With maths, a child with flair can be introduced to a concept/technique, and they can explore and extend it a great deal themselves.
How does a child develop exceptional literacy skills in KS1? I think writing a good book is setting the bar a bit high, but perhaps it’s a combination of speech, vocab, reading, spelling, grammar, interpretation, writing?
Wide vocab starts with speech I guess, so there is a significant advantage for a child who grows up with people who use a wide vocabulary. I am often surprised that so many Y1-Y2 children still apply ‘rules’ to common irregular verbs (eg flied instead of flew). DD just ‘got it’ with language. Is this an early indicator of ability?
Being read to, and then reading, expands vocabulary, though you need to discover what the new words mean. A child with good comprehension and inference skills can make sensible assumptions about the meaning of a word from the story, but will benefit enormously from having the precise meaning explained to them, or checking in a dictionary. This requires invested parents and a child who is really interested in what words really mean, and this process can disrupt the flow of the story.
Some children are naturally good at spelling and grammar. My DD just seems to remember/understand how words are spelled and how sentences should be constructed. For example, she didn’t have to be taught which of their, there, they’re, or to, too, two to use. She’s a keen reader, obviously. I’m not sure whether this is a ‘gift’ as such: I’m sure there are plenty of advanced readers with good comprehension and inference skills who are weak spellers/grammarians.
There must be a ‘world awareness’ element. Some children seem to have a greater ability to absorb, interpret and compare information and pick up nuance, whether from speech, writing or environment. Brilliotic and one or two others have touched on this. If a child has this type of ability I think it stands out clearly at school unless a child is very shy. My DD’s ‘show and tell’ sessions have impressed, for example.
Writing really divides the crowd at such a young age because so many aren’t physically ready to write at any length, so should it essentially be ignored until they’re a bit older than Y2? DD happens to love writing, and because she has the whole ‘package’ of attributes mentioned above, her writing stands out at this stage. I’m very interested to know whether this advantage will stay with her, or whether others will catch up as they are taught the techniques she has developed for herself.