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Reading

At London Colney, we provide an appropriate, inclusive, engaging English curriculum. The development of children’s language is crucial to their success across the curriculum. We want all children to be excellent communicators, to listen actively and to speak with confidence. At London Colney, children are helped to develop a love of reading and to become skilful and imaginative writers. During all lessons across the school, children have the opportunity to develop their spoken language capabilities and improve their listening skills through a wide range of activities.

“The way reading is prioritised and organised in this school is highly inspirational and will lead to high quality outcomes across the school, which will further enhance achievement across the curriculum. Senior leaders are excellent role models in the teaching of reading and are well placed to coach others.” – Hertfordshire Improvement Partner

Reading is placed at the heart of all we do here at London Colney. We know the importance of not only getting children reading fluently as early as possible but also to enjoy what they are reading. We know that the ability to read unpins the rest of our taught curriculum and that enjoying stories and texts allows our pupils to journey within and beyond what they know.

Reading is taught daily as part of our phonics curriculum, through guided reading (whole class or group) and through daily reading aloud for pleasure. We also recognise that the teaching and learning of reading is an essential component of the teaching sequence for writing within English and across the wider curriculum. Children are given the opportunity during lessons to read texts for meaning, infer perspectives and authorial intent, use what they have read as a model for writing and build vocabulary. In addition, reading for writing strategies are included in our English plans and linked to our core texts. Other opportunities for reading include:

  • Vocabulary development – in all subjects
  • Library skills; Children are taught to use the library and to care for the books and make sure they are always returned to the appropriate place.
  • Research skills including use of contents, index, etc. They are taught to use a wide range of sources so that they become competent and confident users of a variety of resources. We also ensure that the resources we provide contain the information they are searching for and are updated regularly and include the use of ICT for research.
  • All children are read aloud to regularly from a selection of contemporary and classic texts appropriate to key stages and cohorts’ interests.
  • Each week, children have timetabled slots to read texts from the library/ book corners. Book corners contain a wide variety of texts and the school subscribes to several magazines and newspapers which are used in book corners. Children are regularly consulted about texts they would like in their class.
  • Each child has a reading record book, which is acknowledged daily or weekly by the class teacher and parent. It is expected that the children will read at home with their carers/parents every day. In KS2, we encourage the same and begin to expect greater individual reading as the children get older, become more fluent and self-regulate their reading enjoyment.
  • As a school, we use reading texts linked to our phonics scheme – Little Wandle and related Big Cat Phonics texts.
  • In order to enhance the reading culture in school, we regularly plan whole school ‘Enrich’ English topics.

You may find the following documents useful with helping your child with learning to read, reading to learn and developing a love of reading:

Reading Challenges

As well as teaching children how to read, we also want them to be inspired to read and develop a love of stories and books. To support with this, we have devised our own Reading Challenges for each year group. We have worked to carefully select quality, inclusive and diverse texts for each year that will promote a love of reading. Children in each year group are set the challenge of reading all of the reading challenge texts for their class by the end of the year. Want to help your child further? Why not purchase or borrow some of the texts from your child’s reading challenge to have at home?