GLF Schools

GLF Schools

GLF Schools was founded in 2012 in order to enable the federation of Glyn School (an academy in 2011) and Danetree Junior School. Together, we began our journey to become a MAT of more than 1000 talented staff working with over 10,000 children in 40 schools across 5 regions in southern England.

Our Schools

Banbury Region

Banstead Region

Berkshire & Hampshire Region

Caterham Region

Crawley Region

Didcot Region

Epsom Region

London Boroughs

Redhill Region

Sunbury & Camberley Region

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    At Aureus Primary School, we use the Read Write Inc. synthetic phonics programme primarily in our EYFS classes and KS1.

    In our phonic sessions, we teach phonemic awareness which is the ability to hear, identify and manipulate phonemes (smallest units of sound). The aim of Read Write Inc. is to enable beginning readers to decode new written words by sounding them out (known as blending).

    Reading is a key tool for life. Our curriculum enables our children to develop a life-long love of reading as well as be ready, at the end of each phase, for the next stage of their education. We aim for all children to become fluent readers, using their phonological knowledge, understanding of vocabulary and comprehension skills across all areas of the curriculum.  Reading is very important to us at Aureus Primary School; it helps us gain new knowledge, develop our imaginations and helps us relax.  Below is a link to a list of books which are recommended to read before you leave primary school.  We hope you enjoy them!

    100 fiction books to read before leaving primary school
     
    Top tips for reading with your child

    This is a simple sequence that can be used to support shared reading. When reading together, adults can pause and:

    • Prompt the child to say something about the book;
    • Evaluate their response;
    • Expand their response by rephrasing or adding information to it; and
    • Repeat the prompt to help them learn from the expansion.

    For example, if an adult and child were looking at a page in a book about a zoo, the parent might point at a picture and say, ‘What is that?’ [prompt]. The child replies, ‘zebra’, and the adult responds, ‘That’s right [evaluation]—it’s a black and white stripy zebra [the expansion]; can you say, “stripy zebra”?’ [the repetition].

    There are five main types of prompts that can be used as part of the PEER sequence. The prompts can be remembered using the acronym CROWD:

    • Completion—leave a blank at the end of a sentence for children to complete (this works particularly well with books with rhymes or repetitive phrases);
    • Recall—ask children about something they have already read (these prompts support children to understand the story plot);
    • Open-ended—often with a focus on pictures in books (this works well with illustrations and encourages children to express their ideas);
    • Wh—prompts that begin with ‘who’, ‘what’, ‘where’, ‘why’, and ‘when’ (‘what’ questions can be used to develop vocabulary); and
    • Distancing—connects the book to children’s own life experiences and provides an opportunity for high quality discussion.

    The link below provide useful videos and resources to support reading development at home:

    Parent information for Read Write Inc