Y1 Students

Year 1

Reading at home

Make reading fun

Reading at home should be fun and easy. It should be something you both look forward to and a time for laughter and talk.

Here's a tip: talk a lot to your child while you are doing things together. Use the language that works best for you and your child.

Talk about reading

Make it a special time together

Reading is a great chance for you and your child to spend special time together. Make reading:

Here are some tips: if your child is stuck on a word wait a few seconds, give them a chance to think. If they are still stuck, help them to try to work the word out by saying, "read the sentence again and think what would make sense". Ask "could it be …?" (and give a word that might fit). The pictures also help them check they have got the right word. If they still can’t work out the word, tell them and praise their efforts. Remember, reading should be fun.

Help your child to link stories to their own life. Remind them about what they have done when a similar thing happens in the story.

Writing at home

Make writing fun

Here's a tip: don’t worry if your child’s letters or words are sometimes backwards or misspelt at this age. The important thing is that they have fun writing at home and are making an effort.

Give them reasons to write

Here's a tip: display their work. Put it on the fridge. Be proud of it. Share it with others.

Talk about their writing

Here's a tip: talk about what your child writes. Be interested. If you don’t understand what your child’s picture or story is about, ask them to tell you about it.

Encourage writing

Mathematics at home

Talk together and have fun with numbers and patterns

Help your child to:

Here's a tip: maths is an important part of everyday life and there are lots of ways you can make it fun for your child.

Use easy, everyday activities

Involve your child in:

Here's a tip: use lots of mathematics words as your child is playing to develop their understanding of early mathematics (for example, "over", "under", "first, second, third", "round", "through", "before", "after"). Use the language that works best for you and your child.

For wet afternoons/school holidays/weekends

Get together with your child and:

Here's a tip: being positive about mathematics is really important for your child’s learning even if you didn’t enjoy it or do well at it yourself at school.