Primary school literacy skills on the rise
Year 1 students in South Australia’s public schools are continuing to show improvements in literacy – with results from the 2023 phonics screening check climbing for the fifth consecutive year.
The assessment has helped educators bring about a cumulative improvement of 28 percentage points since the first check began in 2017.
This year, 71 per cent of Year 1 students met or exceeded expectations, which requires them to correctly decode 28 or more words out of 40. This is an increase of three percentage points compared to last year.
Improvements were seen across several student groups, including Aboriginal students, students who speak English as an additional language or dialect, and students in country schools.
The check shows teachers how their students are progressing in phonics, which is the relationship between letters and sounds and is critical for learning to read.
The phonics screening check is completed state-wide in Term 3 each year. This allows Year 1 students enough time to develop phonics skills, while still being early enough to implement effective support for students who need it.
The check takes place in a quiet room between each student and their classroom teacher and takes about five minutes. The teacher asks the student to read 40 words aloud from a list that consists of a combination of real and pseudo-words that steadily become more challenging. The pseudo-words show the student can use their phonics skills to decode and blend letters into sounds, rather than relying on memory or guessing familiar words.
Although reception teachers do not implement the Phonics Screening Check, they lay the foundation reading skills that set children up for success in reading.
Over 1300 public school teachers and leaders attended professional learning in 2023 and from next year the Education department will expand early reading support to include learning for Year 2 teachers with a focus on Oral Reading Fluency.
Following the phonics check success here in South Australia, New South Wales completed a trial of phonics screening in 2020 and mandated it for all public schools in 2021, with Victoria and Tasmania introducing the check for all Year 1 students in public schools this year.