At The John Roan School, we are committed to improving the reading and literacy of our students. For this reason, we are introducing two initiatives for Years 7-10:
Reading intervention groups for two days a week during tutor time.
An online platform called ‘Bedrock learning’ which will be set as homework and completed each week (replacing Sparx Reader)
Reading intervention groups
Pupils have been allocated to an appropriate reading group according to their reading age to ensure that they are supported, stretched and nurtured. The ‘NGRT reading assessment’. This is a standardised and adaptive reading assessment that measures reading skills against the national average. The assessment provides the school with a ‘Standardised Age Score’ and provides key insights into your child’s current reading ability.
Pupils who need the most support will be entering a phonics programme or an online intervention during this time. If your child is receiving this level of support, you will be contacted by Ms Matei, the literacy learning coach with more information.
We will continue to monitor students' reading progress by observing their in-class reading and monitoring their Bedrock homework.
Research shows that there are clear links between independent readers and academic outcomes. Our Whole School Reading Programme is designed to engage students in a love of reading, building their independent reading skills over time to advance their academic and pastoral success.
Form tutors read aloud with their reading group twice a week for an hour with students engaging in discussion and learning new vocabulary as they read a text as a class. Our texts are appropriate for students' reading ages and they are diverse in culture, era and genre.
Comparing the engaged reading time of 2.2 million students, Kirsh found that reading for 15+ minutes a day provided accelerated reading gains. Results showed that students reading for 20 minutes a day were likely to score better than 90% of their peers in standardised tests. (National Center for Education Statistics).
Form Tutors read aloud, at pace and with fluency, novels that their tutees would not easily access independently. Thus, we are equipping students with the skills and confidence to become fluent, independent life-long readers.
‘Read-Aloud is a unique opportunity to breathe life into texts that students are unable to read independently, so as to make those texts accessible … When you read a complex text aloud, you pave the way for students to read it themselves’ Doug Lemov (Reading Reconsidered).
Research shows that ‘simply reading challenging, complex novels aloud and at a fast pace … repositioned ‘poor’ readers as ‘good’ readers, giving them a more engaged, uninterrupted reading experience over a sustained period. In 12 weeks students made 8.5 months progress, but poorer readers made 16 months progress’. Westbrook (Just Reading, 2019)
Texts chosen are suitably challenging and reflect our school community. They are an important part of all students’ cultural capital, broadening minds and expanding horizons. Our Tutor Time Reading Programme texts are read on a rota system with students in each year group reading 6 texts across the academic year, alongside texts studied through the curriculum.
Private Peaceful
by Michael Morpurgo
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
by William Shakespeare
Anne Frank’s Diary
by Anne Frank
The Wolves of Willoughby Chase
by Joan Aiken
The Girl of Ink and Stars
Frankenstein Play and Extracts
by Philip Pullam and Mary Shelley
Richard III
I am Malala
by Malal Yousafzai
Dystopian short stories
Blood Brothers
by Willy Russell
Dear Martin
by Nic Stone
Romeo and Juliet
We Should All Be Feminists by Ngozi Adichie
Sherlock Holmes
by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Iridescent Adolescent
A Christmas Carol
by Charles Dickens
Macbeth
An Inspector Calls
by J. B. Priestley
A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
Chinese Cinderella
By Adeline Yen Mah
Blackberry Blue and other fairy tales
by Jamila Gavin
High-Rise Mystery
by Sharna Jackson
Boys Don’t Cry
by Malorie Blackman
Little Women
by Louisa K Alcot
Journey to the Centre of the Earth
by Jules Verne
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
by Mark Haddon
Things a Bright Girl Can Do
by Sally Nicholls
The Time Machine by
H.G. Wells
Animal Farm
by George Orwell
Orangeboy
by Patrice Lawrence
Noughts and Crosses
Lord of the Flies
By William Golding
The Fountains of Silence
by Ruta Sepetys
Touching the Void
by Joe Simpson
Wuthering Heights
by Emily Bronte
The Book Thief
by Marcus Zusak
Rebecca
By Daphne Du Maurier
Anita and Me
by Meera Syal
The Great Gatsby
by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Flowers for Algernon
by Daniel Keyes
The Woman in White
by Wilkie Collins
Things Fall Apart
by Chinua Achebe
Great Expectations
Silas Marner
by George Elliot
Subject Intervention provided by the Directors of English, Maths and Science
Students are splint in to reading groups according to their “Zone of Proximal Development”* and twice a week enjoy reading for pleasure as a group.
We read a range of books during this time across a broad range of genre fron=m Glee Club, Frame and High Rise Mystery to text for older readers such as Wurthering Heights and White Teeth.
“Zone of Proximal Development” or ZPD and is normally given as a range. Books in school libraries that use this system are rated by their ZPD score and allow children to pick from books within this range. These books are the ones best suited to develop their reading ability.
David Ross Education Trust - DRET Reads
https://www.jotterpadteachersnotes.com/2019/08/whole-school-tutor-read-aloud-programme
Joanne Tiplady – TEAL Trust https://researchschool.org.uk/greenshaw/news/making-word-rich-readers
Alex Quigley, Closing the Reading Gap
Doug Lemov, Reading Reconsidered
Each department has a list of subject-specific recommended texts that have been chosen to further enrich and broaden students’ education within and beyond each subject.
Click here to download the list of recommended wider reading texts by subject.
At The John Roan School, we welcome everyone’s involvement and participation in creating a reading culture within and beyond our school community.
Keep reading this summer with free access to myON We want to make sure that every child has access to daily reading, which is why we are announcing access to over 6,000 digital books with myON, as well as myON News, which provides daily news articles reviewed by child.
Every week a popular children's author or illustrator will provide you with free books, exclusive videos and their top three recommended reads.
OverDrive is a resource by which students can enjoy free books and audiobooks, online, whilst not in school.
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