Learning Teaching Eyfs
Learning Teaching Eyfs
Learning Teaching Eyfs
providing opportunities for children to communicate thoughts, ideas and feelings and build
up relationships with adults and each other;
giving opportunities to share and enjoy a wide range of rhymes, music, songs, poetry,
stories and non-fiction books;
giving opportunities for linking language with physical movement in action songs and
rhymes, role play and practical experiences such as cookery and gardening;
planning an environment that reflects the importance of language through signs, notices and
books;
providing opportunities for children to see adults writing and for children to experiment with
writing for themselves through making marks, personal writing symbols and conventional script;
providing time and opportunities to develop spoken language through conversations between
children and adults, both one-to-one and in small groups, with particular awareness of, and
sensitivity to, the needs of children learning English as an additional between children and adults,
both one-to-one and in small groups, with particular awareness of, and sensitivity to, the needs
of children learning English as an additional language, using their home language when
appropriate;
providing time and opportunities to develop their phonological awareness through small group
and individual teaching, when appropriate;
planning opportunities for all children to become aware of languages and writing systems other
than English, and communication systems such as signing and Braille;
close teamwork between bilingual workers, speech therapists and practitioners, where
appropriate;
opportunities for children who use alternative communication systems to develop ways of
recording and accessing texts to develop their skills in these methods.
Speak clearly and audibly with confidence and control and show awareness of the
listener, for example by their use of conventions such as greetings, please and thank
you. (1)
Explore and talk about things which interest young children indoors and outdoors and
listen and respond to their questions
Support children in using a variety of communication strategies, including signing where
appropriate
Listen to children and take account of what they say in your responses to them
Share rhymes and stories from many cultures
Set up a listening area where children can enjoy music, rhymes and stories
Give children clear directions and help them to respond to those involving more than one
action
Provide practical experiences that encourage children to ask and respond to questions
Introduce new words in the context of play and everyday activities
Show interest in the words children use to communicate and describe their experiences
Help children expand on what they say, introducing and reinforcing the use of more
complex sentences
Encourage conversation wit others and demonstrate appropriate conventions taking
turns, waiting until someone else ahs finished, listening to others.
Show children how to use language for negotiating in your interactions with them
Effective Practice to help children progress towards the Early Learning Goals for
Communication for Thinking:
Encourage children to talk about how they feel, for example after a disagreement, when
they are excited at seeing snow, or at the birth of a sibling
Create a story with children, asking them to predict what will happen next
Ask children to tell you about what they are going to do before they do it, and ask them to
suggest possible outcomes, for example, It might break because there are too many in it
Help children to identify patterns and draw conclusions, for example, The sky has gone
dark, it must be going to rain, explain effect, It sank because it was too heavy, predict, It
might not grow in there if it is too dark, and speculate, What if the bridge falls down?
Ask children to give reasons, further explanations or evidence for what they say
Ask children to think in advance about how they will accomplish a task. Talk through and
sequence the stages.
Use stories to focus childrens attention on predictions and explanations, for example,
Why did the boat tip over? and general patterns, for example, what usually happens to
the good and wicked characters in stories
Take an interest in what and how children think and not just what they know
Encourage children to explore and ask about the meanings of words
Encourage children to explain sometimes how things work in words rather than actions
Effective practice to help children progress towards the Early Learning Goals in
Linking Sounds and Letters
When singing or saying rhymes, talk about the similarities in the rhyming words. Make up
alternative endings and encourage children to supply the last word of the second line, for
example, Hickory, Dickory, boot, the mouse ran down the .?
Talk to children about the letters that represent the sounds they hear at the beginning of
their own names and other familiar words. Incorporate these in games
Demonstrate writing so that children can see spelling in action, Encourage them to apply
their own knowledge of sounds to what they write
Use a large phoneme frame with groups of children and give them small magnetic ones
of their own, so that they become more confident to use their phonic knowledge in
spelling
Ensure that role-play areas encourage writing with a real purpose, such as lists or menus
Plan games that help children create rhyming strings of real and imaginary words
Plan a range of activities as part of the daily, systematic phonics session to teach
grapheme/phoneme correspondences
Provide opportunities for children to practise and apply their skills in freely chosen
activities
For children in reception, plan the daily discrete phonic session carefully bearing these
points in mind:
The children have been carefully assessed, including exploring the boundaries of their
phonic knowledge
Assessments are used to plan the next steps in learning, in accordance with the
principles of effective Assessment for Learning
The sessions are pitched at the appropriate step so learning is incremental
The sessions reinforce and build on recent learning
The sessions are engaging, pacey and use multi-sensory activities
Children have the opportunity to practise any new knowledge, e.g. identifying new
grapheme/phoneme correspondences, or practising blending and segmenting
During the course of the session, at the point of learning, the children should see how the
new learning can be applied and contextualised by the teacher/practitioner modelling it
e.g. by writing a short sentence that includes a CVC word which can be segmented, or
reading a phrase or short sentence that is phonically decodable.
Effective Practice to help children progress to the Early Learning Goals for Reading
Focus on meaningful print, such as a childs name, favourite cereal or book, in order to
discuss similarities and differences between symbols
Help children to understand what a word is, by using names and labels and by pointing
out words in the environment and in books
Read stories that children already know, pausing at intervals to encourage them to read
the next word
Explain to parents the importance of reading to children, ask about favourite books, and
offer book loans
Help children identify the main events in a story and to enact stories, as the basis for
further imaginative play
Demonstrate the reading strategy of reading using phonics first while children can see the
text, for example, using big books
Effective Practice to help children progress to the Early Learning Goals for Writing
Draw attention to marks, sigs and symbols in the environment and talk about what they
represent
Make books with children of activities they have been doing, using photographs of the children
as illustrations
Act as a scribe for children. After they say the sentence, repeat the first part and say each word
as your write and include some punctuation
When writing, talk about what you are doing and why, and talk through some of your decisionmaking on the way, such as what to write, choice of words and their order. Continually reread
the writing to provide a good model for children when they write
Provide materials and opportunities for children to initiate the use of writing in their play, as well
as creating purposes for independent and group writing
Plan occasions where you can involve children in organising writing, for example, putting recipe
instructions in the right order
Effective Practice to help children progress towards the Early Learning Goals for
Handwriting
Encourage children to handle and manipulate a variety of media and implements, for
example, clay, finger paints, brushes etc
Provide activities that give children the opportunity and motivation to practise
manipulative skills, for example, cooking and playing instruments
Teach children to form letters correctly, for example, when they label their paintings
Encourage children to practise letter shapes as they paint, draw and record, and as they
write, for example, their names, the names of their friends and family or captions
Continue writing practice in imaginative contexts, joining some letters, if appropriate, for
example at, it, on
Give children extensive practice in writing letters, for example labelling their work, making
cards, writing notices
a session led by the teacher/practitioner of shared reading and/or shared writing so that
reading and writing strategies, including the use of phonics, are clearly demonstrated in a
purposeful context;
Twice a week
Children take part in:
Guided reading with the teacher/practitioner. These small-group sessions will be planned
to support the development of reading strategies and skills according to the needs and
experience of children.
guided writing with a teacher/practitioner, where, as part of a group, they have the
opportunity to develop their writing skills (including oral rehearsal) with support. The
context for the writing could derive from any area of the curriculum, and indeed over time
should do so.