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Creative curriculum: inspiring young imaginations using the arts is just one of the ways Anna Warren teaches her pupils. Photograph:
Tom Finnie
Anna Warren
Thursday 14 February 2013 07.00GMT
As a creative school, with a track record in fantastic English results, we are often asked what
our specic approach is: how do we teach through the arts yet manage to maintain such high
expectations from all our pupils? I'd like to share some of these approaches with you:
Immersion activities
How can children access stories, poems and other texts if their minds and imaginations not
fully engaged? We have found that immersing children in a range of creative activities before
reading the text means that they are fully prepared, and excited, about the reading journey
ahead of them. Through painting, music composition, a lm project, in role drama or
sculpture, the kids have had a chance to share vocabulary, ideas and concepts which gives
their reading fresh meaning and purpose.
Clear purpose
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What's the point of reading and writing anything if you don't know why you're doing it? We
aim to provide children with a clear purpose to all reading, and especially writing tasks.
Whether it's an invitation to the headteacher to attend a class assembly, an email to an author
or an article for a school newspaper, our children know why the quality of their writing
matters: because there will be a real audience for their published work.
Professional publishing
One eective way of valuing children's work as well as providing a real incentive, is to plan for
a range of ways to publish their writing. Recent examples include a whole school bookmaking
project. Following a whole school Inset on bookbinding techniques, every class published their
own shared book; one example being an anthology of short spooky stories composed by year
6. Their stories were mounted on handmade paper, accompanied with each child's art work
(lino cut style prints on metallic paper) with a dramatic paper cut out front cover. The eort
the children put into their work was immense, and the results were stunning as a result. The
anthology has been enjoyed by parents and other pupils and the children's pride in their work
is clear to see.
Meaningful planning
Where possible, learning in English is linked with subjects within the creative curriculum we
follow: the international primary curriculum (IPC). Well in advance of teaching, teachers
collaborate and share their ideas for planning through a mind mapping process. Meaningful,
creative activities are planned for, ensuring that all sta members know exactly what the
children will be learning and why.
Focused on strategies
The teaching of reading is not easy. As children's uency in reading increases, it's hard to know
what reading skills need to be taught, and when. We ensure that specic reading strategies are
modelled explicitly to the class; this provides children with a holistic bank of skills to draw
upon. This could include scanning a text, making an inference, predicting or creating a mental
image. Our teachers use 'think aloud' statements to model to the children how these skills are
used, and how they can help them become better readers. These strategies are then shared as a
class, and then assessed in follow up guided reading activities.
make homework lists as personalised to the child as possible to ensure that the spelling
patterns stick in a meaningful way.
Anna Warren is the English subject leader and the year 6 teacher at Holy Trinity and St Silas
School, London.
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Topics
Teaching tips Schools Primary schools Teaching English and creative writing Literacy
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