Power of Reading Enquiry March 2019

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Bradley Green Power of Reading Enquiry How does the Power of Reading make a powerful contribution to our Curriculum?

Making Learning Memorable Putting high quality text at the heart of the curriculum has had a huge impact in classrooms across Bradly Green. We observed the skilful use of those high-quality texts by teachers. This enabled children to suspend belief and enter the story. Empathising with the characters and their feelings and developing their own ideas about where the story might go to next. We saw huge levels of engagement in those classrooms, children often going beyond being simply engaged and becoming totally enthralled by the time and place those stories took them to. Those texts, as well as drawing children into wonderful stories what we also observed was the utilisation of high-quality texts to bring challenging issues in to the classroom. Enabling children not just to explore those issues but also to become involved. Creating opportunities to take strong positions and argue passionately for a point of view. The children’s emotional engagement with texts in both of these cases made learning memorable for those children. Talking to them about the books they had engaged with and what they had learned from them as well as their sheer enthusiasm they were able to talk in animated fashion about the characters in those books and the situations they found themselves in. Having got those fabulous levels of engagement, teachers were also able to utilise the texts for children to develop a deepening understanding of how language work. Both studying how authors use language to create effect and developing their use of language in their own writing.

A Community of Writers (and Readers) One of the most striking aspects of the learning we observed in Bradly Green was a sense of togetherness adults and children working collaboratively to create the best outcomes they can. The teacher would stop the class, ask for everyone’s focused attention then conduct a session where some of the great ideas which had been generated were shared across the classroom. Someone suggested that there was ‘something in the air’, a community of writers (and readers) embracing the challenges presented to them. We encountered energised children, energised learners, energised writers. There were no passengers, every child in the class was totally involved and supported by their peers to create a great outcome. These classrooms were shaped by the intense modelling of adults. Stepping in to explore word choices with children. Modelling through talking their thinking. Demonstrating to children the processes to work through when making those choices for themselves. Celebrating with children when they had created something of significance and sharing those things across the classrooms so that children could hear and learn from the best ow


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