!
So
What have you done? What are you going to do?
91
LITERACY IMPACT!
Having 4 approaches
Mnemonics
SPELLING
Starters
Word webs
Rules
92
Literacy Across the Curriculum
9
Spelling approaches
93
Literacy Across the Curriculum
10
Mnemonics Fun
Necessary never eat chips eat sausage
sandwiches and raspberry yoghurt
Words within words
enviRONment buSINess deFINitely sePARAte
Got any others?
94
Literacy Across the Curriculum
11
Signature Signatory
Consign Consignment Consigned
Resign Resignation Resigning Resigned
Sign
Design Designer Designing Designed Designation Des
ignate Redesign
Signal Signalling
Assign Assignment Assignation Reassign
95
LITERACY IMPACT!
12
RULES I before e Effect of final e hop - hope
96
LITERACY IMPACT!
13
97
?Kick-start learning
? Dont aim for false links with main lesson
content
? No Blue Peter badges
? Do aim for coherence across starters
? Emphasise collaboration problem-solving
? Avoid writing
? Avoid the temptation to extend the activity
98
  • www.geoffbarton.co.uk

99
-ible -able
  • www.geoffbarton.co.uk

100
Homophones Sound of Music Kylie Beethoven their
there theyre too two to pray prey
  • www.geoffbarton.co.uk

101
Hard
Homophones Freeze Stand advice advise pract
ice practise effect affect Its its
  • www.geoffbarton.co.uk

102
Activity Ill say some sentences containing
homophones. You tell me whether its list A or
list B. Make up sentences eg The pilot of the
aircraft was really rather plain) A stand
up B under table plain Plane weak
Week steal Steel main Mane rows
Rows fare Fair break Brake sew So due
Jew whether whether
  • www.geoffbarton.co.uk

103
LITERACY IMPACT!
So
What have you done? What are you going to do?
104
So ..
  1. If its a priority, do something
  2. Customise and simplify ruthlessly
  3. Identify the essential (simple) skills of reading
    - eg by asking students
  4. Build into school systems of training,
    observation, performance management
  5. Dont forget reading for pleasure keep it in the
    public domain

105
LITERACY IMPACT!
Literacy Across the Curriculum Maintaining the
Momentum
Have a safe journey home
All resources can be downloaded at
www.geoffbarton.co.uk
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