Reading
Intent
We believe that a quality reading curriculum should develop children’s love of reading. We aim to inspire an appreciation of our rich and varied literary heritage and a habit of reading widely and often. We want to inspire children to be confident in the art of speaking and listening and who can use discussion to communicate and further their learning.
We believe that children need to develop confidence and fluency in reading, which follows a clear pathway of progression as they advance through the primary curriculum. Reading materials have been selected to build cumulatively and progressively. We believe that a secure basis in reading skills is crucial to a high quality education and will give our children the tools they need to be successful in their next stage of education.
Our children will leave with a love of reading, able to discuss books and compare works of key authors. At secondary school, they will be able to access the full curriculum offered and read both for knowledge- acquisition and pleasure.
Implementation
Reading is taught daily throughout the school in line with the National Curriculum (2014) for half an hour using a whole class approach.
We believe that ‘good readers are successful across the curriculum’. Therefore, children are exposed to high-quality, age-appropriate texts that cover a range of genres. Phonics is taught daily in Reception and KS1, and progresses to whole class reading on completion of the phonics programme after Easter in Year 2. All children graduate from Read, Write Inc. and begin whole class reading, starting with extracts from RWInc. comprehension which match their phonic ability with precision.
Children follow a set progression of skills through the content domains of the National Curriculum using the acronym of VIPERS to develop an ability to decode and comprehend the texts they read. This approach is reinforced whenever a child reads whether in school and parents are encouraged to focus on this at home.
To ensure our taught curriculum is a stepping stone to independent reading, two copies of the books from each extract are available to the children in their class libraries alongside other copies of their other works. To guide children into selecting these books to read independently, the extracts ensure children are exposed to ‘unmissable’ scenes, chapter ones and prologues - enticing the children to want to read on.
Reading is taught through a diverse and ambitious text spine of extracts that are cumulative and progressive in nature, where both the complexity in text level and themes addressed are built upon term-by-term. We use a ‘Read, Enrich, Explore’ approach to reading across the week (see below). The extracts are rich in cultural capital through the themes they address alongside the historical and geographic settings. Authors have been selected specifically to include a range of contemporary and relevant authors (which in turn provide relevant protagonists) alongside a purposeful mix of modern classic and classic texts that provide a step into wider reading for children. Non-fiction and poetry are also an integral part of the spine, where the non-fiction link to the ‘focus text’ of the writing curriculum.
Progression within the content domains in ensured through a rigorous document which progressively increase the understanding of each reading content domain term-by-term, year-by-year.
Teachers plan to the needs of their class by cross-referencing the assessment data obtained from the NTS reading assessments (see more detail below), where they find the content domains that the children need more teaching in and focus on these more heavily across a term than some of the content domains that the children are already more proficient at.
Each extract is pre-read as an intervention prior to the main learning sequence (where necessary) to the children who require additional input and who may need some extra time and practice with the decoding element of the text so that they come to the first lesson equipped with confidence and understanding to access the same learning as their peers working at ARE.
READ, ENRICH, EXPLORE
READ: On the first day of a new unit of work, challenging vocabulary is pre-taught to the class so that they have a solid understanding when they meet it in context. Subsequently, the children have the text read to them by the class teacher and the children follow on the page in front of them. The teacher’s focus is on modelling of pace, fluency and intonation. The lesson is concluded through Aidan Chambers’ ‘book talk’ model of ‘likes, dislikes, puzzles and patterns’ where the children discuss and explore the text they have been read.
ENRICH: As the texts are rich in their complexity and cultural capital, there may be elements that the children would struggle to comprehend at face value (for example, why one character looked at the other in a certain way, or a cultural reference that is integral to the comprehension of the extract). We mitigate this, if there is a need, and deepen the children’s understanding through an ‘enrichment’ task, which can comprise further reading, experience or additional discreet teaching that underpins the deep comprehension of the text. Once this is complete, the teacher reads the text for a second time, linking the enrichment to the comprehension and how they now have a deeper understanding; pausing to spaced-retrieve vocabulary and model ‘thinking aloud’ and authorial intent.
If this is not required as the teacher feels the children will comprehend the text on its first read, then the children complete a read aloud activity, such as reading at an appropriate pace, or giving characters voices.
EXPLORE: The following three lessons are where the children are equipped to study the text in depth, using the content domains of the National Curriculum. The lesson focuses on one content domain in the form of a VIPER for children and consists of a balance between formal comprehension questions and a wider, richer response to reading. Where formal comprehension questions are used, teacher modelling is apparent by working through a shared example as a class and highlighting the skills required before the children complete similar questions independently.
ASSESSMENT
Formative assessment takes place tri-annually across the trust using the NTS reading assessments. This data is used by leaders to measure the efficacy of reading and to hold teachers to account, and teachers use it to be assured of the content domain deficiencies that they need to address with their pupils.
CLASS READER
In addition to reading lessons, children are also exposed to a class novel for 15 minutes each day. The class novel is pre-selected so that the children are strategically introduced to a wide range of diverse literature that ensures that children have the opportunities to see themselves in books, underpinned by the theory of ‘windows, mirrors and sliding glass doors’. They have also been selected to run in parallel with the reading extracts in the reading lesson so that children have the opportunity to draw parallels in authorial styles and themes from a rich range of authors. The books themselves have been selected to address Lemov’s ‘five plagues of the developing reader’ with a sixth ‘year group focus author’ so that the children experience these texts in a forum that they can be guided through by their teacher and offer rich discussion points with their peers.
However, the most important element to our reading curriculum is that it provides each class teacher to be every child in their class’ reading role model.
Year 2
Text overview
| Year 2 | 
| RWInc Comprehension Texts | 
| Module 1- Chicken-Licken Module 2- Anansi and the Four Bananas Module 3- The Wish Module 4- The Three of Us Module 5- Drusilla's Diary Module 6- The Cupboard Under the Stairs Module 7- Rose and Ruby Module 8- Mary Seacole Module 9- Teeth Module 10- The Class Trip Module 11- All About India Module 13- Bees Module 14- Atishoo! | 
| Additional Texts | 
| Legend of Spud Murphy- Eoin Colfer The Hundred-Mile An-Hour Dog- Jeremy Strong The Princess in Black- Bathtime Battle- Shannon and Dean Hale The Princess in Black- Shannon and Dean Hale | 
| Term 5 | 
| Daisy and the Trouble with Burglars- Kes Gray Daisy and the Trouble with Zoos- Kes Gray Dirty Bertie- David Roberts Fortunately the Milk- Neil Gaiman Horrid Henry's Underpants- Francesca Simon Sophie takes to the Sky- Katherine Woodfine | 
| Term 6 | 
| I Talk Like a River- Jordan Scott Little Badman- Humza Arshad & Henry White Sam Wu is not Afraid of Ghosts- Katie and Kevin Tsang The 13-Storey Treehouse- Andy Griffiths The Climbers- Ali Standish Toto the Ninja Cat- Dermot O'Leary | 
Y2 - Progression within reading content domains

Year 3
Text overview
| Year 3 | |||
| 
 | Fiction | Non-Fiction | Poetry | 
| Term 1 | Story writing (character and setting description) | Report writing (Q&A interview) 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | Stuart Little- E.B. White 
 Bill’s New Frock- Anne Fine 
 Diary of a Killer Cat- Anne Fine 
 Stig of the Dump- Clive King | Stone Houses (Explanation) 
 Soil (Information) | 
 | 
| Term 2 | Adventure stories | Newspaper report | 
 | 
| 
 | Go Ahead, Secret Seven- Enid Blyton 
 The BFG- Roald Dahl 
 The Boy Who Grew Dragons- Andy Shepherd | Food (Explanation) 
 Earth Charter (Newspaper) 
 Giant Refugee Puppet On Trek to UK (Newspaper) | 
 | 
| Term 3 | Dialogue | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | The Iron Man- Ted Hughes 
 Captain Apparatus (Diary) 
 The Lost Happy Endings- Carol Ann Duffy 
 The Hodgeheg- Dick King Smith 
 The Worst Witch- Jill Murphy | Strange Predators (Information) 
 
 
 | 
 | 
| Term 4 | 
 | Biography | 
 | 
| 
 | Mr Majeika- Humphrey Carpenter 
 Alex Sparrow and the Really Big Stink- Jennifer Killick | Lonely Hearts (Narrative Biography) 
 Who was Robin Hood? (Information) 
 Shoot Like Robin Hood (Instructions) | Walking With My Iguana- Brian Moses 
 Scissors- Allan Ahlberg | 
| Term 5 | 
 | Persuasive letter | 
 | 
| 
 | Alice in Wonderland- Lewis Carroll 
 My Head Teacher is a Vampire Rat- Pamela Butchart 
 Nothing to See Here Hotel- Steven Butler | Why Do Dragons Make Great Pets? (Persuasion) 
 The Wave (Letter) | The Sound Collector- Rodger McGough | 
| Term 6 | 
 | Balanced argument | 
 | 
| 
 | The Enchanted Wood- Enid Blyton 
 The Magic Faraway Tree- Enid Blyton 
 The Wild Robot- Peter Brown | The British Coastline (Information) 
 Ocean Food Chain (Information) | The Owl and the Pussycat- Edward Lear | 
Year 3 - Progression within reading content domains

Year 4
Text overview
| Year 4 | |||
| 
 | Fiction | Non-Fiction | Poetry | 
| Term 1 | 
 | Explanation | 
 | 
| 
 | Frost Hollow Hall- Emma Carroll 
 The Griffin Gate- Vashti Hardy 
 A Bear Called Paddington- Michael Bond | What Have the Romans Done For Us? (Explanation Text) 
 Digestion (Explanation Text) | Hot Food- Michael Rosen | 
| Term 2 | 
 | Instructions Leaflet/poster | 
 | 
| 
 | Malamander- Thomas Taylor 
 Pippi Londstocking- Astrid Lindgren 
 Kick- Mitch Johnson | Rocket Balloon (Instructions) 
 Inventions that Changed the World (Information Text) | Chocolate Cake- Michael Rosen | 
| Term 3 | 
 | Non chronological report | 
 | 
| 
 | Ghost Garden- Emma Carroll 
 Sky Chasers- Emma Carroll 
 Mary Poppins- Pamela Lyndon Travers | Legends of the Deep (Information Text) 
 Television (Information Text) | School Tomorrow- Joseph Coelho | 
| Term 4 | Playscript | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | The Legend of Podkin One Ear- Kieran Larwood 
 Kensuke’s Kingdom- Michael Morpurgo 
 Private Peaceful- Michael Morpurgo 
 The Secret Garden- Frances Hodgson Burnett | A Letter Home (Informal Letter) 
 The Gold Rush (Information Text) | 
 | 
| Term 5 | Adventure stories | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | A Girl Called Owl- Amy Wilson 
 Animals of Farthing Wood- Colin Dann 
 The Wonderful Wizard of Oz- Lyman Frank Baum | Enormous Eruptions (Explanation Text) 
 The Skeleton (Explanation Text) | Two Plants- John Agarde | 
| Term 6 | 
 | Diary | 
 | 
| 
 | The Goldfish Boy- Lisa Thompson 
 Owen and the Soldier- Lisa Thompson 
 The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe- C.S. Lewis 
 Swallows and Amazons- Arthur Ransome | The Amazon River (Information Text) 
 The Troy Ploy | |
Year 4 - Progression within reading content domains

Year 5
Text overview
| Year 5 | |||
| 
 | Fiction | Non-Fiction | Poetry | 
| Term 1 | 
 | Recount | 
 | 
| 
 | Nowhere Emporium- Ross Mackenzie 
 The Middler- Kirsty Applebaum 
 Highland Falcon Thief- MG Leonard | A Mother’s Diary (Diary) 
 Evacuee Letter (Informal Letter) 
 Life Cycle of a Flowering Plant (Explanation Text) | 
 | 
| Term 2 | Mystery stories | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | The House With Chicken Legs- Sophie Anderson 
 Skellig- David Almond 
 Clockwork Crow- Catherine Fisher | Formal Letter (Formal Letter) 
 EeZeeEyeStrain-Remover (Persuasive Advert) | Colonel Fazackerley- Charles Causley | 
| Term 3 | 
 | Biography and autobiography | 
 | 
| 
 | The Castle of Tangled Magic- Sophie Anderson 
 The Lion Above the Door- Onjali Q Rauf 
 Star Outside my Window- Onjali Q Rauf | Soldier’s Diary (Diary) 
 Kindertransport (Informal Letter) | The Tyger- William Blake | 
| Term 4 | 
 | News interview (shift in formality) | 
 | 
| 
 | The Girl Who Speaks Bear- Sophie Anderson 
 Where the River Runs Gold- Sita Brahmachari 
 Beetle Boy MG Leonard 
 | Trimdon Grange Disaster (Formal Newspaper) 
 Brave Yank Flies to the Rescue (Informal Newspaper) 
 Dear Humans (Informal Letter) | 
 | 
| Term 5 | Dilemma stories | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | Oranges in No Man’s Land- Elizabeth Laird 
 Troofriend- Kirsty Applebaum The London Eye Mystery- Siobhan Dowd 
 Peter Pan- J.M. Barrie | Pandemics (Information Text) 
 The Changing Police (Information Text | 
 | 
| Term 6 | 
 | Balanced argument | 
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| 
 | Boy in the Tower- Polly Ho Yen 
 Cogheart- Peter Bunzl 
 The Cat Who Walked By Himself- Rudyard Kipling 
 The Jungle Book- Rudyard Kipling | Should Animals Be Kept in Zoos? | If- Rudyard Kipling | 
Year 5 - Progression within reading content domains

Year 6
Text overview
| Year 6 | |||
| 
 | Fiction | Non-Fiction | Poetry | 
| Term 1 | 
 | Persuasive speech | 
 | 
| 
 | Sky Song- Abi Elphinstone 
 The Storm Keeper’s Island- Catherine Doyle 
 The Graveyard Book- Neil Gaiman 
 Once- Morris Gleitzman | Women’s Football (Persuasive Letter) 
 The Right Not to Work (Non-chronological Report) | 
 | 
| Term 2 | 
 | Formal letter Explanation | 
 | 
| 
 | Rooftoppers- Katherine Rundell 
 The Dreamsnatcher- Abi Elphinstone 
 Holes- Louis Sachar | What is Evolution? (Explanation Text) 
 Serena Williams (Biography) | I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud- William Wordsworth | 
| Term 3 | Adventure stories | 
 | 
 | 
| 
 | Brightstorm- Vashti Hardy 
 The Explorer- Katherine Rundell 
 The Hound of the Baskervilles- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 
 The Wind in the Willows- Kenneth Grahame | Diary from the Beagle (Diary) | The Crossover- Kwame Alexander (Narrative verse poetry) | 
| Term 4 | 
 | Non-chronological report | 
 | 
| 
 | Letters from the Lighthouse- Emma Carroll 
 The Good Thieves- Katherine Rundell 
 Wildspark- Vashti Hardy 
 The Somerset Tsunami- Emma Carroll | Strange Hearts (Non-chronological Report) 
 Dia de los Muertos (Information Text) | 
 | 
| Term 5 | Dilemma stories | 
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 | 
| 
 | Orphans of the Tide- Struan Murray 
 Mortal Engines- Phillip Reeve | A Schoolhouse Letter (Informal Letter) 
 Greta Thunberg (Biography) 
 Tim Berners Lee (Biography) 
 Pickles Saves the World Cup (Newspaper Report) | 
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| Term 6 | 
 | 
 | 
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| 
 | The Railway Children- E.Nesbit 
 Street Child- Berlie Doherty 
 The Northern Lights- Philip Pullman 
 Wonder- R.J. Palacio | 
 | Invictus- William Ernest Henley 
 Charge of the Light Brigade- Alfred, Lord Tennyson | 
Year 6 - Progression within reading content domains

