Category: Literacy

Brilliant P 5 & 6 Pupils Publish Bankier Banter Magazine

Primary 5 & 6 pupils at Bankier PS collaborated to create all of the copy needed for their latest school magazine – Bankier Banter. They used a wide range of listening, talking, reading and writing skills within this publishing theme to create an impressive publication which they are very proud of. The magazine was officially launched with a photo-call just before 3 pm on the last day of term.

This engaging and motivating work shows how teachers in Bankier are trialling a thematic approach to their teaching of literacy. They found that the thematic approaches to numeracy which they used last school year really helped pupils to progress their numeracy skills. They therefore wanted to see if similar improvements would happen when they took a themed approach to pupils’ literacy work. Primary 5 pupils were interviewed to gather their thoughts on how well this had worked for them. They shared the wide range of purposes for writing which they had used: book reviews, jokes and riddles, recipes, information articles about travel, history, celebrities, the latest games and video and lots of news and updates about school clubs and events. They enjoyed writing for a genuine school and community audience and said “if you want to be a person who writes newspapers, you’ve got to practice!” Aaron in primary 5 also worked in his own time to create an online version of the publication.

Pupils felt that this real-life literacy task improved their reading, writing and digital skills, as well as increasing their vocabulary. They had to work with others effectively to meet the publication deadline, finalise the layout and edit everything together. Pupils feel good about this work and really valued having their writing published – “You can be a bit famous” “You get credit, I find it amazing – I’ve made my mark”. They are justifiably proud of this collaborative literacy work and endorse their work with by saying that their articles and contributions are “all made with care”.

You might also- want to read here about the thematic literacy work done by primary 7 pupils at Bankier PS

 

Bankier Brilliant Bairns Run Spring Event

Primary 7 pupils at Bankier Primary School are writing this post to share how they organised and hosted an event on Wednesday 29th March. They invited parents, carers and people from their community to the event to help raise money for their leaver’s trip. The pupils really enjoyed this  experience as they hadn’t done anything like this before.

At Bankier some of the teachers planned their literacy work using a thematic approach which had really helped pupils to progress their maths and numeracy skills in 2022. This Spring event was planned around primary 7’s World War II topic.

Pupils read The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas to help them learn about the war. They were interested in how French people took part in this war and created a French cafe for their fund-raising event which sold: pain au chocolat, croissants, baguettes and hot drinks.  The event raised over £400 and pupils will plan how to spend this on their leavers trip next term.

The pupils really enjoyed the whole process and feel that it helped them develop different elements of literacy such as:

  • Writing letters and invitations
  • Developing French vocabulary
  • Writing and translating menus
  • Planning and organising different parts of the event

Pupils also learned new skills in art, food hygiene, handling money, timing and scheduling. They improved their ability to organise, work together, work to deadlines and use their ICT skills.

Click here to find out about the thematic literacy work done by primary 5 and 6 pupils at Bankier PS.

 

 

English as an additional language – celebrating and supporting

Over 75 different languages are currently spoken by pupils in Falkirk Council’s Early Learning and Childcare (ELC) Centres and Schools. The EAL team is part of the Additional Support Needs Outreach Service and works with pupils whose first or home language is not English.

Our EAL team support pupils who are enrolling in or who are already attending a Falkirk Council ELC centre/class or school. Their support helps pupils who may be beginners in English or pupils who speak English more fluently but are not achieving their full academic potential. They work with schools and families to meet the needs of learners for whom English is an additional language.

Please visit the EAL team blog page here for more information and support with any queries you may have about teaching and supporting your pupils. All EAL professional learning from CPD Manager is listed on our 2022-23  professional learning menu which you can visit using this link Professional Learning for Literacy and English – Welcome to Falkirk Literacy (glowscotland.org.uk).

 

Kickstart literacy for 2nd level pupils using brilliant NewsWise resources

Slide from Lesson 1 PowerPoint resource

NewsWise is a free, cross-curricular news literacy project for 7-to-11-year-olds across the UK. It is designed to help children develop their critical literacy skills within a real-life Journalist Training School context. The whole unit consists of 15 lessons which allow pupils to develop, consolidate and apply reading, talking and listening and writing skills in an holistic way. The real-life, “world of work” journalism context is an engaging way for teachers to help their second level pupils to understand, critically navigate and report real news. As well as developing most of the main CfE literacy organisers and sub-organisers, it also integrates essential learning within Technologies and Health and Wellbeing (Mental, emotional, social and physical wellbeing). Find out more and download this free resource by clicking here. It includes:

  • curriculum-based lesson plans
  • posters and all necessary resources for the lessons
  • exciting school workshops
  • opportunities to speak to real journalists.

NewsWise was funded by Google, and developed by the National Literacy Trust in partnership with the Guardian Foundation and the PSHE Association.

News from our National Literacy Network Meeting June 2022

This blog post shares key information and opportunities from the last National Literacy Network meeting which took place on 8th June 2022.

AGENDA: Welcome
• Love to Read Project – Dr Sarah McGeown
• Break Out Room Discussion -Focus on progression Early through First Level
• ES and Partner Updates
• Future NLN / LECN Dates

Love to Read Project – Dr Sarah McGeown, University of Edinburgh – This is a programme created by researchers, teachers and children to inspire and sustain a love of reading. It draws upon theory, research, children’s insights and teachers’ professional and pedagogical knowledge, expertise and experience. More information about this programme can be found here and it will be freely available from March 2023.

 

 

 

 

 

Sarah also shared reading for enjoyment links below:

For teachers/school leaders: McGeown, S., & Wilkinson, K. (2021). Inspiring and sustaining reading for pleasure in children and young people: A guide for teachers and school leaders. UKLA Minibook. Available here:

For children: Connecting with Fictional Characters: The Power of Books. Available here.

The final literacy development shared by Sarah was the Move to Read programme which is a collaborative research project between the University of Edinburgh and schools within Edinburgh City Council. It aims to co-create physically active early literacy activities (P1) which are embodied –  more information here.

Further information about the value of participatory research involving researchers, teachers and pupils can be found in The University of Edinburgh blog here. 

Focus on progression Early through First Level

Education Scotland colleagues shared national pupil attainment data from 2020-21, so that we could examine these as a group. The breakout discussions were used the questions below to explore our theories around why there was a dip at first level across literacy.

  • What are the theories around why the dip happens?
  • What are the challenges to effective learning (P1 – P4)?
  • How do we strengthen understanding of progression through this level?
  • In what ways do we support pedagogy at this level?

ES and Partner Updates

  1. Cabinet Secretary announcement December 2021: National Response to Improving Literacy group (NRIL)
    “Scotland already has the National Response to Improving Mathematics Partnership Board, and we will set up a National Response to Improving Literacy group. Both groups will examine the existing landscape in Scotland and internationally, seeking opportunities to enhance professional learning for teachers and the classroom experiences for young people”
  2. Themes are beginning to emerge from the consultation done so far by the NRIL. These will be developed and shared over the next months.

Future NLN / LECN Dates

LECN (Literacy and English Curriculum Network) meeting 16.6.22 – Gender and Literacy Motivation

The next National Literacy Network meeting takes place on Thursday 15th September 2022

 

Coming soon to our FVWL RIC – Alex Quigley talks Literacy

We are delighted to have Alex Quigley, a renowned literacy specialist, contributor to Educational Endowment Foundation (EEF) research and publications and author of several best-selling books (including Closing the Reading Gap and Closing the Vocabulary Gap) join us for three sessions in May and June. During these sessions Alex will share insights and evidence-informed approaches that teachers can employ in their practice. There will be a follow-up session on 15th June for attendees to discuss what they have taken from the sessions, as well as a platform to discuss how the RIC can best support you going into the 2022-2023 school year.

 Closing the Reading Gap with Alex Quigley

11th of May at 4pm – Alex explores the brilliantly complex act of reading in this session. He tackles practical issues, such as developing reading fluency, and how to support pupils to become strategic and knowledgeable readers. The session draws upon Alex’s best-selling book for teachers, and is research-informed but also packed with practical strategies every teacher can apply in the classroom.

Sign up via CPD Manager – course ID: 78388

Literacy across Learning with Alex Quigley

25th of May at 4pm – During this one-hour session Alex draws upon his classroom practice and a wealth of research evidence to explore the challenges pupils face when it comes to literacy in the classroom. In this session, he explores the importance of ‘disciplinary literacy’, focusing on how pupils develop as readers and writers across the curriculum. The session includes practical strategies to develop reading, writing and vocabulary approaches that unlock the curriculum for students and help ensure their success.

Sign up via CPD Manager – course ID: 78133

*This session is also part of the Forth Valley and West Lothian Regional Improvement Collaborative’s Futureproofing Pedagogy Series, which runs every Wednesday from 4pm from 26th April until 1st June.

Closing the Vocabulary Gap with Alex Quigley

7th of June at 4pm – Alex explores the phenomenon of the ‘vocabulary gap’ and its crucial impact on learning in the classroom. In this session, he explores how teachers can support vocabulary through rich academic talk, alongside applying vocabulary approaches to ensure pupils read and write with success. Alex holds a mirror up to word-rich classrooms and offers practical strategies that you can apply in your own classroom context.

Sign up via CPD Manager – course ID: 78389

Closing the Literacy Gap

15th of June at 4pm – This session is an opportunity for practitioners who attended Alex Quigley’s sessions to meet up and discuss the key messages covered in the sessions, as well as sharing ideas on what type of support they would like from the Forth Valley and West Lothian Regional Improvement Collaborative in the 2022-23 school year.

Sign up via CPD Manager – course ID: 78697

Connecting Parents & Carers with Literacy through Play at Maddiston Primary School

Primary 1 staff and Diane Russell (PT) at Maddiston PS created a video for their P1 parents and carers, who would usually visit the P1 classrooms to attend Literacy information workshops. The video shares and explains how literacy learning and play pedagogy are used to support primary 1 pupils as they progress their reading, writing, talking and listening.

The video shares a range of ways in which staff build literacy through play, playful teaching and engaging, active learning. These include:

  • Helicopter Stories
  • Foundations of Writing
  • Approaches designed to develop phonological awareness & other elements of reading
  • Building words
  • Developing a reading culture
  • Stories – reading in class and at home via initiatives such as the Bedtime Story Box
  • Listening activities
  • Message centre

The video is narrated by staff and children and they share how the learning environment promotes literacy skills.

  • Role play
  • Small worlds
  • Sand and water trays
  • Construction
  • Sound and audio in class

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UlqPAd6BEG4&w=560&h=315]

The final section of the video gives parents and carers an overview of a key reading and comprehension resource used in school – Bug Club.

Forth Valley, West Lothian Regional Collaborative Disciplinary Literacy Training sessions

Our FVWL RIC literacy team is offering new professional learning in Disciplinary Literacy for non-English teaching secondary practitioners. John Sherry, Principal Teacher of Literacy with FVWL RIC will deliver the following sessions:

  • Disciplinary Literacy 1 – An Introduction to Disciplinary Literacy – Monday 27th September at 4pm, Webinar. Course ID: 76134
  • Disciplinary Literacy 2 – Reading – Monday 25th October at 4pm, Webinar. Course ID: 76161
  • Disciplinary Literacy 3 – Writing – Monday 29th November at 4pm, Webinar. Focus on writing and how it is approaced in diferent ways across the curriculum.  Course ID 76162

These sessions will explore how to get secondary pupils to read like a geographer, write like a biologist or talk like a mathematician. This series is for secondary practitioners who want to know what disciplinary literacy is and how it can be used in their teaching. The three sessions will cover how pupils learn best when they are immersed in the vocabulary and nuances of their subject (session 1), with a specific focus on reading (session 2) and writing (session 3). Participants will be supported at every stage of the process as they trial and create subject-specific strategies to embed into their practice and help their pupils to reach their potential.

Sign up for each session via CPD Manager or contact John Sherry (gw14sherryjohn@glow.sch.uk) for more information.

2021-2022 Literacy Professional Learning – What’s on when?

The Falkirk Literacy Team would like to welcome you to this new school session. We are delighted to have scheduled the courses and professional learning opportunities below for this term and will continually update this page during the school year. We have also included courses from the universal professional learning offer provided by our regional collaborative literacy team. These courses can all be booked in the usual way via CPD Manager. Please leave your comments below or email one of us directly at: yvonne.mcblain@falkirk.gov.uk or yvonne.manning@falkirk.gov.uk

April 2022:

26/4/22 – Froebel S – Froebelian approaches to Literacy : Songs, Rhymes and Movement

27/4/22 – ASN 010 – Supporting Bilingual Learners, Drop-in Session (on Microsoft Teams)

May 2022:

25/5/22 – RICFP 05 – Futureproofing Pedagogy: 5- Literacy across learning

16/5/22 – Teaching Reading Comprehension National Webinar – 4 – 5pm Eventbrite sign up Teaching Reading Comprehension Tickets, Mon 16 May 2022 at 16:00 | Eventbrite

June 2022:

Literacy News Update – March 2021

This blog post shares recent developments regarding literacy and English in our authority and within our Forth Valley and West Lothian Regional Collaborative. It then lists the professional learning opportunities which will be available April to June 2021.

News:

Our literacy network met on 2nd February 2021 and discussed:

  • how to build on the very successful staff development day professional learning session about writing.
  • how we could support teacher judgement and confidence in assessing literacy during the remote-face-to-face transition phase
  • how we might support and co-ordinate moderation across clusters and the authority using existing or new portals with professional learning
  • the grammar and other online sessions provided by Dr Kylie Bradfield – what we gained from these and how the recordings could be shared more effectively (Click here to view an example)
  • what the gaps in pupil literacy learning might be upon return to school-based learning and what we could do to help

We used Google Jamboard (image above) to capture what was going well at that stage in remote literacy learning.

Our Learning Resource Service Teacher book clubs are going from strength to strength enabling teachers to recommend texts for each other and for specific pupil needs and interests. Click here to read more about this in our LRS blog.

Our wonderful LRS also created and promoted a brilliant Falkirk response to World Book day. We hope you like our team photos and thank you to all who made such effective use of Twitter at the time too.

 

 

Our Literacy Strategy Refresh:

The literacy team have developed our professional learning menu in response to the initial Literacy Blether sessions we held with various groups at the start of this session. By combining this intelligence from practitioners and senior leaders with other data,  focus areas emerged to inform a visual refresh of our Falkirk Literacy Strategy. Our literacy network colleagues will naturally help to shape this strategy, but contact yvonne.mcblain@falkirk.gov.uk if you want to be involved. This document will update and complement our existing Sway Strategy by indicating key messages and processes.

Our professional learning menu below indicates some of these focus areas, and also shares sessions designed with Malcolm Wilson to explore how digital tools and approaches can support teaching and learning and help unlock the literacy potential of all pupils. In March 2021, Malcolm and Yvonne co-presented a Top Tips for Teams Feedback and Assessment in literacy then a session which homed in on how to combine Sway and Microsoft Forms for literacy teaching, learning and assessment. Sessions LIT 10, 13 & 14 below all explore how specific digital tools can support practitioners as they adapt their practice during the return to classroom-based teaching. You may also want to click here to visit the Education Scotland Digilearnscot Literacy Support video library.

West OS Literacy support videos 

William Brown, development officer for West OS gave a short presentation at the most recent FVWL RIC literacy meeting. He highlighted how this collection of 10 minute micro lessons could be used independently by pupils, or as learning/teaching tools by practitioners. These teaching and learning resources are being developed as a long term national support tool and have a wide range of teacher-produced, quality-assured literacy videos from early level up through the broad, general education. Once logged into Glow and West OS via ClickView, click here to view an example of a video for early learners designed to develop reading visualisation skills. William explained that these materials provide standalone learning activities in or out of the classroom and have proven valuable for many learners including those in self-isolation, with English as an additional language or hearing impaired children and young people (most videos also have closed captions). Although there is a very wide library of videos, William would be glad to hear from practitioners who would like to create/submit their own micro-lessons (arrangements for payment for this work are in progress). Contact inwbrown001@glowmail.org.uk for further information.

Professional Learning Opportunities:

Falkirk:

LIT 10-2021 – 26.4.21 – Let’s talk about unlocking pupil potential – creating texts across the curriculum using digital tools (speech to text & read aloud) This is an opportunity to explore how tools such as Immersive Reader can support pupil progression and attainment in literacy – particularly creating written texts. 4-5.30 pm.

LIT 11-2021 – 6.5.21 –  Let’s talk about reading – resources. This is a staff development day session for primary and secondary support for learning assistants. 9.15 – 12 noon

LIT 12-2021 – 7.5.21 – Let’s talk about reading – challenges and support. This is a staff development day session for primary and secondary support for learning assistants which explores reading difficulties, shares approaches for supporting readers through adult/pupil paired reading strategies, and provides a forum for sharing, discussing and asking questions about reading. 9.15-12 noon.

LIT 13-2021 -18.5.21 – Let’s talk about unlocking pupil potential – supporting independent reading for research across the curriculum using digital tools (Immersive reader – converting texts, screen reader, simplified layout, Office Lens) This is an opportunity to explore how these tools can support pupil progression in reading for information and understanding. 4-5.30 pm

LIT 14-2021 – 27.5.21 – Let’s talk about unlocking pupil potential – supporting pupils to be clear, expressive and confident when communicating & presenting using digital tools ( Power Point Live & Presentation Coach) This professional learning is for practitioners working in primary, secondary and ASN settings. 4-5.30 pm.

LIT 15-2021 – 1.6.21 – Let’s talk about how our schools are using Reciprocal Reading strategies. This professional learning is  for practitioners and senior leaders who have attended training in Reciprocal Reading and/or have been using/developing this reading comprehension approach in their setting. It is designed as an opportunity to promote sharing of useful practice and reflection upon the impact of the approach so far. It also offers a chance for colleagues from different schools to begin to form useful networks around this and other reading approaches and strategies. 4-5.15 pm.

Forth Valley & West Lothian RIC:

RIC LIT 15 – 20.4.21 – Collaborative Literacy in Early Years Session 2

RIC LIT 14 – 21.4.21 – Helicopter Stories for early years and primary practitioners

RIC LIT 20 – an introduction to Reciprocal Reading strategies (this is a repeat of previous opportunities as requested by our schools)

RIC LIT 18 – 28.4.21 – Greg Bottrill session on his message centre approach to early writing

RIC LIT 21 – 13.5.21 – Reciprocal Reading session 2 – part of the extended training in Reciprocal Reading offered by Dr Janet Adam. This session will focus on the importance and role of Think Alouds and pupil meta-cognition when modelling and teaching these reading strategies. It will be co-presented by Dr Kylie Bradfield of Stirling University.

RIC LIT 22 – 25.5.21 Reciprocal Reading session 3 – the final part of the extended training in Reciprocal Reading offered by Dr Janet Adam. This session will focus on exploring approaches and good practice in the use of this approach to reading comprehension.

RIC LIT 23 – 27.4.21 – Writing Bubbles Webinar 3.15-4.15 pm

RIC LIT 24 – 4.5.21 – Collaborative Literacy in Early years session 3

RIC LIT 25 – 11.5.21 & 25.5.21 – Collaborative Literacy – Literacy through Play (Colleagues from Airth PS will co-deliver these sessions) 4-5 pm.

Click here to view the Sway March 2021 update from our FVWL RIC – it contains further detail in the Literacy section about the events and developments listed here.