Jean Gross CBE, 2015.  Why work on spoken language matters so much - for literacy, learning and life  Fantastic practice from across the country- the.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How to be a good teacher? What makes a good teacher?
Advertisements

Total Physical Response (TPR)
The New English Curriculum
Every child talking Nursery Clusters. Supporting speech, language and communication skills Nursery Clusters Cluster 2 Understanding Spoken Language.
Effective support: working with others Effective support: working with others A Twilight Training Session by Gareth D Morewood, Director of Curriculum.
ICT in Primary Schools Presentation to Southampton PGCE course Friday, March 28th 2003.
Enfield Understanding how schools manage Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) 2 By the end of this session you will Understand what is meant.
 A New School System A Guide for Parents and Carers.
Playing board for the game Crooked Rules
 A New School System A Guide for Parents and Carers.
New Curriculum Parents Meeting September 2014 East Farleigh Primary School.
KS1 Information Sessions for Parents
Big Ideas and Problem Solving in Junior Math Instruction
Welcome Hello and welcome to our reading session. Thank you for coming!
Using MidYIS to inform Teaching & Learning
Jean Gross CBE, January Language and the brain Why communication and language matter – the links with learning and behaviour Share some effective.
Education Policies and Structures Their impact on the delivery of Gaelic Games.
Slide 1 © Crown copyright 2009 Talk for learning Session 3.
Thinking Skills 1 of 23. Why teach thinking skills? Is it really that important? Creative and critical thinking abilities are not inborn as was once believed.
Parents’ workshopPare Mr Martin and Miss Richter Reading Workshop.
Robertson National School Welcome to our Open Afternoon.
PLANNING FOR THE TEACHING OF READING: SHARED, GUIDED AND INDEPENDENT Week 4 – FT PGCE.
Early Intervention EYFS Framework Guide. Early intervention The emphasis placed on early intervention strategies – addressing issues early on in a child’s.
1 Quality of Play: Progress and Challenges. 2 Introduction Key Sure Start objective: Improving the ability to learn Core Sure Start service: Support for.
Staff meeting: why, what and how?. Why focus on speaking and listening?
Some Missing Links? Charles L. Mifsud Literacy for All Seminar, 15 th November 2012.
The New English Curriculum September The new programme of study for English is knowledge-based; this means its focus is on knowing facts. It is.
Welcome to Boost Your Child’s Literacy and Numeracy Evening.
Promoting good practice in tackling poverty and disadvantage INSET materials for primary schools.
Staff meeting: why, what and how?. Why focus on speaking and listening?
Webinar Maths and SLCN Jean Gross CBE The webinar slides, plus additional strategies, can be downloaded.
Carolyn Carter
Help with Speech and Language in the Classroom. Language and Attainment? “Children who enter school with poorly developed speech and language skills are.
Welcome to Early Years Foundation Stage Curriculum Workshop November 2013.
MATH COMMUNICATIONS Created for the Georgia – Alabama District By: Diane M. Cease-Harper, Ed.D 2014.
Techniques for Highly Effective Communication Professional Year Program - Unit 5: Workplace media and communication channels.
One Step at a Time: Presentation 8 DISCUSSION SKILLS Introduction Initial Screen Skills Checklist Classroom Intervention Lesson Planning Teaching Method.
Aims of tonight's meeting
SEF Describing good or better achievement and standards What is laid down, ordered, factual is never enough to embrace the whole truth: life spills over.
Year R Stay and Play Talk. Why?  Communication is the number one skill. Without it, children will struggle to make friends, learn and enjoy life.
NUMERACY NATIONAL LITERACY and NUMERACY FRAMEWORK INFORMATION FOR PARENTS GD LITERACY.
SEN Coffee Morning September  You may be aware that a Children and Families Bill was published this year and within that document lies the New.
KS1 SATS Guidance for Parents
Contact details: Marie Newton Speech and language therapist Zoë Mylchreest Specialist teacher
Changes to assessment and reporting of children’s attainment Monday 12 th October A guide for Parents.
SPEAKING AND LISTENING ACROSS THE CURRICULUM HOW TO SUPPORT YOUR CHILDREN’S LEARNING LOWER KS2.
Developing Communication Skills why a language rich environment is not enough.
Come to our curriculum evening after school on Monday Speak to staff about how your child learns Ask questions about how your child is assessed Find out.
SEN Hub Webinar Literacy and SLCN Jean Gross CBE The webinar slides can be downloaded and printed from:
Supporting Children with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN) Monday 21 st March Emily Alderson – Speech and Language Therapist.
© Crown copyright 2009 Slide /10 Teacher CPD programme – primary mathematics Strengthening mental, reasoning and communication skills in mathematics.
Peartree Primary School SEND (Special Educational Needs & Disabilities) Information Report
The new framework for inspection Inspecting for successful early reading Gill Jones HMI 7 June 2012.
2 What are Functional Skills? How do they fit in and how will they be assessed?
Rhaglen Gymorth Genedlaethol National Support Programme Llythrennedd a Rhifedd Literacy and Numeracy Workshop for Governors.
The importance of effective vocabulary teaching – Literacy.
 To help you to understand the curriculum which is covered in the Early Years Foundation Stage.  To understand how we teach in order to cover the requirements.
SOUTH VIEW COMMUNITY PRIMARY SCHOOL. NEW NATIONAL CURRICULUM From September 2014 it became statutory for all schools to teach the New National Curriculum.
Greenhills Primary Literacy Workshop
The Need. The Need As highlighted by Better Communication: Shaping Speech, language and communication services for children and young people (Gascoigne,
Lisa Morgan Professional Director – The Communication Trust
Ready to Read Using Dialogic Reading
Communication and Language Workshop
Speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)
Speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)
Speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)
Speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)
Speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)
Staff meeting: why, what and how?
Pre-learning Vocabulary and Mind Maps
Presentation transcript:

Jean Gross CBE, 2015

 Why work on spoken language matters so much - for literacy, learning and life  Fantastic practice from across the country- the teaching and learning strategies that make most difference

Poor communication skills impact on... Educational achievement Behaviour/vulnerability Mental health Employability Criminality Disadvantage Cycle Vocabulary at 5 a powerful predictor of GCSE achievement 2/3 of 7-14 year olds with serious behaviour problems have language impairment 40% of 7 to 14 year olds referred to child psychiatric services had a language impairment that had never been suspected 47% of employers say they can’t get recruits with the communication skills they need 65% of young people in young offender institutions have communication difficulties Children from low income families lag behind high income counterparts by sixteen months in vocabulary at school entry

The number of pupils identified as having speech, language and communication needs in annual DfE school census has increased by 72 per cent between 2005 and 2011

The amount of time television (adult and child programmes) was on in the home when child was under two predicted achievement at school entry. As this time increased, so the child’s score at school entry decreased. Roulstone et al, 2011 Investigating the role of language in children’s early educational outcomes, Research Report DFE-RR134

Vocabulary at age 5 has been found to be the best predictor of whether children who experienced social deprivation in childhood were able to ‘buck the trend’ and escape poverty in later adult life

The Effects of Weaknesses in Oral Language on Reading Comprehension Growth (Hirsch, 1996) Reading Age Level Chronological Age Low Oral Language in Kindergarten High Oral Language in Kindergarten 5.2 years difference

 For Year 5 children with poor reading comprehension, an intervention to boost oral language skills made more difference to reading comprehension than an intervention directly teaching reading comprehension skills (Developing Reading Comprehension, Clarke et al, Wiley, 2013 )

 Nursery/YR children who took part in an oral language intervention (Nuffield Early Language Intervention) showed significantly better reading comprehension in Y1 than control group (Fricke, 2012)

 ICAN’s A Chance to Talk whole-school initiative – children involved made on average 50% more progress in reading at key stage 1 than previous cohorts  Children receiving specific small group language intervention made accelerated progress academically. 90% of them met or exceeded the progress expected for all children of their age group in reading, 69% in writing and 76% in maths.

‘How to teach pupils to write well is first to get them to speak well.’,

ListeningSpeakingReadingWriting Learned Used Taught

ListeningSpeakingReadingWriting Learnedfirstsecondthird Usedmostnext to most next to least least Taughtleastnext to least next to most most

 Teachers should develop pupils’ spoken language, reading, writing and vocabulary as integral aspects of the teaching of every subject.  Pupils should be taught to speak clearly and convey ideas confidently using Standard English. They should learn to justify ideas with reasons; ask questions to check understanding; develop vocabulary and build knowledge; negotiate; evaluate and build on the ideas of others; and select the appropriate register for effective communication.

 They should be taught to give well-structured descriptions and explanations and develop their understanding through speculating, hypothesising and exploring ideas. This will enable them to clarify their thinking as well as organise their ideas for writing.

Teaching listening

Teaching children to listen

 Why work on spoken language matters so much - for literacy, learning and life  Fantastic practice from across the country- the teaching and learning strategies that make most difference

The talking classroom A place to talk A reason to talk Support for talk

A place to talk

It doesn’t have to be expensive © Elizabeth Jarman

Good practice A place to talk A reason to talk Support for talk

A reason to talk

Class discussion ‘Classrooms where teachers talk less and children talk more. Classrooms where teachers scrap the mechanistic reliance on hands-up, ask more open-ended questions (why? how?), give thinking time, make space for collaborative conversations and oral rehearsal of answers, and then always ask pupils – rather than us – to comment upon the answer they have just heard.’(Barton, 2011).

Bouncing ‘Thank you for making that point, Jo. Andrew, what are your thoughts on what Jo just said?’ Teachers can extend this to ‘Can you build on what Jo just said/ summarise what she said/ compare her ideas with Andrew’s/ decide whether you need to ask Jo for more detail/give reasons for agreeing or disagreeing.’

Take maths.... Hot seating – child in centre is a number and others have to ask questions to find out what the number is Snowballing – What can you tell me about 24? Find 3 facts as a pair then choose 5 facts as a group of 4, 8 facts as a group of 8... Think-pair-share- Deciding the best way to investigate a question like how many people would be able to sit in the school hall

A few more ideas.... Jigsaw – expert groups could learn about different ways of presenting data (line graphs, pictograms, bar graphs) and then home groups could be given some data and asked to choose which is the best way to represent it Envoys – give each group some data to represent and then envoys go and look at how other groups have done it

Barrier games One child to use coordinates to enable the other child to reproduce the picture first child holds Both children have an identical set of photographs. One child chooses one and describes it. The other child has to pick out the photograph from their set One child makes a 3-D shape using linking cubes, Duplo or Lego and describes to partner how to make

A few more ideas.... Make a maths podcast – groups first explore a question like ‘Do teachers usually drive small silver cars?’, then make a podcast about their methods and findings

Good practice A place to talk A reason to talk Support for talk

The sad tale of Three Billy Goats Gruff....

Actively teaching the skills of listening, working in groups Using talk frames Actively teaching vocabulary Support for Talk

Support for talk – working in groups

Teaches pupils how to hold a reasoned discussion, tackling problems in groups through talk. The approach has been rigorously evaluated using experimental and control groups. There were significant impacts on attainment in science and maths, and in non-verbal- reasoning. Thinking Together approach

Talk frames Year 1 They are the same because………… ……… They are different because………… ………is…………an d…………is……… …… Year 6 In some ways………and…..are alike. For instance they both……………………….. Another feature they have in common is that……………………… However they also differ in that…. For example……………..whereas……………. The similarities/differences seem more important than the similarities/differences because…….

Vocabulary building

Vocabulary acquisition