Get the best experience in our app
Enjoy offline reading, category favourites, and instant updates - right from your pocket.

Exclusive: DfE won’t rule out 2021 autumn phonics check

Department remains silent on phonics plans following cancellation of primary assessments in 2020-21 academic year
11th January 2021, 6:42pm

Share

Exclusive: DfE won’t rule out 2021 autumn phonics check

/magazine/archived/exclusive-dfe-wont-rule-out-2021-autumn-phonics-check
Coronavirus: Will There Be A Phonics Screening Check In The Autumn In Primary Schools This Year?

The government has declined to ruleout the possibility of holding another catch-up phonics check in the autumn termafter thesummer testwascancelled.

It was announced last week that all statutory primary assessments due to take place in the 2020-21 academic year, including the summer phonics check, would bescrappedfollowing widespread school closures.

But it is unclear whether someof the tests could be postponed untillater in the calendar year.

After the pandemic forced the cancellation of assessments last summer,schools weretold to hold a past version of the phonics check in theautumn term for incoming Year 2 childrenwho had missed the June test.In a normal year, pupilswould sit the check at the end of Year 1.


Last year:Pupils to catch up on phonics test ‘in autumn term’

Backlash:Outrage as teachers’ pleas to scrap phonics test ignored

Phonics: Most teachers oppose ‘pointless’ autumn phonics check


Now the Department for Education has refused to rule out this arrangement being repeated.

The department would only tell Testhat more details will be released in due course.

Coronavirus: Autumn phonics check ‘was a distraction’

The NEU teaching union said the government “should learn” from the experience of last year’s autumn check “before they impose another one on schools”.

Kevin Courtney, NEU joint general secretary, told Tes:“The 2021 check was a distraction for teachers, a source of stress for some children and a measure that did nothing to help schools re-engage their pupils with learning.

“Teachers want the DfE to pause for reflection and to consider what will really support schools in 2020-21, instead of reverting to a test-driven curriculum.”

The 2020 catch-up testproved extremely controversial with school staff. TheNAHT school leaders’ union called for the autumn check to be scrapped, arguing that the testcarried a “completely unnecessary bureaucratic burden” with “zero academic value”. But the DfEwould not budge on the plans.

And in November, research suggested that nearly three in four teachers were against the autumn catch-up check,with some voicingconcernsthatpreparingfor the test could be “delaying” pupils’learning.

More than two in fiveYear 2 teachers (43per cent) believed the autumn checkhadcaused pupils additional anxiety, while 82 per cent saidit hadadded to their own stress levels, according to a report from theUCL Institute of Education.

And 68 per cent of teachers saiddelivering thetesthad“reduced the time spent on other literacy activities”, with some suggesting there hadbeen a focus on fluent readers“relearning to segment words”.

You need a Tes subscription to read this article

Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content:

/per month for 12 months
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters

You need a subscription to read this article

Subscribe now to read this article and get other subscriber-only content, including:

/per month for 12 months
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
  • Unlimited access to all Tes magazine content
  • Exclusive subscriber-only stories
  • Award-winning email newsletters
Recent
Most read
Most shared