In sharing ideas, resources and lesson plans about teaching reading in whole-class lessons, the question I am asked most often is about KS1 and how it can work there. This post will hopefully answer that question and give you some information and resources to demonstrate how it works. Also included at the end are the Year 1 and Year 2 Reading Objectives organised under RIC headings and a link to the folder which contains all Key Stage 1 resources for you to download. Two colleagues, Laura and Sophie, have helped me put together this post so my thanks must go to them for their time, permission and expertise.
In addition to daily phonic sessions, the children take part in a small-group reading session with an adult. In this session the children are grouped according to their phonic ability, this allows the focus book to be at the correct level for each child. This is similar to the group with the teacher in traditional carousel guided reading sessions. Over the week the children are introduced to the story, adults pre-teach the vocabulary they need and groups discuss similar events in their life with predictions based on the title. Follow up sessions include reading the book at least 2 times with a final session based on comprehension skills using the RIC objectives - depending on the level of the child this can be verbal, written multiple choice or traditional written questions.
Year One - RIC
Two or three times a week, Year One children sit down together before home time to complete a Read with RIC session. During this session they decode some real words, some alien words (you can thank the Phonics Screening for that) and read a book together. They use the RIC logos to answer questions about these texts which require them to retrieve, interpret and predict. In the autumn term, this session is completed verbally with a main focus on retrieve. As the term progresses, the focus changes to interpreting and predicting with RIC. In the Summer term, the children move to producing written responses to these RIC questions.
Year One - Whole Class Reading
Whole class reading is carried out through texts we use in our Literacy lessons, using a rich and broad text to teach English reading and writing objectives. The children become familiar with the text through drama and speaking and listening activities so that all children can then access the text and even read specific sections despite it being a challenging text for the children to read independently. Activities always include an aspect of comprehension understanding at both word and sentence level with a writing outcome. For example, We're going on a bear hunt. We use this text to teach contractions, prepositions (word level work) jumbled sentences, sequencing (sentence level work) and the children write their own version after going on a bear hunt in their school environment.
The slideshows below show a Year 1 Read with RIC session from the Autumn Term and then one from the Summer Term. You can see the progression, not only in the sounds referred to in the decode section but in the expectations in the RIC questions.
Autumn:
Summer:
Year Two
At the end of Year Two, the expectation from the government is that children should write responses to questions about texts. Therefore, phonics sessions and verbal reading groups will not suffice to prepare them for this. Children are introduced to RIC activities similar to those used in KS2. Some of these use visual stimuli such as videos and images however the focus is mostly on text-based stimuli, as per the assessments children will take towards the end of the year.
In whole-class sessions, children complete RIC activities in a RIC book which are then marked and discussed in the session. Some of these RICs have more than one question per objective so children practise answering such questions more frequently and, as the tests approach, general reading comprehension questions are mixed up so children get used to recognising question types without the logos. RIC sessions also mean teachers can address the interim framework statement about linking the book they are reading to others they've read. Year 2 teachers base RICs on videos and cartoons as well as texts which are familiar to children such as traditional tales.
In whole-class sessions, children complete RIC activities in a RIC book which are then marked and discussed in the session. Some of these RICs have more than one question per objective so children practise answering such questions more frequently and, as the tests approach, general reading comprehension questions are mixed up so children get used to recognising question types without the logos. RIC sessions also mean teachers can address the interim framework statement about linking the book they are reading to others they've read. Year 2 teachers base RICs on videos and cartoons as well as texts which are familiar to children such as traditional tales.
The slideshow below shows some RIC activities which Year 2 have used. Children write answers to these in a RIC book which, nearer to SATs, is used for comprehension test practice too.
Assessment
As with KS2 classes, I've made the following objective sheets for KS1. These can be downloaded in PDF format from the link at the end of this post. Please see this post for how these objective sheets have been used in KS2 and let me know in the comments below how you use them in your KS1 class. As well as listening to children read and asking them questions verbally, tests form an important part of how we assess children's understanding of what they've read.
You can view and download everything mentioned in this post (including all the slideshows, assessment sheets, RIC examples and more) by clicking here (go to RIC Activities for the slides and Objective Sheets for the assessment pages).
To download items, click the down arrow in the top right-hand corner. I will be adding to this folder over the coming weeks.
As with KS2 classes, I've made the following objective sheets for KS1. These can be downloaded in PDF format from the link at the end of this post. Please see this post for how these objective sheets have been used in KS2 and let me know in the comments below how you use them in your KS1 class. As well as listening to children read and asking them questions verbally, tests form an important part of how we assess children's understanding of what they've read.
Year 1 Objectives |
Year 2 Objectives |
Year 2 Interim Framework Objectives |
You can view and download everything mentioned in this post (including all the slideshows, assessment sheets, RIC examples and more) by clicking here (go to RIC Activities for the slides and Objective Sheets for the assessment pages).
To download items, click the down arrow in the top right-hand corner. I will be adding to this folder over the coming weeks.