EYFS
Intent
The First Steps pathway curriculum is developed to build upon prior learning by working in partnership with parents, carers, previous settings and a wide range of professionals. We work to help each child to establish solid foundations for future learning and development, particularly with regards to functional communication, independence and self-care. We provide each child with a wide range of new and exciting experiences, and give them opportunities to consolidate existing skills and to learn new ones. Expertly trained staff support each child to develop socially, physically, intellectually and emotionally through high expectations, praise and positivity. Our aim is to give each child a happy, positive and enjoyable start to school life.
Pupils will develop an awareness of others by being part of a group.
Pupils will be actively engaged and adapt to a range of situations.
Pupils will develop consistent responses in order to communicate wants, needs and preferences.
Pupils will develop their skills of mutual and joint emotional regulation.
Pupils will develop their skills of joint and independent attention.
Pupils will learn through play and a specially adapted, meaningful topic-based curriculum.
Implementation
Learning through the Early Years Framework: Staff working in our Early Years classes support learning in the seven areas of Communication and Language, Physical Development, Personal, Social and Emotional Development, Literacy, Mathematics, Understanding the World, Expressive Arts and Design. We consider each child’s unique needs, interests and stage of development when planning activities. Teaching and learning is delivered in a cross curricular way and planned activities often cover more than one area of learning.
Learning through play: Child-initiated play has an important role in children's learning and development, because children explore and learn from their own thoughts and ideas through the freedom and creativity that child-initiated play enables. First-hand experiences allow children to develop an understanding of themselves and the world in which they live.
Child-initiated activities are then picked up on and supported by an adult – these are opportunities for ‘sustained shared thinking’ to take place.
Adult-led play activities are based on our own professional understanding of what we should teach our children and what experiences they should have. Through adult-led activities, we introduce children to new ideas, provide opportunities for them to develop their skills and ensure that they experience all areas of learning
Learning through continuous provision. The environment is arranged to enable learning through continuous provision. We recognise continuous provision as the resources we offer children as part of an enabling environment and the resources that are safe for children to explore independently. It is important to remember that continuous provision is not just provision that is continually accessible; it is also a selection of resources that continue children’s learning with or without adult.
support. We enhance the provision, adding additional resources according to children’s interests or to support a theme or topic. We ensure the provision is evolving, stimulating, creative and engaging
Learning through multi-sensory approaches using teaching methods that involve engaging more than one sense at a time. Involving the use of visual, auditory and kinaesthetic-tactile pathways, a multisensory approach can enhance memory and ability to learn.
Learning through planned activities which draw upon the following interventions, methodologies and practices:
- Attention Autism to develop natural and spontaneous communication through the use of visually based and highly motivating activities.
- Visual Supports- Presenting information in a way that is meaningful to a learner to increase expressive and receptive language and increase independence. These include
- whole class visual timetable
- individual pupil timetables/schedules where appropriate
- use of objects/photographs/pictures/symbols of reference to support transitions
- Now and then boards
- Colourful Semantics communication boards: a method of teaching children how to understand and build sentences
- Pairing and Intensive Interaction: the process of building rapport and solid relationships through shared positive relationships
- Task Analysis- Breaking down complex skills or behaviours in to smaller steps.
- TEACCH- To support pupils with ASC, the use of structured teaching across the areas of physical structure, visual schedules, work systems and task organisation.
- PLAY Autism Intervention Project: an intervention to engage the child in a playful way that promotes his or her development.
- Sensory motor strategies and resources is any equipment or technique that increases or decreases sensory input to help a pupil to focus and learn
- The Zones of Regulation-a curriculum geared towards helping pupils gain skills in consciously regulating their actions by increasing control and problem-solving abilities.
- Transactional supports: desirable hands on activities, use of visuals, concrete and pictorial, responsive adults who notice subtle signals of energy/emotional state
- Elklan Approach: To supports pupil’s language and communication development in a structured manner
- Wellbeing profiles: identifies key supports for each child to promote and maintain positive wellbeing in the areas of Social and emotional, physical and sensory, environmental, educational and communication.
Impact
The impact of the curriculum, interventions and strategies are measured through ongoing assessment and target setting.
- Personalised Learning Plans: Are produced termly and map out children’s targets in line with their EHCP outcomes and how the development of these skills will be facilitated by carefully matched provision.
- Early Years Foundation stage: Reception children are baselined and tracked throughout the year and termly to assess them alongside the Early Years Foundation Stage month bands. At the end of the EYFS, staff complete the EYFS profile for each child.
- Evidence for Learning: An assessment system to evidence, assess, review and plan for meeting the unique needs of our SEND learners linked to pupil’s PLP’s and our key skills.