The following curriculum overview gives you details about what your child will be learning this half term. Using the links below you are able to view the different objectives that are being covered across a range of subjects and how you can support your child at home.
In Reception we do a lot of learning through exploration. Each day we have activities planned to develop your child’s knowledge and skills. We try and encourage them to direct the way the topic develops by asking questions that need to be investigated or by demonstrating a particular interest. Your child is encouraged to read, write, count and problem solve on a daily basis through challenges and careful questioning by the staff.
Building on all that we have learnt during term 1, term 2 is a very exciting one! Parkfielders will explore traditional tales and discover mysterious events taking place in our environment. We will explore different people who will help us solve crimes.
Some of the memorable moments for our pupils this half term will include:
Exploring our local woodland... who will we find in the woodland?
Observing jelly babies over a period of days
Weekly baking.
Exploring sense of taste.
This half term we will:
Talk about our families and what we like to do together.
Know that rules keep us safe when using equipment. Safety rules include always listening carefully and following simple instructions, using equipment only for the tasks they are designed for and washing hands before touching food. (Revisit)
Consider and manage some risks without direct adult supervision and is able to follow routines and structure with increasing independence. (revisit)
We will think about how we can help each other and be kind both in and out of school.
We will set ourselves targets of things we want to achieve.
We will talk about things that make us proud.
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
Can label and talk about own and others’ emotions.
Responds well to more complex instructions in smaller groups, but can need visual reminders in larger groups.
Completes set challenges/tasks independently.
Is able to talk about ways that skills can be improved and to demonstrate pride in achievements.
More confident to tackle new challenges and with encouragement will keep going.
Follows school and class rules and can talk about their importance.
Knows some ways to keep healthy.
Can cooperate with others, listening and sharing some ideas and will listen to advice about how to solve disagreements.
Uses words to solve conflicts.
Takes turns in group activities.
Identifies how others feel and responds appropriately.
This half term we will:
We will share and record our weekend news.
Work more independently on tasks and ask for help if we need it.
We will vote for and listen to daily stories, non fiction books and poetry.
Develop storylines in our own play.
Retell stories and innovate aspects of the story using our imagination.
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
Can switch attention from one task to another.
Follows complex instructions.
Responds to discussion with comments and questions.
Is able to listen in whole school Collective Worship and recall some of the themes and comments at a later stage.
Enjoys being part of conversations and discussions and uses new vocabulary in context.
Uses talk in different ways, in imaginative play, to develop thinking, to collaborate and plan with others and to express ideas.
This half term we will:
Complete lots of funky finger tasks to support muscle strength.
Complete dough disco and pen disco.
Play a variety of ball, bean bag games.
Practise gymnastics safely.
Have a weekly session with our PE specialist.
Learn short routines and perform them to our friends.
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
Sits at a table to write.
Holds a pencil in a tripod grip.
Uses scissors to cut around more complex shapes, e.g. split pin characters.
Can throw, kick, pass and catch a large ball.
Able to balance on and off equipment.
Can jump safely from a piece of equipment.
Recognise and say sounds represented by graphemes.
Blend sounds into words, so that they can read short words made up of known letter-sound correspondences. Suggest what might happen at different points in a story
Describe the characters, events and settings in stories that have been read to them using recently introduced vocabulary.
Use phonic knowledge to blend sounds into words.
Join in with repeated refrains and anticipate key events and phrases in rhymes and stories.
Be aware of how the title and blurb give information about a book.
Use writing to communicate thoughts, ideas, experiences and events.
Write our RWI sounds
Hold a sentence
Conduct mini spelling sessions writing cvc words.
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
Has a good understanding of story structure and can retell and make up own stories using vocabulary that has been learnt.
Identifies non-fiction texts, remembering facts.
Reads books with a range of Phase 2 and 3 cvc words and tricky words and shows a good understanding of what has been read.
Reads all Phase 2 and 3 tricky words.
Says the sound for each Phase 2 and 3 grapheme.
Writes some upper case letters correctly.
Writes most lower case letters correctly using a tripod grip.
Says the sound for each Phase 2 and 3 grapheme.
Writes cvc words and labels using Phase 2 and 3 phonemes.
Spells some tricky words.
Write captions.
Is starting to write short sentences.
Uses finger spacing between words.
Reads sentences back to an adult.
We will enjoy….
Goldilocks and the Three Bears (Ladybird First Favourite Tales)
Little Red Riding Hood (Ladybird First Favourite Tales)
The three little Pigs
The gingerbread man
Cinderella
The Three Billy Goats Gruff
using numeral dice in games; matching numerals with varied groups of things.
Correcting 'Math's Marvin' (puppet) who may say that there are more or fewer objects now as they have been moved around/spread out/pushed together.
Sharing out and grouping things in different ways- puppet complaining that its not fair as they have more/less.
Counting forward and backwards from a given number.
Convert two unequal groups into two that have the same number. Eg There are 6 apples in one bag and 2 in another bag; can we make the bags equal for the two hungry horses?
Explaining unfair sharing - "This one has more because it ahs 3 and this one only has 2. "
Comparing numbers that are far apart, near to, next to each other.
Children will secure their understanding of the pairs of numbers that make 5, and then use double dice frames to begin to explore 6, 7 and 8 as numbers that are composed of ‘5 and a bit’.
Play skittles, looking at how many have fallen how many are standing. How many are there altogether?
Using whole part model to demonstrate composition of numbers to 10.
Patterns
Spot patterns and predict what will happen next
Spot mistakes in patterns and say why it is a mistake
Explore patterns that work and patterns that don't.
Make a huge marble run using the piping and outdoor water resources
Make faces using shapes and a range of materials (Picasso style)
Foil covered objects - pupils to guess the items inside
Use class timetable to understand the routine of the day
Odd one out games using length or height/ weight or size
Use the balancing station inside and out to compare objects/items.
Use the filling up station to compare capacities/investigate items around school
Compare the capacity of bottles and glasses
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
Developing sense of numbers beyond 5 and can subitise to 6.
Confidently talks about the different ways that numbers can be made to 5 and is now applying this knowledge to numbers to 10.
Links subtraction facts to composition of numbers to 5.
Recalls some double facts to 10.
Can count beyond 10 and is starting to recognise the pattern of the counting system to help count beyond 10.
Recognises patterns within number.
Uses mathematical language to compare and talk about shape and size.
This half term we will:
We will look at a map and identify a route to find treasure.
During forest school we will identify our school on the map and it's locality.
Explore and discuss similarities between aspects of their life and life in the past, using books, stories and pictures.
We will join in whole school assemblies and be part of the whole school community.
We will use computer/iPads to support our learning.
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
People Culture and Communities
Has a wider understanding of the wider world and draws comparisons between own local environment and other places.
Looks at, and makes maps, of local environment.
Describes a journey within the local environment.
Talks about some features of a Christian Church and knows that the school is connected to the churches in the local area.
Has a good general knowledge about living things and the natural world and can describe features of different plants and animals recognising when they are the same and different.
This half term we will:
To explore and recreate famous Art such as Vincent Van Gogh.
To use resources to create their own props.
Use ribbons and material to move to music from different cultures.
Play instruments to the pulse of the music
Begin to retell stories and act them out
Study Picasso and his portraits
Recreate our own Picasso Portraits
End of Spring Term Checkpoint
Creating with materials
Uses different techniques and materials to achieve the desired effect and can talk about what has been created.
Mixes colours to produce different shades and combines materials to create different textures.
Is beginning to plan a design before starting.
Uses a range of tools and equipment and selects the most appropriate tool or joining material for the job.
Being imaginative and expressive
Plays a range of percussion instruments and glockenspiel.
Uses instruments to compose own music.
Along with others, collects resources to develop own role play storylines.