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5 Tips for Teaching Young Students Proper Grammar

Children can cope with learning grammar from the age of 5. Over the last 21 years, we have worked with schools to develop synthetic phonics programs and, latterly, grammar programs to cater for early years learning. We know that children at a young age display a good knowledge of how to use language: they already use perfect tenses such as “I have been playing”, they will use the continuous tense; “I was watching television”.

We shouldn’t view the teaching of grammar as difficult or something children will not be able to deal with but as something to get excited about. Grammar gives them a better understanding of what they are already using. Taking a child beyond their initial experience is all part of learning and hugely rewarding for child and for the teacher.

As the child constructs sentences with the tools they’re being given then a stability develops that doesn’t exist if the child is expected to just pick it up through reading in context.

 

  • Nouns
  • Verbs
  • Adjectives
  • Spelling
  • Punctuation
Taking children through common and proper nouns, then moving on to abstracts and collective means that children become coherent in their use of language and grammar, and often their speech improves and they become adept at using language in a full and flexible way. We teach an action for proper nouns – you put index and middle finger where forehead meets nose – and we teach a different action for common nouns – tapping the top of our heads. We then play a game calling out proper noun or common noun and getting the children to use the corresponding action. You can add in verbs, adjectives etc as they are learned. This is also a good way of visually seeing who in the class is with you and who isn’t.

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