Primary One Literacy Phonics – Starting sounds Making the Links between the Classroom & Sports...

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Transcript of Primary One Literacy Phonics – Starting sounds Making the Links between the Classroom & Sports...

Primary One LiteracyPhonics – Starting sounds

Making the Links between the Classroom & Sports Hall

The “Big Picture” of the Curriculum at Foundation & Key Stages 1

Curriculum Aim …The Northern Ireland Curriculum aims to

empower young people to achieve their potential and to make informed and responsible decisions

throughout their lives…

How can we use curricular subjects through PE to achieve this?

PresentersPRESENTER CLASS THEME

JOE McMAHON P.1 LITERACY - PHONICS

BEN McGUCKINFIONNTAN O’DOWD

P.2 THE WORLD ABOUT US

GAVIN McGILLY P.3 NUMERACY - DIRECTIONS

OWEN MOONEY P.4 NUMERCY – MULTIPICATION , SPACE & ANGLES

Learning To Move&

Moving To LearnClassroom Sports Hall

Sitting Moving – Spatial Awareness

Fine Motor Skills Gross & Fine Motor Skills

Left Hemisphere Cognitive Learning - Telling Left & Right Brain Cognitive & Physical – Doing Through Action

Traditional Teaching Style - Didactic Coaching Style – Questioning – Kinaesthetic –Remember more through Doing

Social – Low self esteem Social – High Self Esteem through Social & Emotional Learning

Educational – Literacy New ways of learning – Maths, handwriting, alphabet, vocabulary

Pens - Paper, Words, Sentences Body – Floor - Actions - Sequences

Learning Through Movement • Why do some children do so well and others fail?

• How do we keep our pupils in the most receptive state for learning?

• We teach children what to learn but do we teach children How To Learn?

• Do we use different teaching styles to suit different learning methods?

• How might we use the sports hall to reinforce curricular skills?

Primary One LiteracyPhonics

Starting sounds

Objective

Linking physical literacy with starting sounds

Connective learning between the classroom and gymnasium

‘Children to associate a visual picture with the starting sound of word while

being physically active.’

How we as coaches linked what teachers were doing in class to the

gymnasium Visual aids 10% - Hear Sounds 50% - See

C 90% - Do

P.E. Activity

P.E. Activity

t

m

sc

a

t

o

a

Lets have a go

Conclusion

• Classroom

• PE Hall

Making the link

Making the Links between the Classroom & Sports Hall

The Arts:•Role play – Pirates.•Make – Pirate Hats, telescope.•Famous People – Black Beard, Henry Morgan etc.•Use a range of materials, tools and processes to realise their ideas and intentions.•Develop a sense of the world by engaging in a range of creative and imaginary role play situations.

The Arts:•Role play – Pirates.•Make – Pirate Hats, telescope.•Famous People – Black Beard, Henry Morgan etc.•Use a range of materials, tools and processes to realise their ideas and intentions.•Develop a sense of the world by engaging in a range of creative and imaginary role play situations.

Key Stage 1: P3. Teacher: Mr Paddy Hardy. Date: December/January 2012

Making the Links between the Classroom & Sports Hall

P4 – Classroom to PE Hall & Visa Versa - Owen Mooney

Aim

• Connect Learning through the Topic of Numeracy from the classroom to the PE Hall with a Focus on Multiplication & Angles

• Linking PE to the Classroom through All Cross Curricular Topics

Objective

• Develop Methods for Reinforcing the Topic of Multiplication through Classroom & Physical Activity Based Interactive Activities

• Linking Angles through the medium of Physical Actions in the PE Hall

Background

• Thought Provoking, Creative & Innovative

• School/Teacher/Children & Coach Relationships

Why Multiplication

• Topic Being Covered by Mary & The Class

• Multiplication – Interactive Whiteboard• Multiplication Story• Multiplication & Scoring in PE – 3 Videos

Why Angles

• Complicated Linking

• Attacking & Defending Questioning• Use of Space• The Defenders Back - 3 Videos

Angles - Task

Connecting Learning to PE

• Connecting PE to the Classroom

• Teacher & Coach Relationship

The Future…• The belief is that we now live in an intelligence economy, not a knowledge

economy.

• It is how well people can think, solve problems, communicate and work in teams that are more important than simply how much you know.

• We must provide opportunities for developing children’s Thinking Skills & Personal Capabilities

• If we do not act, the obesity epidemic will continue, helping to fuel the looming health-care crisis and lowering the quality of educational achievement of our children.

• There is abundant evidence that regular physical activity benefits the brains and bodies of school-aged children.

Go Raibh Maith Agat

Any Questions