Literacy Overview
Literacy Overview
Achievement By the end of Year 2, students understand how similar texts share characteristics by identifying text structures and language
Standard features used to describe characters and events, or to communicate factual information.
They read texts that contain varied sentence structures, some unfamiliar vocabulary, a significant number of high-frequency
sight words and images that provide extra information. They monitor meaning and self-correct using knowledge of phonics,
syntax, punctuation, semantics and context. They use knowledge of a wide variety of letter-sound relationships to read words of
one or more syllables with fluency. They identify literal and implied meaning, main ideas and supporting detail. Students make
connections between texts by comparing content. They listen for particular purposes. They listen for and manipulate sound
combinations and rhythmic sound patterns. When discussing their ideas and experiences, students use everyday language
features and topic-specific vocabulary. They explain their preferences for aspects of texts using other texts as comparisons. They
create texts that show how images support the meaning of the text.
Students create texts, drawing on their own experiences, their imagination and information they have learnt. They use a variety
of strategies to engage in group and class discussions and make presentations. They accurately spell words with regular spelling
patterns and spell words with less common long vowel patterns. They use punctuation accurately, and write words and
sentences legibly using unjoined upper- and lower-case letters
Content Understand that different types of texts have identifiable text structures and language features that help the text serve its
Descriptors purpose
Understand how texts are made cohesive through language features, including word associations, synonyms, and antonyms
Recognise that capital letters signal proper nouns and commas are used to separate items in lists (revision from last term)
Understand the use of vocabulary about familiar and new topics and experiment with and begin to make conscious choices
of vocabulary to suit audience and purpose
Orally manipulate more complex sounds in spoken words through knowledge of blending and segmenting sounds, phoneme
deletion and substitution in combination with use of letters in reading and writing
Understand how to use knowledge of digraphs, long vowels, blends and silent letters to spell one and two syllable words
including some compound words
Build morphemic word families using knowledge of prefixes and suffixes
Use knowledge of letter patterns and morphemes to read and write high-frequency words and words whose spelling is not
predictable from their sounds
Use most letter-sound matches including vowel digraphs, less common long vowel patterns, letter clusters and silent letters
when reading and writing words of one or more syllable
Understand that a sound can be represented by various letter combinations
Create events and characters using different media that develop key events and characters from literary texts
Innovate on familiar texts by experimenting with character, setting or plot
Listen for specific purposes and information, including instructions, and extend students’ own and others' ideas in discussions
Use interaction skills including initiating topics, making positive statements and voicing disagreement in an appropriate
manner, speaking clearly and varying tone, volume and pace appropriately
Rehearse and deliver short presentations on familiar and new topics
Identify the audience of imaginative, informative and persuasive texts
Read less predictable texts with phrasing and fluency by combining contextual, semantic, grammatical and phonic
knowledge using text processing strategies, for example monitoring meaning, predicting, rereading and self-correcting
Use comprehension strategies to build literal and inferred meaning and begin to analyse texts by drawing on growing
knowledge of context, language and visual features and print and multimodal text structures
Create short imaginative, informative and persuasive texts using growing knowledge of text structures and language features
for familiar and some less familiar audiences, selecting print and multimodal elements appropriate to the audience and
purpose
Re-read and edit text for spelling, sentence-boundary punctuation and text structure
Write legibly and with growing fluency using unjoined upper case and lower case letters
Week 1 - Description
Learning To understand the purpose and features of description texts
Intention
Success I can identify the purpose of a description
Criteria I can identify the audience of this text type
I can list the elements of the description bubble
I can describe the structure of a description
Text Type
Week 2
Learning To understand the purpose and features of description texts
Intention
Success I can compose an action statement at the end of my writing
Criteria I can compose a judgmental statement in my writing
I can compose a simile or metaphor
Writing In groups, students are given objects to describe with each team member being responsible for an element of description
Text Type
Week 3 - procedure
Learning To understand the purpose and features of the materials list in a procedural text
Intention
Success I can identify the purpose of a procedure
Criteria I can identify the components of a procedure
I can describe what must be included in a procedure
I can compose a materials list
I can compose an ingredients list
I can compose simple, sequential, numbered steps
Writing Pre-test of procedure writing for data collection
(examples Look at example procedure – discuss the importance of each component – what do you notice? How is this different from
of tasks) the other text types we have learnt?
Students to look at ‘tropical fingers’ procedure – what do you notice about the ingredients? Why is it important to list
Text Type
amounts?
Students to piece together a cut apart procedure (tropical fingers) and discuss the importance of sequence in a procedure
Students to write their own procedure for creating pizza fingers with the inclusion of specific ingredients and amounts,
materials and a well sequenced method.
Assessment Observation
Work samples (writing samples collected)
Weekly Big Write
Self-assessment using success criteria
Pre testing of procedure at beginning of week
Big Write Prompt Focus
Title
Materials list
Week 5 - procedure
Learning To understand the purpose and features of a procedural text
Intention
Success I can compose a detailed ingredients and materials list
Criteria I can compose a detailed, numbered and sequential method
Text Type
Students choose an animal from the sheets provided – students write a macro sentence for their animal then research and
record different facts for the given micro groups on the sheet (teachstarter resource)
Assessment Observation
Work samples (writing samples collected)
Weekly Big Write
Self-assessment using success criteria
Pre testing of information reports at beginning of week
Big Write Prompt (based on information video) Focus
Title
Defines topic
Macro sentence
Assessment Observation
Work samples (writing samples collected)
Weekly Big Write
Self-assessment using success criteria
Pre testing of description at beginning of week
Big Write Prompt (based on information video) Focus
Micro groups
Paragraphing
Description – adjective use