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January 2014

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Year 6. Parents' SATs Meeting. January 2014. Aims of the session. To share important information about KS2 SATs To answer any questions about KS2 SATs Discuss / share ideas about how you as a parent can help your child at home. What are KS2 SATs?. Standard Assessment Tests - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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•To share important information about KS2 SATs

•To answer any questions about KS2 SATs

•Discuss / share ideas about how you as a parent can help your child at home

Aims of the session

•Standard Assessment Tests

•All children have to be tested before they go to high school

•Provide assessment information for high schools

•Purpose – assign National Curriculum levels to children before they leave primary school

What are KS2 SATs?

•Level 2 – these children will not be entered for the tests

•Level 3 – below age related expectation

•Level 4 – age related expectation ( this is now a 4B )

•Level 5 – above age related expectation

What other information do high schools want?

• SATs results• Teacher assessments• Tests administered by the high

schools• It varies according to which high

school your child is going to

•Teacher assessment draws together everything the teacher or teachers know about a child, including observations, marked work and school assessments.

•Teacher assessment is not a ‘snapshot’ like tests and is therefore more reliable.

•There can be a difference between teacher assessment results and test levels.

•Teacher assessment only, is used for children who work below level 3 (children who don’t do the SATs).

What does teacher assessment involve, and is it different from testing?

•A timetable is issued to school, telling us on which days/sessions tests must be administered.

•All children must sit the tests at the same time.

•Test papers can only be opened 1 hour before the tests begin.

•Tests are completed in classrooms, with any displays that may help covered over.

•Children are divided into groups for test administration to ensure they are properly supported and feel secure.

How is SATs week organised?

Year 6 SATs Week 12th May – 16th May

Monday 12th May

Tuesday 13th May

Wednesday 14th May

Thursday 16th May

Friday 17th May

English - Reading Test

English – Grammar, punctuation and spelling test

Science test paper 1

Mental Maths Test

Maths Test A

Science paper 2

Maths Test B

Level 6 Maths paper 1

Level 6 Maths paper 2

English short writing test English long writing test

Any questions

?

•The best help is interest taken in learning and progress.

•Supporting homework.

•Good communication between the school and home.

•Getting a good sleep on a school night!

How can parents help?

English SATs consist of:

•A reading test

•A grammar, punctuation and spelling test

•A writing test ( this is now teacher assessed and then moderated by the local Authority )

THE READING TEST – 50 MARKS 1 hour

Usually three different text types; however, this is changing this year.

1 mark to 3 marks for a question Biggest weighting – retrieval and inference

•There are 4 main types of questions on the reading paper:

•Literal – answer is there in the text

•Deductive – look for clues

•Inferential – read between the lines

•Authorial intent – e.g. why does an author use a particular word

As the afternoon light started to fade, the cow stopped eating grass, stood instead with its head over the gate

and gazed expectantly down the lane.

Sentence from: ‘A Day in the English

Countryside’

1. How light was it? (Literal)

2. What three things did the cow do? (Literal)

3. What time of day was it? (Deductive)

4. Where was the cow? (Deductive)

5. What do you think the cow was expecting? (Inferential)

6. What strategies does the writer use to give the reader so much information in a single sentence? (Authorial intent)

How can parents help with reading?

• Ensure your child reads every night!

• Encourage them to read fiction and non-fiction.

• Try to listen to your child read and ask them questions about the text.

• Help them with the different skills of reading especially ‘skim’ reading where they are looking for key words in the text.

• Speed reading

• Reading homework

Any questions

?

•Again, reading a variety of texts – the more children read, the more familiar they become with different text types

•Reading homework – text analysis

•Writing homework – is very rare - but getting your child to write as much as possible –even shopping lists help

•Spelling – spelling lists / rules every week –make sure your child knows the high frequency words

•Grammar and punctuation homework – work with your child on these

How can parents help with writing?

Any questions

?

SPaG – Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar test

GRAMMAR

National Curriculum KS2 expectations:

Pupils should know:

• What the term ‘word class’ means and the jobs of different word classes – nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, connectives, articles.

PUPILS NEED TO UNDERSTAND THE TERMS:

•QUESTION •STATEMENT•COMMAND

PUPILS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT CONJUNCTIONS

althoughhowever

becauseChoosing the correct one for the context of

the sentence

Pupils are expected to have a sound grasp of subject – verb agreement and tense agreement:

PUNCTUATION!!Pupils need to know how to use:

capital lettersfull stopsquestion and exclamation markscommas in listscommas to mark phrases or clausesinverted commasapostrophesbrackets, ellipses, colons

SPELLING TEST = 20 MARKS

SPaG TEST = 50 MARKS

In the sample test, the distribution of questions was as follows:

Grammar 29 marksVocabulary 9 marks Punctuation 12 marks

The Maths Tests

There are 3 papers for all pupils:• Mental Test - Out of 20• Test A (No calculators allowed) - Out of 40• Test B (No Calculators allowed) - Out of 40

Some pupils will sit the Level 6 tests:• Paper A (No calculator allowed) – Out of 25• Paper B ( Calculator allowed) – Out of 25

The Maths Mental Test

• Wednesday 14th May 2014• A warm-up to the written tests• Approx. 20 minutes• 20 questions/marked out of 20• Covers all the strands with an emphasis

on number

3

4

5

1 0

1 1

Key stage 2 mathem atics 2006 mental m athem atics test

First name Last name

SchoolTotalMarks

Time: 5 seconds

Practice question

Time: 15 seconds

Time: 10 seconds

8 30 p

14

17 0.7 0 .077 0 .707

0.77 7 .007

16

1 80

2 90 pp

6 308

7 150

9 15m m

12 ºC

13 cm 2

15 0.9

18 44

20 45girls

19 £1.95£

To help your child in the mental test:

• Times tables EVERY day• Number bonds up to 100 • Measure – how many g’s in a kg? • Double and half • Quick addition facts • Division facts • Names of shapes

Test A – No calculator allowed

• 45 minutes

• Tests pupils at Levels 3 to 5.

• Up to 25 questions and worth 40 marks.

• Covers all the strands in mathematics with number being more heavily weighted.

Test B – Calculator NOT allowed (this is a change from 2013)

• 45 minutes

• Tests pupils at Levels 3 to 5.

• Up to 25 questions and worth 40 marks.

• Covers all the strands in mathematics with Number being more heavily weighted.

General Hints for Success

• Underline key words

• Ask for questions to be read to you

• Annotate diagrams

• Show all the steps to multi-step problems

• Ensure digits are legible – digit formation

• Never overwrite a wrong answer

The Facts- what children need to know

• Number bonds• Tables facts• Division facts• Fraction, decimal and percentage

equivalents• Names and properties of shapes• Measures

How You Can Help at Home• Regular tables practice• Regular four rules calculation practice – caution please-

children learn a variety of methods at school – let them use which one they find easiest!

• Revision/Practice resources• CGP booklets• Websites• BBC Bitesize• Maths for Real• Ensure homework is handed in on time• Keep in touch via the planner• School calculation policy (website) • Encourage your child to ask for a question to be read to

them if they do not understand.

What do SATs questions look like and some helpful

strategies

•Some questions are worth one mark and therefore accuracy is important.

•Other questions are worth two marks and even if the answer is wrong, a mark may be given for correct working.

•Teachers may read questions in both written papers to pupils if asked.

•Support with homework – not just helping with the Maths but reading the question can really help.

•TIMES TABLES!!!

•Help your child to check their work through – this will help them to spot mistakes that can sometimes be easily fixed.

How can parents help with Maths?

Any questions

?

Special Arrangeme

nts

Any questions

?

What are we doing?

•Amazing teaching of course!

•Vibrant curriculum – cross-curricular teaching

•Setting for Maths and English

•Teaching assistant support

•Booster sessions

•Homework

•Test preparation

•Fun – hard work but no stress on the children!

Any questions

?

http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/maths/sats/index.html

http://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks2/


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