Title: Planning for transition
1Planning for transition Development of writing
skills from Early Years to KS1 ensuring
progression of each pupils Basic
Skills
2Chinese symbols/ Urdu
3Aims and Objectives
- To identify progression of writing skills through
the Foundation Phase - To outline opportunities and offer effective
strategies and activities for developing boys
and girls writing within the learning
environment and across areas of learning. - To plan experiences for developing childrens
writing skills - To plan for effective teaching and learning to
develop children as independent writers
4What is extended writing?
Content and text organisation
Purpose and Audience
Language features
A range of forms
Across the curriculum
Extended texts
Standard of writing
5Development of writing
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17Respond to writing
Positive personal response
Note the strengths specifically
Opportunity to self-assess ask for the childs
response/ view
Response on content
Question to extend
Response on layout/ neatness
Encourage re-drafting
Question to suggest
Agree on one target to move forward
18How do you teach writing?
19Forms of Writing
20- Task each group will have a text form and write
a short paragraph or first few lines on
Butterflies - Group 1poem,
- Group 2report (information - What do I know,
what do I want to know, what have I learned?
make own books), - Group 3 recount dwyn i gof visit to butterfly
form, - Group 4instruction (how to make butterfly
cakes), - Group 5explanation (lifecycle of a butterfly)
- Group 6 narrative
21STEPS TO TEACHING A NEW FORM OF WRITING
- Familiarisation
- Discovery
- Model
- Shared
- Guided
- Independent Construction
- Present to Audience
22 23Planning for a range of forms across the
curriculum
- How can we provide further opportunities
- to consolidate this learning?
- Areas within the environment
- Props for role-play
- Exemplar photographs of mark-making area
24Foundation Phase Effective Learning
Principles
- developing a disposition to learn
- learning and owenrship of their learning
- child-initiated and child-led
- active learning through first-hand experiences
- - well-planned practical activities,
- investigative, asking questions,
- learning through using their senses,
- through interacting with others,
- through problem-solving,
- through purposeful repetition,
- through developing independence and thinking
skills - increased home-school partnership
- listening to the voice of the learner