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The literacy hour

Since September 1998, all primary schools in England have been expected to teach the literacy hour as laid down in the National Literacy Strategy in the Framework for Teaching. As a response to the National Literacy Project, many LEAs in England initiated their own 'literacy hour' anticipating the White Paper proposal in 1997 to extend the National Literacy Project to all schools in England. The literacy hour is now part of the Primary National Strategy.


What is the literacy hour?

The 18,500 English state primary schools were required, from September 1998, to teach reading and writing in a highly structured manner as laid down by the strategy which insists that phonics comes first. The National Literacy Strategy is an unprecedented intervention in classroom teaching methods - representing the first England-wide policy on the teaching of reading.

The National Literacy Strategy describes term by term how reading and writing should be taught. It lays down that pupils should be taught to:

  • Discriminate between the separate sounds in words;
  • Read words by sounding out and blending their separate parts;
  • Write words by combining the spelling patterns of their sounds.
  • Only when children are reasonably fluent readers should the emphasis shift to advanced reading.
The policy requires primary teachers to teach a daily English lesson in which pupils are taught for the first half of the lesson as a whole class, reading together, extending their vocabulary, looking at the phonetics of words and being taught grammar, punctuation and spelling. The lesson should begin with clear objectives. The teacher led part of the hour should be interactive with the teacher modelling what the pupils have to do and the pupils increasingly joining in the activity so that they have the confidence to work on their own in the second half of the lesson. For the last half of the lesson they will work in groups or individually with the teacher focussing on one group. The lesson ends with feedback from the children on what they have been doing in relation to the objectives of the lesson.

Recommended structure of a literacy hour

First section:(15 minutes)
Make the objectives of the lesson clear
- Whole class: Modelling reading using an enlarged text or modelling writing by scribing with the class.

Second section:(15 minutes)
-Whole class: Focused word or sentence work.

Third section (about 20 minutes):
- Group or individual work: Reading, writing or word and sentence work while the teacher works with one or more ability group on guided text work.

Final section: (about 10 minutes)
- Whole class plenary session: Reviewing the learning that has taken place related to the learning objectives of the lesson - the pupils, not the teacher, explain what they have learnt.

Why a plenary session? The logic behind the structure of the literacy hour with its plenary session is this: educational research and brain research shows that people learn things better if they know initially what are the objectives of their learning and are provided with frequent opportunities to review what they have learnt. Explaining to others (a key ingredient of the plenary session) is one of the most effective methods of reviewing since if you can explain what it is you have been doing itdevelops your understanding of what you are doing and means you are much more likely to retain the information.

   
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