Writing:
We are all writers! We want our children to love writing. We want them to have no limits to what their ambitions are and grow up wanting to be authors, journalists, poets and reporters. At Rillington Primary School we believe that writing is integral to every element of our curriculum with explicit and intrinsic links made to the teaching of oracy and reading. |
The three c's - connect, collect and compose:
In writing we follow the three c's approach, where we build up to quality published pieces of writing with a clear audience, purpose and form.
Our intent is to:
- Provide a clear sequence, building on children's prior knowledge and skills, and making meaningful connections with reading.
- Develop a love for writing with a sense of pride when children publish their work.
- Teach national curriculum objectives in meaningful and inspiring ways.
- Children to write in a range of styles and genres.
- Use a consistent approach to teaching spelling.
When we are focusing on the 'connect' stage, we ponder and predict what might happen in the story, analyse WAGOLL's for word, sentence and organisational features as well as connecting to high quality vocabulary from the text, which children can utilise in their own writing. Teacher's use creative and innovative methods and resources to inspire children.
In the 'collect' stage of our learning, we use our connections to collect sentences for our composing stage. We use vocabulary from the first stage of writing and model it into sentences including grammar skills from the national curriculum. We also develop ideas by manipulating sentence structures, constructing paragraphs and use higher-level punctuation.
In the 'compose' stage of learning, we draft sections or paragraphs of text using writing skills checklists and then edit and improve these pieces of writing before publishing a final piece for our intended purpose and audience. This produces a high quality published piece of writing with all feedback embedded. Children's writing opportunities are carefully thought out to make a positive impact on transforming our world and sharing our core values with our local and global community.
The importance of wellbeing and relationships allow teachers to 'challenge' children by giving them immediate, direct feedback. We put great emphasis on children taking pride in their writing and having a critical, editorial eye to create the best work they can.
Sequence of learning:
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Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
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Background knowledge, whole class text, book work |
Whole class reading and book work |
Whole class reading and book work |
WAGOLL and feature spotting |
Vocabulary exploration, sentence type 1 from previous unit |
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Research and collect notes Sentence type 1 |
Research and collect notes Sentence type 2
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Collect other sentences using notes and research |
Collect other sentences using vocabulary exploration |
Organise sentences into paragraphs, plan writing |
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Draft |
Edit and improve |
Draft |
Edit and improve |
Publish and check against WAGOLL |
Sentence types:
Alan Pear 25 sentences
Year 1 |
Year 2 |
Year 3 |
Year 4 |
Year 5 |
Year 6 |
BOYS
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Simile |
Personification of weather |
Noun, which/who/ where |
P.C.
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Some; others |
Short
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All the w’s
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Many questions |
3 bad – (dash) questions? |
De:De
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O, (I) |
Emotion word, (comma) |
Ad same ad
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List |
3_ _ _ ed |
2A
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2 pairs
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Verb, person |
Double ly ending |
_ing, _ed
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Imagine 3 examples
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The more, the more |
If, if, if, then
Irony |
Planning:
Compose planning example
CCC’s |
Date: Core text: Goodnight Mister Tom |
Audience: Himself/friends/family Purpose: To inform others of how he is feeling Form: Monologue |
Monday - LI: To plan |
Scaffolding: Planning format |
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Compose
Plan Draft Edit Publish |
Input/ modelling: Using a model example, can the children identify the key skills taught last week? Recap these key skills and identify what impact each one has on the piece of writing. Break the monologue down into 4 sections – model this on the board for the children to connect with their skills P1 – What life used to be like P2 – Then – what happened? P3 – Now – what is currently happening? P4 – uncertainty about the future. Use of rhetorical questions. |
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Tuesday – LI: draft |
Scaffolding: High quality example |
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Input/ modelling: Key skills: Modal verbs, use of synonyms, past and present tense – knowing the difference and being able to consistently write in either, use of one word phrases, short sentences and long sentences. |
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Wednesday – LI: To edit and improve
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Scaffolding: Model editing format. Children are to independently use each other, working walls, resources within the classroom in order to up- level their work. |
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Input/ modelling: Model how the yellow box section feedback works. Aim is for the children to be able to edit and up level their own piece of work independently. Model an example. Keep reflecting on the aim and audience for this piece of writing. Model up-levelling. Use of working wall to look for skills which need to be applied within the writing. |
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Thursday – LI: Redraft |
Scaffolding: In partners children to identify where improvements could be made based on the poor example. |
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Input/ modelling: Peer assess – use of post it notes. Looking for children to be applying self- assessment from yesterday to their partners work today. What do I still need to be focussing on? What is my target for each paragraph? Provide children with a template ti use when self-assessing. |
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Friday – LI: To publish |
Scaffolding: |
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Input/ modelling:
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Overview of genres:
Year group |
Purpose / Text Type Autumn A |
Purpose / Text Type Autumn B |
Purpose / Text Type Spring A |
Purpose / Text Type Spring B |
Purpose / Text Type Summer A |
Purpose / Text Type Summer B |
Reception |
Captions and labels |
Fact file |
Re-tell story |
Instructions |
Recount |
Postcard |
Year 1/2 |
Story Setting description Recount |
Instructions Poetry Setting description |
Story Recount Fact file |
Informative letter Recount Instructions |
Story Postcard Information poster |
Retell story Story (time travel) Explanation |
Year 3/4 |
Setting description Character description Story |
Information leaflet Brochure page Poetry |
Instructions Diary entry (in role) Informal letter |
Poetry Explanation Persuasive letter |
Non chronological report Recount of trip Biography |
Story (imaginary) Setting description Poetry |
Year 5 |
Setting description Letter Poetry |
Newspaper Diary entry Non chronological report |
Non chronological report Character description Poetry |
Setting description Balanced argument |
Diary entry Biography Poetry |
Biased argument Explanation Poetry |
Year 6 |
Character description Setting description Letter - discussion |
Poetry Diary entry News report |
Non chronological report Speech – persuasive Setting description |
Character narrative Commentary Poetry |
Balanced argument News report Biography |
Letter Review – discussion Poetry |
Spelling, Grammar and Punctuation: |
SPaG is taught daily and links with the genre which the children are currently learning. The children understand the elements taught in greater detail rather than if it was taught stand alone. Teachers plan for the SPaG coverage using the National Curriculum. Spellings are taught through the No Nonsense spelling scheme which has a clear progression of teaching units from Years 2-6. The children are taught a range of spelling strategies throughout the year which they can apply and build on as they progress throughout the school.
At Rillington Primary, the impact of quality first teaching in writing will foster a love and enthusiasm for the subject. · Writing outcomes at KS2 at or above national average · Children become passionate about writing · Children can access and follow an ambitious writing curriculum · Standards in books are strong |