The Writing Curriculum at Parochial
'Parochial Cares', our mission is to prepare children for the future by living, learning and growing together in God.
To live life... life in all its fullness (John 10:10)
Writing curriculum handbook available upon request:
Vision:
At Parochial, we aim to promote high standards of language and literacy by equipping pupils with a strong command of the spoken and written language. Through the use of an in-depth text spine, pupils read and listen to books by significant authors to ensure they are hearing rich language structures and imaginative ideas. Writing across a range of genres, including writing to persuade, entertain, inform and discuss, enables pupils to write accurately and coherently, adapting their language and style in and for a range of contexts, purposes and audiences. Writing encourages pupils to use discussion in order to learn; elaborating and explaining clearly their understanding and ideas. At Parochial we also aim to develop competent speakers and listeners, who are able to make formal presentations, demonstrate to others and participate in debate.
Implementation:
At Parochial we are:
Educating for Wisdom, knowledge and skills in Writing through the use of the Pathways to Write approach. Moving from the Gateway sessions to Pathways to independent application, the Pathways to Write approach enables children to read and write independently for a variety of audiences and purposes. The key phases of the Pathways to Write approach firstly hooks children into their writing through drama, art and collaborative learning. Following this, children repeatedly practice the application of their Mastery Keys through a variety of different writing genres. Finally, children are given the opportunity to apply their Mastery Keys with greater independence by producing their final written pieces. Language, punctuation and sentence construction is built upon from EYFS through to Year 6 using the National Curriculum guide.
In EYFS, phonics is the gateway to writing. Pupils will learn to write through the Read Write Inc phonics programme, the children write every day, rehearsing out loud what they want to say, before spelling the words using the graphemes and ‘tricky’ words they know. They practise handwriting every day: sitting at a table comfortably, they learn correct letter formation and how to join letters speedily and legibly. Children’s composition (ideas, vocabulary and grammar) is developed by drawing on their own experiences and talking about the stories they read.
Building on these foundations, pupils learn rhymes and simple stories using role play to immerse themselves in the text. Appropriate props and resources are provided to the pupils which encourage and develop the children’s story telling skills, ultimately impacting on their spoken vocabulary. As a class, the children make simple innovations to the original story by considering alternative characters and settings. They then re-learn the text with the adaptations and the teacher models writing to them. Within continuous provision, writing opportunities are provided to the children to encourage them to write captions, labels, familiar phrases or sections of a story using the skills they have been taught. With a wealth of stories already in their heads they are able to focus on the technical parts of writing as they move through KS1 and beyond.
In KS1, the Pathways to Write process continues. Pupils are provided with a range of scaffolds to support them in adapting the text to create alternative versions. At the end of the Pathways process, pupils plan their own stories using the structure and vocabulary they have learnt – allowing all children to demonstrate their skills as a writer.
In KS2, pupils develop rich language structures, age appropriate, powerful vocabulary and imaginative ideas. They begin to experiment with their sentence structures and become aware of their audience. Pupils actively read through their writing assessing the effectiveness of their own and others writing and suggest improvements. Throughout the process, teachers are continually creating word banks, adding new vocabulary and encouraging pupils to magpie ambitious, powerful vocabulary in their sentences – both orally and written.
Educating for hope and aspiration through writing by immersing children in high quality texts. Whether, it’s fiction, non-fiction or poetry, at Parochial we want to use literature as a context for writing and an opportunity to analyse an author’s style, word choices and approaches which pupils can magpie and mimic as they move through Pathways process and into the independent writing stage . Through the use of high quality texts, pupils will be exposed to a range of writing genres filled with ambitious spelling, punctuation and grammar choices appropriate to its audience, placing great literature at the heart of every Pathways to Write cycle. In addition, writing is modelled to a high quality through the use of shared and modelled writing techniques
Educating for community and living well together by providing a real, authentic audience and purpose for children’s writing. At Parochial, we provide our pupils with writing opportunities which draw on issues within the local community and beyond. In KS1, pupils write to inform as they explore environmental issues through the text, ’The Last Wolf’ and write a letter in role as the main character persuading others to save trees. Pupils also write to entertain by writing a story with a moral focus based on the text, ’Grandpa's Secret Giant’. In KS2, pupils write to persuade using the text ‘Big Blue Whale’ to help to protect sea life and through the text ‘The Paperbag Prince’ to persuade others to recycle their belongings and help the environment. They discover how to formally debate through the English curriculum and this skill is used to explore issues around conservation and sustainability in Science. .
Educating for dignity and respect by providing pupils with opportunities to take part in self and peer assessment. By the end of Key Stage 1 pupils are able to discuss what they have written with the teacher or other pupils and read their writing aloud, clearly enough to be heard by their peers and the teacher. In Key Stage 2, pupils evaluate and edit by assessing the effectiveness of their own and others’ writing responding with empathy and compassion. They propose changes to vocabulary, grammar and punctuation to enhance effects and clarify meaning. They gain a resilience when trying to improve and reflect on their work appropriately. Pupils learn how to take risks, becoming creative, sophisticated and effective writers.
Impact:
Through the teaching of systematic phonics and the Pathways to Write process, our children become confident and accurate sentence writers by the end of KS1. By the time children leave Parochial, they are fluent, confident writers who are able to reflect on their understanding of the audience for and purpose of their writing by selecting appropriate vocabulary and grammar. Our pupils actively strive to improve their work, reading it aloud to themselves and others moulding their language, and most importantly their tone, to make their writing successful.