Transcript Slide 1

Year 1 Phonics Assessment - Aims
• What is phonics?
• To inform you of the background to this
new assessment
• What the check will involve
• When it will take place
• How Ms Lane and Miss Joy would like you
to help
• Expectations
• What happens next
When is phonics taught?
• It starts with you – making sounds with
your baby. Nursery rhymes
• Daily highly structured phonics lesson in
F/KS1
• Continues in Key stage 2
What is phonics?
• Children are taught to recognise the
sounds that each individual letter makes.
• Children are taught to identify sounds that
different combinations of letters make –
such as “th” or “ee”
• Children are taught to blend these sounds
from left to right.
• Children are taught to enunciate the
phonemes “snappily.”
Using the terminology….
• Children are expected to use these terms:• Phoneme – the sounds in a word
• Grapheme – a sequence of letters that
represents a phoneme
• Each of these words have 3 separate phonemes. Each of these
phonemes is represented by a grapheme.
c
b
p
kn
a
ir
ai
igh
t
d
n
t
More terminology
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Short vowel, long vowel sip night
Digraph th oo
Trigraph igh
Split vowel digraph hate
Segmentation - hearing the individual phonemes
within a word. C-r-a-sh (helpful for spelling
• Blending- merging the individual phonemes to
read and unfamiliar word. Sound out each
grapheme th-i-n
More about phonics
• There are lots of different ways of making
the same phoneme.
• For example:• /ee/ meet sea, these, happy, chief, key
• /igh/ high pie, by, like
How could you make the /oa/ phoneme?
• The expectation is that by the end of Year
1, 85% children will be secure at working
at this level
What phonics offers
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A very useful tool to help children learn.
However….
It doesn’t test children’s understanding
It doesn’t help with “tricky words” e.g.
eyes, friends, through
• So it’s not a reading test, it’s just testing
knowledge about how sounds go together.
Why this new test is happening
Huge change in emphasis over the last few years
in the teaching of reading.
85% of the English Language is decodable.
Funding, training, testing..
A statutory test for all Year 1 children , to see
whether individual children have learned phonic
decoding to an appropriate standard.
What the test will involve:-
Each child will read 40 words, by
themselves, with Miss Joy.
There will be a mixture of real words
and non words.
It will take about 10 minutes.
When, where and with whom?
• The week commencing June 17h
• Miss Joy
• Somewhere quiet
A video of a pilot school.
How Ms Lane and Miss Joy would
like you to help.
• Become familiar with the different sounds
your child is learning.
• Practise sounds regularly with your child
using the lists given.
• Make sure you keep sounds short and
sharp – this is crucial.
• Make sure your child blends the sounds
and does not just sound them out.
• Play games 
Expectations
• The government’s expectations are that
85% of children are secure at Phase 5 at
the end of Year 1.
• However, in the pilot study last year, there
was a 35% pass rate…
• All schools’ results will be published.
• Your child’s score will be reported to you
by the end of this school year.
Suppose my child doesn’t meet the
expectations?
• We all mature at different rates – can be
harder for the “summer – borns.”
• We use all forms of testing to help us see
exactly what we need to teach, and to whom.
• The year 2 teacher will carry on exactly
where Ms Lane and Ms Joy left off.
• Children not achieving a pass will be retested
at the end of Year 2.
Phonics – a useful tool, but not the
whole story
• It’s not a reading test – it’s just checking
one small but vital aspect of reading.
• It doesn’t test understanding, nor
knowledge of “tricky words” – the ones you
can’t decode using phonics. (Mr, people,
said, many…)
Producing literate children
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Read to children – bedtime stories, etc.
Power of Reading
Visit the public library
Let them see you read.
Help with spellings at home
This is a journey that will continue into
secondary school