How are the key stages grouped? How will my child be assessed in their key stage? Students are expected to reach certain levels at each key stage test. In the past, pupils were assigned national curriculum levels to show their academic progress, but levels were abolished in and replaced with a primary school grading system which can vary from school to school.
So, at the end of Key Stage 1 Year 2 , students are expected to be at level 2. At the end of Key Stage 2 Year 6 , students are expected to be at level 4.
Visit our super SATs area to find out more about the key stage tests, and to help your child practise for them. More like this. The primary school National Curriculum in England explained for parents. Primary-school grading system explained for parents.
How your child develops in the Early Years Foundation Stage. What your child learns in Key Stage 1 English. They also determine how children should be tested and what standards they should achieve. Key Stages 1 and 2 are taught in primary schools and Key Stages 3 and 4 in secondary schools. Despite its name, Key Stage 1 does not apply to the youngest school children.
Those 4 and 5-year-olds in the reception year are instead covered by the Early Years Foundation Stage. The National Curriculum sets out which subjects primary school children should be taught in KS1. Only state-funded local authority-maintained schools have to follow the National Curriculum.
Independent private , academy and free schools are all free to set their own, although in reality most do stick to the National Curriculum. Home schooled children are also exempt from the National Curriculum. Religious education is also a subject on the National Curriculum and all state-maintained schools have to teach it to KS1 pupils. Lessons should cover a range of religions, not just one. PSHE personal, social and health education is another optional subject.
It teaches children about staying safe, looking after themselves and living a healthy lifestyle. Citizenship is another optional subject at primary level. How well they do in these assessments is measured against the level expected by the Government. At the end of Year 1 pupils have their phonics skills checked. This involves reading 40 words to their teacher. Half the words are real and half are made up. The test allows teachers to see how well children can read and how they pronounce different combinations of letters.
Then they can retake the test at the end of Year 2. At the end of Year 2 when KS1 finishes all children are required to take national tests. Schools try to make these as comfortable as possible, like an ordinary class test, rather than an important exam. This is to avoid putting young children under any unnecessary stress. KS1 tests are graded in a different way than you might expect. A score of is the expected standard, so any score over means the child is doing better than required and less than means the child is below the level set.
Teachers will also assess pupils on science.
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