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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year the new language stops being a list of vocabulary words and starts becoming a tool students actually use. Students hold short conversations about familiar topics, read simple stories and messages, and write or speak in connected sentences instead of single phrases. They also compare how the language and its cultures work next to their own. By spring, students can introduce themselves, ask and answer everyday questions, and share a short opinion or story without freezing up.

  • Everyday conversation
  • Reading short texts
  • Writing in sentences
  • Culture comparisons
  • Listening comprehension
  • Using the language outside class
Source: Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Core Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Building everyday conversations

    Students start the year using the new language for real exchanges. They ask and answer questions about family, school, food, and free time, and learn to keep a short conversation going when they don't know every word.

  2. 2

    Reading and listening for meaning

    Students work with short articles, videos, songs, and stories in the language. They pick out the main idea, find specific details, and figure out new words from context instead of looking up every one.

  3. 3

    Culture and daily life

    Students look at how people actually live in places where the language is spoken, from school routines to holidays to food. They compare those habits to their own and talk about what surprises them and why.

  4. 4

    Writing and presenting ideas

    Students write short pieces and give short talks in the language. They describe people and places, tell a story, share an opinion, and start to adjust their tone for a friend, a teacher, or a wider audience.

  5. 5

    Using the language beyond class

    Students use the language outside the classroom through pen pals, online content, community events, or research projects in other subjects. They set personal goals and notice how much more they can do than at the start of the year.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 9.
Communication
  • Learners understand, interpret

    Checkpoint B

    Students listen to, read, or watch material on different topics in the language they're learning and show they understand what it means, not just what the words say.

  • Learners interact and negotiate meaning in spoken, signed

    Checkpoint B

    Students hold back-and-forth conversations in another language, sharing opinions, reactions, and information. They adjust what they say based on what the other person says, not just recite memorized phrases.

  • Learners present information, concepts

    Checkpoint B

    Students give short speeches, write paragraphs, or make simple presentations on familiar topics, adjusting their language and details to fit who is listening or reading.

Cultures
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint B

    Students look at how people in the culture actually live, from daily routines to celebrations, and explain what those habits reveal about what that culture values. They use the target language to do it.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint B

    Students look into objects, art, food, or traditions from a culture and explain what those things reveal about how people in that culture think and what they value.

Connections
  • Learners build, reinforce

    Checkpoint B

    Students use the language they're learning to explore topics from other subjects, like science or history. Working in a new language pushes them to think through problems in a different way.

  • Learners access and evaluate information and diverse perspectives that are…

    Checkpoint B

    Students read, watch, or listen to real content in another language to find information they could not easily get in English. They compare what they learn to their own experiences and consider different points of view.

Comparisons
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint B

    Students look at how the language they are learning works differently from English, noticing patterns in grammar, word order, or vocabulary that help them understand both languages better.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint B

    Students compare everyday life in another culture to their own, using the language they are learning to explain what they notice and reflect on the differences.

Communities
  • Learners use the language both within and beyond the classroom to interact and…

    Checkpoint B

    Students use the language they are learning to talk and work with people outside class, not just during lessons. That might mean a school event, a community conversation, or connecting with someone from another country.

  • Learners set goals and reflect on their progress in using languages for…

    Checkpoint B

    Students choose a goal for using their new language outside class, then look back at what they've done and decide what to work on next.

Common Questions
  • What should students be able to do in the language by this point?

    Students can hold a short conversation on familiar topics like school, family, food, and weekend plans. They can read a simple article or menu and get the main idea, and write a paragraph about themselves or someone they know. Speech still has pauses and mistakes, and that is fine.

  • How can families help at home without speaking the language?

    Ask students to teach a few words at dinner, or to label things around the kitchen with sticky notes. Watching a short show with subtitles in the language for ten minutes a few nights a week also helps. The goal is regular small contact, not long study sessions.

  • How should the year be sequenced?

    Start with familiar personal topics like school, family, and daily routines, then move to community topics like food, travel, and celebrations. Save more opinion-based talk and short presentations for the second half, once students have the words and patterns to back up what they want to say.

  • Is it a problem if a student still makes a lot of grammar mistakes?

    No. At this stage, getting the message across matters more than perfect grammar. Students should be understood by a patient listener, even if endings, tenses, and word order are still rough. Accuracy keeps building over the next few years.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Verb endings, past tense forms, and gender or agreement rules tend to slip the most. Listening to longer stretches of speech is also harder than it looks, so short, repeated listening tasks pay off more than one long one.

  • How much culture should be part of the class, not just vocabulary?

    Culture should show up in most lessons, not as a separate unit. When students learn food words, look at real menus and meal times in those countries. When they learn about school, compare a real school schedule. Practices and products tie directly to language use.

  • What can a student do at home to practice speaking?

    Have students narrate what they are doing for a few minutes in the language, even in simple phrases, while cooking or walking the dog. Voice memos to themselves work well too. Speaking out loud, even alone, builds more fluency than silent review.

  • How do teachers know students are ready for the next level?

    Students should be able to keep a conversation going on a familiar topic with some follow-up questions, read a short text and summarize it, and write a connected paragraph without copying. They should also notice patterns between the new language and English on their own.

  • Does memorizing vocabulary lists still matter?

    Word lists help in small doses, but using words in real sentences and conversations sticks better. A student who can use twenty words in five different ways is further along than one who can translate a hundred words in isolation.