Thursday 11 April 2013

PROJECT X CODE via EDGE HILL UNIVERSITY and OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS


Marie Kilgallon is an Independent Education Consultant who specialises in Literacy and Synthetic Phonics.

Project X Code is a new reading intervention from Oxford University Press. It embeds systematic synthetic phonics into a gripping series of adventure books that is targeted at struggling readers in Years 2 to 4 who are not on track to achieve appropriate levels for their age.

Edge Hill University, in partnership with Oxford University Press, provides training to help teachers or teaching assistants to deliver it effectively to children who need a helping hand to develop phonics and comprehension skills and a love of reading. The training ensures maximum impact from the intervention.

Marie Killgallon Associates Ltd., shall be providing the Project X Code in the North East and North Yorkshire at

DARLINGTON – Bannatyne Hotel

18/04/13, 09/05/13, 13/06/13, 04/07/13

TEESSIDE / NORTH YORKSHIRE – Oakdene Primary School, Stockton

19/04/13,  10/05/13, 14/06/13


A list of the dates and venues for all the courses are listed here. More dates will be provided soon.




http://www.oup.com/oxed/primary/projectx/code/
https://readingsupport.edgehill.ac.uk/erc-for-schools/project-x-code/
http://www.mariekilgallonliteracy.co.uk/#

Tuesday 5 February 2013

Learning about Phonics



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Phonics is the flagship for literacy adopted by the UK government for teaching reading to boost standards for children, in primary schools. Match-funding of £3000, set to run out at the end of March has just been extended to October 2013.

Teaching phonics started in England in April 2011 following the publication of poor results for 10 year olds. The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) saw England fall from third out of 35 countries in 2001 to 15th out of 40 countries in 2006.

Phonics however has been around for a long time and has been taught amongst other methods over the decades. In fact according to "Sounds Familar: The History of Phonics Teaching", it was around in the 1850'S.

Other methods of teaching include the "look and say" approach. The ideology to repeat words on each page enough times that children memorised them. This was founded by American psychologist Edmund Huey in1908 and came to the UK in the 1940s.

In the 1950s and 1960s this method was often taught through the "Janet and John" books. However, in 1955, American reading expert Rudolph Flesch published "Why Johnny Can't Read", stating that the "look and say" method was encouraging illiteracy. This influenced policy in the UK.

In schools 'alphabetic reading' (not phonics) had dominated teaching until the 19th Century. This taught children to name letters of the alphabet in upper and lower case alphabetically through recognition.

In the 'look and say method', children are exposed to pictures and stories from an early age and will learn to recognise complete words.


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What the experts say about phonics


"Some children will need more phonics teaching more than others," says Andrew Lambirth, professor of education at the University of Greenwich. "To the government, the phonics only approach seems to be a logical one."

Dr Kathy Goouch, reader in education at the department of Professional Development, Canterbury, Christ Church University says;

"Learning about phonics is just a tiny part of learning to read. If children learn to read by using other strategies as well, it sometimes takes longer than simply being taught to decode words."

Ian McNeilly of the National Association for the teaching of English says,

"The use of learning aids like letter cards and alphabet guides, recognising rhyming patterns and the use of powerful texts to engage children's interest are among some of the strategies used."

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What is phonics?


Phonics teaches children to understand words through sounds, rather than the whole words. In early years teaching words are broken up into the smallest units of sound called phonemes. This is known as synthetic phonics.

Letters (graphemes) represent phonemes. Children are taught to read the letters in a word like 'd' 'o' 'g', and pronounce it as a word - 'dog'.

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Phonemes aren't restricted to one grapheme either. A sound can be made using combinations of letters, like 'oo' or 'ay' and 'ough'. There are around 40 phonic combinations.

Marie Kilgallon is an Independent Education Consultant who specialises in Literacy and Synthetic Phonics.

Link:
http://www.pro5.org/phonics/