Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byConrad Tyler Modified over 8 years ago
1
SEN Hub Webinar Literacy and SLCN Jean Gross CBE -------------------------------------------------- The webinar slides can be downloaded and printed from: http://bit.ly/Jeanwebinar Do your colleagues need to use the Hub? Your subscription includes 6 log-ins. Make sure you’re using them all. For help call the Hub Line and speak to our friendly team! 0845 0738805
2
Jean Gross CBE, 2014
3
Explore the links between literacy and language Discuss what you can do to help improve both the language and literacy skills of pupils in your school Aims
4
Children and young people cannot succeed in literacy unless they have good oral language skills ‘A common feature of the most successful schools in the survey was the attention they gave to developing speaking and listening’(Removing Barriers to Literacy, Ofsted, 2011) ‘Where inspectors saw links between oral language, reading and writing in lessons, standards at GCSE English Language were higher’ (Excellence in English, Ofsted,2011)
5
Improving literacy in secondary schools, Ofsted 2013 ‘How to teach pupils to write well is first to get them to speak well.’,
6
The Effects of Weaknesses in Oral Language on Reading Comprehension Growth (Hirsch, 1996) 5678910111213141516 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 Reading Age Level Chronological Age Low Oral Language in Kindergarten High Oral Language in Kindergarten 5.2 years difference
7
Pupils with dyslexia Those with poor reading comprehension and difficulties in knowing what to write
8
Communication, language and reading 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
9
Recent evidence 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)
10
Practical steps Screen every child who is struggling with literacy to check whether they might or might not have an underlying SLCN that has not been picked up. You can use the freely downloadable ‘Universally Speaking’ materials from The Communication Trust for this check. https://www.thecommunicationtrust.org.uk/r esources/resources/resources-for- practitioners/universally-speaking.aspx https://www.thecommunicationtrust.org.uk/r esources/resources/resources-for- practitioners/universally-speaking.aspx
11
Or have a look at the excellent computer- based screening-plus-intervention programmes from http://www.speechlink.info/ http://www.speechlink.info/
12
The simple view of reading
13
Increasing number of literacy interventions aimed at comprehension ‘Language for thinking’ by Stephen Parsons and Anna Branagan (Speechmark), which provides strategies for teaching the inference skills that help children comprehend both speech and text. Reciprocal reading Inference training
14
Check on the literacy interventions you use Do they also promote language development? Repeated reads 1-1 conversation with an adult Phonological awareness
15
Check your three wave approach to language Wave 1 Everyday practice in settings and classrooms that develops communication skills All children Wave 2 Small group additional intervention delivered by well trained and supported teachers, TAs or early years practitioners Just below age-related expectations Wave 3 Individual intervention with a trained and supported teaching assistant Struggling Intensive intervention on an individual basis with a trained language specialist Lowest attaining
16
Wave 1 Talk Frames Whole-school approach to teaching new vocabulary Time to talk, Jean Gross, Routledge /nasen 2013
17
Talk frames Year 1 They are the same because………… ……… They are different because………… ………is…………an d…………is……… …… Older … 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…….
18
Vocabulary acquisition
19
STAR - Select Too easyGoldilocks wordsToo hard Everyday words- ones a child might use to another child Not too easy and not too hard, but just right Likely to be encountered again Average adult has a good knowledge of this word Average adult does not have much knowledge of this word Highly topic- specific
20
STAR - Select Too easyGoldilocks wordsToo hard Children Toys Petticoat Hoop Gruel Workhouse
21
The STAR Approach Word Aware, Anna Branagan and Stephen Parsons, Speechmark 2013
22
Teaching vocabulary Semantic - meaning Phonological Grammatical Motor programme Orthographic (Written form) Orthographic (Written form)
23
What it sounds like Begins with: Sound: Letter: Rhymes with: Ends with : Sound: Letter: Number of syllables:
24
What it means How does it feel? Sign/symb ol What do you do with it? What does it look like? Where do you find it? What category is it?
25
Put it in a sentence
26
Words that go with it
27
Wave 2 Do you have evidence-based small group language interventions in place?
28
Evidence-based primary Wave 2 language interventions Key Stage 1 Narrative, Key Stage 2 Narrative (Black Sheep Press) Languageland (Black Sheep Press) Talk Boost (www.ican.org.uk) Language for Thinking (Speechmark) SPIRALS (Routledge) Talking Partners (www.educationworks.org.uk)www.educationworks.org.uk
29
Evidence-based secondary Wave 2 language interventions TalkingPartners@secondary(www.educationw orks.org.uk) TalkingPartners@secondary(www.educationw orks.org.uk) ELCISS (Speechmark)
30
SEN Hub Webinar Questions & Answers -------------------------------------------------- Your next Hub webinar will be: Working with CAMHS Roger Catchpole, Training Manager, Young Minds Wednesday 19 March, 4pm Register at: http://bit.ly/rogerwebinarhttp://bit.ly/rogerwebinar
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.