Category: blog
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A field guide to reading fluency
Just a quick entry to share a recent blog for Herts for Learning that looks at reading fluency in a variety of ways. Within, you will find: definition of terms; why it matters; how we might help to develop this aspect of reading when development stalls; cautionary notes around use of strategies and approaches as…
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The Promise: KS2(+) teaching suggestions
Following my last blog I received a number of requests for the planning ideas that I mentioned, based on Nicola Davies and Laura Carlin’s powerful fable The Promise. Before reading on, you may want to watch Nicola Davies talk about the book, the process of writing it, and at around 3 minutes into the video,…
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Not reopening but blooming: picturebooks for new beginnings.
Up until 2015, prior to some literary hijacking by Max Porter, hope was the thing with feathers. We know this because Emily Dickinson said so. Hope is a curious word. I used to think it was my favourite word and so an early gift from my then not-yet-wife contrived to keep ‘hope’ very close at…
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One school/one book: immersive whole school book studies
Over the past few years, I have been lucky enough to work with Hare Street Community Primary School in my home town, Harlow. It’s a wonderful school by any measure. Most striking, is the sense of community. It’s very evident, almost as soon as you enter the building. Of course, this is predominantly down to…
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Not goodbye: Kate DiCamillo’s Beverly, Right Here.
No spoilers. Certainly no endings. No goodbyes. Only beginnings. Three of them. ‘There were three of them, three girls.’ – Raymie Nightingale, Kate DiCamillo (2016) This much is true. There were three girls. Right there, right from the start. In the space of two short chapters, just seven well-spaced pages, we meet the titular Raymie,…
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Three great books, one autumn Thursday
This is a drive by blog. Or rather a train-ride home blog. Whichever. It’s going to be brief. It has to be. Today is one of those days that was packed from beginning to end, where you get up at stupidly dark o’clock so that the things that you won’t get around to doing are…
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‘Mansions in the head’: images, words, and the memories they conjure.
‘Seeing comes before words… …It is seeing which establishes our place in the surrounding land; we explain that world with words, but words can never undo the fact that we are surrounded by it.’ ‘Images were first made to conjure up the appearance of something that was absent’. Ways of Seeing John Berger ‘Memory…
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I know where I am going: writing fantastical, personal recounts.
This blog, much like my last post on picturebook biographies, is another complement to a blog I wrote for my employers @HertsEnglish. In that blog I explore statutory writing assessment but will also refer to some ideas for writing in the primary classroom. The blogs on this site serve to go into greater detail around…
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Bringing Life to Words (and Pictures): picturebook biographies for children
This blog complements another written for my employer’s site (visit us on Twitter: @Herts English). In that blog, I offer up some advice on helping children to demonstrate a particular standard in statutory writing assessments. I won’t get caught up in further detail here, other than to say that the other blog includes a section…