Where English sits in the National Curriculum (and the traps)
Monday of Week 5, Autumn 2, my Year 6 booster group stalled on a 3-mark inference because the question stem didn’t match the KS2 reading content domains. They’d practised inference, but the prompt wasn’t really a 2d task. That’s the trap: resources can be on-topic yet miss the National Curriculum fit.
Inside the National Curriculum for England, English breaks into reading (word reading + comprehension), writing (transcription + composition), vocabulary/grammar/punctuation, and spoken language. Fit problems I see: US-centric grammar (teaching “articles” but not the broader determiner set), reading questions without domain cues (no 2b retrieval, 2d inference, 2g language), and writing checklists that skip statutory Y3–6 vocabulary and punctuation expectations.
When I need a starting pile to prune, I browse the community Language Arts area, then cut anything that won’t stand up to our content domains and TAF language—you can start that sift in the community library. I keep the survivors filed in ClassPods so I can tweak them mid-unit without hunting folders.