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Primary school teachers develop schemes of work and lesson plans in line with curriculum objectives. They facilitate learning by establishing a relationship with pupils and by their organisation of learning resources and the classroom learning environment.
Primary school teachers develop and foster the appropriate skills and social abilities to enable the optimum development of children, according to age, ability and aptitude. They assess and record progress and prepare pupils for the Standard Assessment Tasks (SATs). They link pupils' knowledge to earlier learning and develop ways to encourage it further, and challenge and inspire pupils to help them deepen their knowledge and understanding.
Primary schools in England and Wales are usually divided into two stages, known as lower primary or infants (Key Stage 1: ages five to seven) and upper primary or juniors (Key Stage 2: seven to 11). In England there is sometimes a middle tier, so that children go to a primary school from the age of five to eight or nine, transfer to a middle school from the age of eight or nine to 12, and then move to a secondary school. In Scotland, primary school classes are organised by age from Primary 1 (age 5) to Primary 7 (age 12).
Typical activities are broadly the same for all primary school teachers and include:
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