Thank you for the replies everyone. It is interesting to see the range of opinion.
I viewed preparing my Dd for school as one of my jobs as a parent. There are so many threads on here about school readiness. My Dd can dress herself, pick out her own coat, take herself to the loo, change for swimming and feed herself with a knife and fork. I would be embarrassed if I left those things for my Dd's teacher to teach her at five years old. DD loves school, which is my main priority. She has been in the school setting for over a year, has lots of friends, settled into the routine quickly, lines up when the bell goes, listens well, shares, and has a good attention span. I am delighted with all those things, but that is not where it ends.
Overnight, I have looked over the seven areas of the EYFS and while I am satisfied with what Dd is doing in the other five areas, I feel that in 'literacy' and 'mathematics' there is a lot of re-doing what she has already learnt in the school nursery. Obviously there will be learning that I cannot see. I can only base my perception, on what Dd tells me, the books she brings home, the newsletters that outline the termly plan for Dd's class, and looking through Dd's work at parents evening. Dd loves drawing and often draws very detailed pictures (e.g. houses have roof tiles, letterboxes, door numbers, curtains etc). All of the work that I have seen is done very neatly. I am not concerned with Dd being top of the class. I am concerned that as she is 'in the class' she too, should be learning 'new' things in all areas of the EYFS framework, each term.
Surely progress for each child is relative to their individual starting point. Based on some of the replies here, there are various things in literacy and mathematics that Dd could have feasibly learnt at school, by this stage - e.g. how to write simple words (other than her own name), simple addition, perhaps some new GPCs etc.
I do encourage learning at home in an informal way. We read lots of stories and play games like I spy, pairs, shut the box, snakes & ladders, frustration, bingo (numbers up to 89) & bananagrams etc. I have also taught Dd some GPCs myself, in order to give meaning to some of the random words in the endless, old fashioned, pink or red level 1+ ORT books that Dd has been bringing home since Easter last year. I just think I am worried about what the future holds, if the whole class are expected to learn at the same rate, and do exactly the same work. It wasn't like this last year.
Oh, and Dd is in a class of 19 with a full time TA.