During term time we ask that students complete 30 minutes of careful reading to as part of their English homework. Often, students will complete this by themselves, but this is something that we welcome parents to help and support with at home if you wanted to read with your child to support their reading development.
At school, we adopt ‘reciprocal reading strategies to support their development with reading. This is something that you can try with your child at home.
- Predict: This is asking students to consider what they think the reading will be about based on the title, cover or even considering what has been read so far. Ask your child to predict what they think it could be about and explain why they think that. E.g. there is a tree so I think it could be set in a forest which could be mysterious.
- Question: As you are reading, it is really important to check students understand what they are reading as they read it. Therefore, quick questions along the way will help to encourage this understanding. E.g. ‘What has just happened here?’ ‘Can you tell me where you got that information from?’ ‘What does this word mean?’ ‘How is the character feeling?’ You could at this point ask you child to then predict what next if you wanted to ensuring they are engaging with the story.
- Clarify: This is where you correct any mistakes that may have been made by telling them what a word means or searching it up with a dictionary or google together. Discussing what the importance of what has just happened is before moving on.
- Summarise: Once you have finished reading a chapter or section of the book, ask your child to summarise in their own words what has happened. This encourages them to identify key information in a concise manner which supports their own thinking when engaging with all subjects!
We do encourage using a dictionary or similar to look up words you don’t know whilst reading. One of the major benefits of reading is that through exposure to new vocabulary, students expand their ‘toolbox’ of words at their disposal to articulate their thoughts and feelings more sophisticatedly and accurately as well as being able to access more content in their subject areas.