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Year 6 - Non-fiction

Narrative
11-12 weeks
UNIT 1
Fiction genres
*
(4-5 weeks)
UNIT 2
Extending narrative
*
(2 weeks)
UNIT 3
Authors and texts
*
(2 weeks)
UNIT 4
Short stories with flashbacks
*
(3 weeks)
Non-fiction
12 weeks
TRANSITION UNIT
Persuasion *
UNIT 1
Biography and autobiography
*
(3 weeks)
UNIT 2
Journalistic writing
*
(3 weeks)
UNIT 3
Argument
*
(3 weeks)
UNIT 4
Formal/impersonal writing
*
(3 weeks)
Poetry
3 weeks
UNIT 1
The power of imagery
*
(2 weeks)
UNIT 2
Finding a voice *

(1 week)
Revision
8 weeks
UNIT 1
Reading and writing narrative
(and plays)
*
(3 weeks)
UNIT 2
Reading and writing non-fiction
*
(3 weeks)
UNIT 3
Reading poetry
*
(2 weeks)
Additional text-based units
There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom
(3 weeks)
The Midnight Fox
(3 weeks)
Street child
(3 weeks)
The Highwayman
(3 weeks)
Sensational!
(2 weeks)
Numbers of weeks identified for each unit are suggestions only

* Where the unit title is asterisked, detailed planning exemplification has been produced and can be accessed by clicking on the title.

The combined content of these units, together with continuous and discrete work at word and sentence level, carries the learning that children can be expected to achieve in Year 6. Further work on presentational skills and speaking and listening will be ongoing throughout the year. Literacy learning in Year 6 is summarised in the objectives in the twelve strands. The year divides into 10-11 weeks on narrative, 12 weeks on non-fiction and 3 weeks on poetry, with 8 weeks for revision but these timings and the ordering of many of the units can be flexible. This flexibility means that schools can position the units to create purposeful links across the curriculum. However care must be taken to maintain the progression in learning at text, sentence and word levels if these units are taught in a different order from the one suggested.

It is expected that the non-fiction units will take place before, after or alongside units from across the curriculum that will provide the content and purpose for speaking, listening, reading and writing. Many schools will also wish to link narrative, plays and poetry units across the curriculum.

See pages 29-36 of Learning and teaching in the primary years: Designing opportunities for learning (Ref: 0521-2004) to see how curriculum maps can be used to align units of study across curriculum areas.

See the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority's opportunities for and examples of embedding aspects of English in art and design, design and technology, geography, history, music, science and mathematics at Key Stages 1 and 2 (http://www.qca.org.uk/qca_5226.aspx).

Non-fiction block

Although these units do not simply repeat the exemplified planning previously published, this remains relevant, and in some instances may be drawn upon for materials and approaches. The relationship between the two is shown in one of the tables below.

The non-fiction block addresses the following learning objectives.

Non-fiction UNIT 1 UNIT 2 UNIT 3 UNIT 4
1. Speaking        
Use a range of oral techniques to present persuasive arguments and engaging narratives   tick tick  
Participate in whole-class debate using the conventions and language of debate, including standard English     tick  
Use the techniques of dialogic talk to explore ideas, topics or issues tick tick   tick
2. Listening and responding        
Make notes when listening for a sustained period and discuss how note-taking varies depending on context and purpose tick tick    
Analyse and evaluate how speakers present points effectively through use of language and gesture     tick  
Listen for language variation in formal and informal contexts.     tick  
Identify the ways spoken language varies according to differences in context and purpose of use     tick tick
3. Group discussion and interaction        
Consider examples of conflict and resolution, exploring language used        
Understand and use a variety of ways to criticise constructively and respond to criticism       tick
4. Drama        
Improvise using a range of drama strategies and conventions to explore themes such as hopes, fears, desires   tick    
Consider the overall impact of a live or recorded performance, identifying dramatic ways of conveying characters' ideas and building tension        
Devise a performance considering how to adapt the performance for a specific audience tick      
5. Word recognition (objectives covered by the end of Year 2)        
6. Word structure and spelling        
Spell familiar words correctly and employ a range of strategies to spell difficult and unfamiliar words tick tick    
Use a range of appropriate strategies to edit, proofread and correct spelling in own work, on paper and on screen tick tick tick tick
7. Understanding and interpreting texts        
Appraise a text quickly, deciding on its value/quality/usefulness tick tick    
Understand underlying themes, causes and points of view tick      
Understand how writers use different structures to create coherence and impact       tick
Explore how word meanings change when used in different contexts        
Recognise rhetorical devices used to argue, persuade, mislead and sway the reader   tick tick  
8. Engaging with and responding to texts        
Read extensively and discuss personal reading with others, including in reading groups        
Sustain engagement with longer texts, using different techniques to make the text come alive tick tick    
Compare how writers from different times and places present experiences and use language tick tick tick tick
9. Creating and shaping texts        
Set own challenges to extend achievement and experience in writing tick     tick
Use different narrative techniques to engage and entertain the reader tick tick    
In non-narrative, establish, balance and maintain viewpoints     tick  
Select words and language drawing on their knowledge of literary features and formal and informal writing tick tick   tick
Integrate words, images and sounds imaginatively for different purposes tick tick   tick
10. Text structure and organisation        
Use varied structures to shape and organise texts coherently tick tick tick tick
Use paragraphs to achieve pace and emphasis tick   tick  
11. Sentence structure and punctuation        
Express subtle distinctions of meaning, including hypothesis, speculation and supposition, by constructing sentences in varied ways tick tick   tick
Use punctuation to clarify meaning in complex sentences     tick tick
12. Presentation        
Use different styles of handwriting for different purposes with a range of media, developing a consistent and personal legible style tick tick tick  
Select from a wide range of ICT programs to present text effectively and communicate information and ideas tick tick   tick

Match between current planning and the previous National Literacy Strategy planning materials

Non-fiction 2006 UNIT 1
Biography and autobiography
3 weeks
UNIT 2
Journalistic writing

3 weeks
UNIT 3
Argument

3 weeks
UNIT 4
Formal/impersonal writing
3 weeks
National Literacy Strategy 2003 Term 1:
Biography/autobiography
Term 1: Journalistic Term 2: Argument Term 2: Formal and Term 3 Impersonal writing