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Welcome to Wheatfields Infants’ and Nursery Key Stage 1 Meeting

Welcome to Wheatfields Infants’ and Nursery Key Stage 1 Meeting. Please help yourself to a drink. Vision and Aims.

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Welcome to Wheatfields Infants’ and Nursery Key Stage 1 Meeting

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  1. Welcome to Wheatfields Infants’ and Nursery Key Stage 1 Meeting Please help yourself to a drink

  2. Vision and Aims On their learning journey within our school our children will grow into confident, happy, independent individuals who can communicate effectively, achieve well and respect the diverse communities that make up our world. In an ever changing world we believe our children should develop a strong set of values that underpin their learning and enable them to become lifelong learners. Each child will learn a range of skills and knowledge that will enable them to recognize the contribution and responsibility they have to developing a sustainable world. Achieve through School Improvement Plan 3 year and 1 year

  3. Our Principles – EYFS and Key Stage 1 Unique Child Every child is a unique child who is constantly learning and can be resilient, capable, confident and self-assured. Positive Relationships Children learn to be strong and independent through positive relationships. Enabling Environments Children learn and develop well in enabling environments, in which their experiences respond to their individual needs and there is a strong partnership between practitioners and parents and carers. Learning and Development Children develop and learn in different ways. The curriculum supports the development of all children – for Years 1 and 2 the National Curriculum. Effective transitions from the EYFS to the National Curriculum.

  4. Characteristics of Effective Learning • Engagement - Play and explore Finding out and exploring Playing with what they know Being willing to ‘have a go’ • Motivation - To actively learn Being involved and concentrating Enjoying achieving what they set out to do Keeping trying • Thinking- To be creative and to be able to think critically Having their own ideas Making links Choosing ways to do things Solving Problems Krishna Cat - Reflectiveness Rufus Rabbit – Reciprocity Building Learning Power Doris Dog-Resourcefulness Tallulah Ted- Resilience

  5. The Curriculum in Key Stage 1Years 1 and 2 We always do our best  We listen · We look after our School · We tell the truth · We are kind and polite · We help each other · We keep safe Values Personal, Social and Emotional Development, RE Building Learning Power, Behaviour , Rainbow Code, Rights Respecting, Sustainability Basic Skills Maths, Literacy (speaking and listening, reading and writing), Science, ICT, PE Foundation Subjects Art, Design and Technology, Geography, History, Music

  6. High Expectations Attainment and Progress • Effective environments • Assessment for Learning • Planning • Basic skills track closely – targets, half termly meetings

  7. Immersion • Enhance learning by offering opportunities to experience the area of learning before particular skills are taught. • Visits /Visitors • Artefacts • Music • Food • Research and home learning • Discussion • Exposure to text genre

  8. Outdoor Classroom • Supports and develops collaborative and cooperative skills • Builds confidence and leadership skills • Develops independence and problem solving skills • Develops creative thinking • Promotes risk taking and ability to assess risks • Reveals talents, capabilities, interests and personalities not so obvious in the indoor environment. • Cross Curricular links

  9. Independent Learning Development • Y1 gradually move from CIL (Early Years curriculum) to National Curriculum and IL. Y2 3x weekly • Offers three quality learning environments across the year group and across the curriculum, each with differentiated challenges • Opportunities to revisit ,practise ,develop skills taught in earlier lessons • Opportunities to begin to evaluate quality of own learning and where need more input or practise

  10. Research Home Learning and Speaking and Listening • Raising a question. Decide on keywords to use in search engine/index • Ensure understanding • Put it into own words • Check it’s true. Look at other sources • Decide on a way to record research/remember • Source the information (book titles and authors, web address) • Think about the audience • Make it interesting-pictures, props, audible voice, varied pace

  11. Maths • Numbers and the Number System • Fractions • Operations and Relationships Between them • Mental Methods • Solving Numerical Problems • Written Methods • Shape (Properties, Position and Movement) • Measures (time, length, capacity, mass) • Data (Processing, Representing and Interpreting)

  12. Numicon

  13. Practical Resources

  14. Literacy • Phonics • Reading • Writing across the curriculum • Spelling • Handwriting

  15. Phonics • Letters and Sounds • Phases • Listening skills • Sound recognition • Letter recognition • Reading • Writing • Spelling • Application and practise, whole class and groups • Relationship to book level

  16. Writing • Practical activities • Alternative forms of recording • Sound buttons • Peer writing • Illustration and diagram • Mind maps and flow charts • Drama • Cloze procedures • Writing across the Curriculum • Spelling • Handwriting

  17. Reading • Guided Reading • Main opportunity for teaching reading skills • Focus on practise and application of phonics teaching • Importance of comprehension and higher order reading skills • Individual Reading • Reading at home • Exposure to books, story telling and reading practise • Reading level • Reading Response book – importance of comprehension • Enjoyment versus speed!

  18. How you can support your child • Spending time with your child , talking. Talking doesn’t cost anything. • Enjoy stories and books with your child. • Counting and playing games. • Home Research Our website • Guides to helping your child with number and literacy • Activity ideas • How we teach maths and literacy

  19. Partnerships Parents are children’s first and most enduring educators. When parents and practitioners work together the results have a positive impact on children’s development and learning. • Communicating - Talking to your teacher, emails, website • Information sharing – Curriculum evenings, Parent meetings Maths Mornings • Celebrating Learning – Assemblies, Performances, Open Evenings, Sports Day

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