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SATS Information Evening: Thursday 7 th March 2019. To answer any questions you may have about the SATs. General Information – when, where and what? What are the reading tests like? What is the spelling, punctuation and grammar test like? How will writing be assessed?
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To answer any questions you may have about the SATs. • General Information – when, where and what? • What are the reading tests like? • What is the spelling, punctuation and grammar test like? • How will writing be assessed? • What are the maths tests like? • Any questions?
SATs Timetable – May 13th 2019 • Monday, May 13th 2019: SPaG Test- Grammar/Punctuation- 45 minutes • Monday, May 13th 2019: SPaG Test- Spelling- 20 minutes • Tuesday, May 14th 2019: Reading Test- 60 minutes • Wednesday, May 15th 2019: Maths Paper 1 (Arithmetic)- 30 minutes • Wednesday, May 15th 2019: Maths Paper 2 (Reasoning)- 40 minutes • Thursday, May 16th 2019: Maths Paper 3 (Reasoning)- 40 minutes
Common questions • Where will the children sit the test? • What help will my child receive during the test? • What equipment will my child need? • What happens if my child is absent on the day? • When will my child know how well they have done?
What do the children get out of the revision? • The obvious – the children revisit the topics and skills they need in order to complete the questions and tasks to the best of their ability • Children have the opportunity to steer their own learning needs; asking for clarification and support where needed • They learn valuable study skills, which they can take with them to secondary school • The children enjoy the quizzes, games etc. in the lessons • Familiarity with the process, timing within each test and requirements – builds tenacity
How have we revised? • Practising NEW SATS papers • Continuous Assessment • Booster Classes – after school tuition (Easter revision) • Focused Maths Lessons • Focused Spelling (RWI spelling scheme) • Focused SPaG Lessons & short tests • Guided and Independent Reading • Home Learning (SPaG.com & Mathletics) • Target Setting and Peer Mentoring
Reading • Accuracy (decoding familiar and unfamiliar words correctly) • Fluency (speed and confidence) • Comprehension (drawing meaning from text) • Inference & Deduction (reading between the lines) • It’s not a memory test • 3 Separate texts – unlinked • 1 hour for the test
Tested Questions Reading • 2a give / explain the meaning of words in context • 2b retrieve and record information / identify key details from fiction and non-fiction • 2c summarise main ideas from more than one paragraph • 2d make inferences from the text / explain and justify inferences with evidence from the text • 2e predict what might happen from details stated and implied • 2f identify / explain how information / narrative content is related and contributes to meaning as a whole • 2g identify / explain how meaning is enhanced through choice of words and phrases • 2h make comparisons within the text
The Reading Test… (1 mark) In which year did the first international games for disabled athletes take place? (up to 2 marks) ….pain flared in her knees. Why is this an effective way of describing how Fiona felt after she fell down the stairs?
Reading continued… (up to 3 marks) How does Fiona’s accident change how she feels about Grandpa? Explain your answer fully, using the text to support your answer. 1 Hour
Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar (SPaG) EPG Test format Punctuation, sentence-grammar and vocabulary will all be assessed by a series of short-answer questions in a variety of formats. Some question formats will be familiar to children from the English reading tests and there are some SPaG specific ones too.
Spelling The spelling test will assess 20 words and will contribute towards the whole-test score There are lists of past spelling words available although there is no guarantee these words will be tested this year. The test follows spelling rules.
Format of the SPaG Test 1.Circle all the adverbs in the sentence below. Open the drawers carefully and quietly when using the filing cabinet. 1 mark
How do we assess writing? • Continuous, through all subjects • Moderated as a school • Confirm moderation with local cluster schools • Confirm moderation with Warwickshire schools • LA external assessment (Pending)
What are the Maths tests like? 3 Key areas Fluency - calculations Reasoning – deepen understanding and explain Problem Solving – applying these skills
Mental Arithmetic Paper 1 • No-calculator paper. • 30 minutes.
Reasoning Papers 2 & 3 • No calculator paper. • 40 minutes.
What is the Mental Maths paper like? GONE • Worth 20 marks • Approx 15 mins • Answer sheet with key details to assist • Played on CD • 5, 10 & 15 second questions
Reporting Results These will come out in July and will be shared with you once we have checked them. Conversion tables for RAW scores released Tuesday 9th July A score of 100 will mean your child will be working at the national average or ARE (age related expectations) A score of 110 will mean your child will be working at greater depth – significantly higher than national average or GDS (greater depth standard) You will receive • A SPaG score • A maths score • A reading score • Writing teacher assessment level (Age Expected) with reports
Misc Breakfast in the morning @ school from 8:20am during SATs week Monday - Thursday • Early nights and lots of sleep • Take it as a challenge • A good breakfast • LOTS OF PRAISE AND ENCOURAGEMENT!
Useful Resources Websites • www.emaths.co.uk • www.sat-papers.co.uk • www.satstestsonline.co.uk • www.satspapers.org.uk • www.spag.com • www.mathletics.co.uk