Our aim is for all children to leave Lansbury Lawrence as fluent and confident speakers, readers and writers to enable them to be effective communicators.
At Lansbury Lawrence, we follow the new National Curriculum for English. Our English curriculum is built around a core literature spine of well-chosen, quality texts and stories, linked as closely as possible to our termly themes.
Speaking and Listening
At Lansbury Lawrence we believe that effective development of children’s speaking and listening skills are fundamental to building the vital life skills of reading and writing. From day one in nursery through to their last day of year 6, it is a core focus of the children’s daily activities.
Children hear excellent models of language from staff and a wide range of vocabulary. They are given opportunities to voice their thoughts and opinions throughout all lessons with oral storytelling, drama, discussion and debates taught across the school. Essentially, speaking before writing enables children to prepare and rehearse their ideas before writing them down. Additionally, children are given opportunities to perform in their class and to wider audiences.
Reading
Our aim is for every child to leave Lansbury Lawrence as a fluent, confident and independent reader.
We believe that reading should be a pleasure, but we recognise that children have to be confident with the skills of reading and so we aim to give them the skills, as quickly as possible.
Lansbury Lawrence Reading Progression
Phonics
Children begin to learn to read by using phonics. Phonics help children to decode new written words by sounding them out using their phonic knowledge.
Early phonics are introduced in nursery through rhymes, singing, stories and play, helping children to start to learn the sounds that letters make.
We use a synthetic approach to teaching phonics using the accredited THEP Phonics scheme. This is taught systematically from phase 1 in the nursery through to phase 6 in year 2, in daily phonics sessions.
Alongside the phonics sessions, children read decodeable books, matched to their phonics stage, in daily guided reading sessions. These are sent home for children to read to an adult to help them build their word reading fluency.
The Phonics Screening Check
Children’s phonic knowledge is tested at the end of Year 1, through a statutory national test. If they do not achieve the threshold score the test is repeated at the end of Year 2.
The large majority of children complete the phonics programme by the end of Year 2. If, through our assessment, we find that some children still have gaps in their phonic knowledge, an intervention programme is put in place in Year 3 and throughout Key Stage 2, as necessary.
Reading for meaning
To be able to understand what they read, children need to be fluent word readers and have good language comprehension.
We develop children’s reading fluency and comprehension skills through daily reading sessions. In reception, year 1 and year 2, children have a daily guided reading session. In years 3-6, children have a daily whole class reading session.
In these sessions, children read a range of stories, non-fiction and poetry. The children practise their reading strategies, learn new vocabulary, re-read texts to develop fluency and develop their comprehension skills through discussing answers to questions about what they have read.
The Joy of Reading
We want the children at Lansbury Lawrence to love reading!
We provide many opportunities for children to develop a love of books and reading from the moment they start nursery. Each class teacher reads a story or a class novel to the children every day. Children are given time to choose books from the class or the school library and to take these home. Home reading is very important and we encourage parents to read or share a book with their child each evening. Books and reading areas are available to children at lunch times.
Children in years 3 – 6 use the Accelerated Reader programme to help them choose books. When they have read a book they can take a quiz about what they have read.
We celebrate events such as World Book Day, invite authors to come in to school and take part in reading challenges such as the Tower Hamlets Book Award and the Ideas Store Summer Reading Challenge.
Reading across the Curriculum
We have invested in buying books which link to our wider curriculum topics so that children have as many opportunities as possible to read across the curriculum in lessons and independently. This supports children with their understanding of their current topic and helps them to develop a wide vocabulary.
Parental Engagement
Children are strongly encouraged to read regularly at home with parental support.
We host reading workshops for parents to give guidance about how we teach reading in school and how to help support with reading at home.
Writing
We build our teaching of writing around a core literature spine of stories, non-fiction texts and poetry, closely linked to our termly themes, to provide excellent models of writing.
Writing is composed of:
- Transcription – handwriting and spelling
- Composition – generating ideas, structuring content
Children are taught to generate ideas, to plan and to edit their writing, thinking about the audience, purpose and effect.
We teach children accurate letter formation and to develop fluent, joined and legible handwriting. In addition, following the completion of the phonics programme, children are taught spelling throughout years 3-6 and to understand the spelling structure of words. We use the no nonsense spelling scheme.
Lansbury Lawrence Writing Progression
Poetry Slam Finals – Winners!
Year 5 were lucky enough to take part in the virtual Poetry Slam finals this afternoon. Both Year 5 classes performed poems they had written themselves, including some group, duo and some very brave SOLO performers! Imteyaz in Kahlo Class won an award for "Best Line...
Kapoor Class End of Term Celebration
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The End of Our Journey Through Space!
It has been another fantastic half-term here at Lansbury Lawrence and everyone in Lichtenstein class has been having great fun and learning a lot along the way. First to English, this term we have be doing some amazing creative writing for the Tower Hamlets creative...
An interview with an author!
Hello everyone, we have once again been doing some exciting things over here in Lichtenstein class! Firstly, we have all been entered into a fantastic story writing competition for the Tower Hamlets area. The stimulus for our writing task is "I am not alone". In order...
Red Nose Day!
Hello everyone! This week we're looking at some of the great work that Lichtenstein class have been producing in English and the fun that we have been having in the build-up to Red Nose Day. This week in English we have been writing a fable based on the Fate of...
Hadid Class Parent Exhibition
Wow! What a strange start to 2021! Hadid class have worked so hard over the past six weeks, and each and every one should be so proud of themselves. Our topic this term has been World War II. We have studied how the conflict started and who was fighting on the allied...
The Blitz – Parents Exhibition
Our topic this term has been World War II. We have studied how the conflict started and who was fighting on the allied and axis sides. We have learnt about Evacuees, The Holocaust and The Blitz. These studies culminated in a piece of creative writing where the pupils...
Phonics in Hamilton class. Every day we practise a new sound, learn how to blend and segment and have a go at forming the letter of our new sound and write a simple word or sentence. Umaymah write the word 'pig'. Yousuf has a go at 'g'. Abdul Hameed is using his...
How To Reach The Afterlife?…
This term in Lichtenstein class, we are learning all about the Egyptians. This week in English, we watched a video about how to reach the afterlife: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yv_MXNYbAo We then used this to write our own instructions. Here is an example of step...
A Wish Gone Wrong!
Hepworth and Hokusai class have been watching One Wish Too Many to inspire their writing since the start of year three. Set on the Lansbury estate and featuring Lansbury Road School, Chrisp St market and other local buildings, the 1950s film is a tale of a schoolboy...