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East Sheen Primary

Upper Richmond Rd West, London, SW14 8ED

Pupil Zone

At our school we value the importance of supporting children’s learning both in school and at home. The websites below provide high-quality activities that can be used to reinforce key skills.

Some resources are free, while others may require a school login.

Early Reading and Phonics (Reception and Key Stage 1)
 

At school we teach early reading using the Read Write Inc. programme.

You may find the following websites helpful to support phonics and reading at home:

Oxford Owl — Free eBooks and phonics support

PhonicsPlay — Interactive phonics games

Teach Your Monster to Read — Fun phonics learning game

English (Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 2) 

BBC Bitesize Key Stage 1 — Reading, writing and grammar support

BBC Bitesize Key Stage 2 — Reading, writing and grammar support

Literacy Shed — Writing inspiration and comprehension

Ed Shed — game-based for literacy and numeracy

Mathematics
 

Topmarks EYFS— Maths games 

Topmarks Key Stage 1— Maths games 

Topmarks Key Stage 2— Maths games 

NumBots — Early number fluency

Times Tables Rock Stars — Multiplication and division recall

Science and Foundation Subjects
 

BBC Bitesize EYFS — Curriculum-linked learning

BBC Bitesize Key Stage 1 — Curriculum-linked learning

BBC Bitesize Key Stage 2 — Curriculum-linked learning

National Geographic Kids — Science and geography learning

Nemo Science Museum — Science at home, do your own tests and experiments

NASA Kids – Find Your Place In Space

 

Creative Arts & Active Learning 

Tate Kids — Online art resources, games, and quizzes 

Cosmic Kids Yoga — Yoga and mindfulness videos

GoNoodle — Movement and dance videos

Danny Go! — Movement and dance videos

How Parents Can Help At Home
 

Supporting your child at home does not need to be time-consuming. Small, regular activities make a big difference.

You can help by:

  • Reading with your child every day (10–15 minutes)
  • Practising phonics sounds and tricky words (Reception and KS1)
  • Encouraging children to talk about what they are learning
  • Practising number facts and times tables regularly
  • Providing opportunities for writing (shopping lists, letters, diaries)
  • Playing board games that involve counting or problem solving
  • Visiting the library and encouraging a love of reading
  • Talking about real-life maths (money, time, cooking, measuring)
  • Consistency is more important than duration, little and often works best.

Online Safety

We recommend that children are supervised when using the internet and that families discuss online safety regularly.

Further guidance can be found through our Safeguarding link below. 

Online Safety