Holding everyday conversations
Students start the year using the new language for real exchanges. They ask and answer questions about daily life, share opinions, and keep a back-and-forth going without falling back on English for every word.
This is the year language study moves past memorized phrases and into real back-and-forth conversation. Students hold short talks about familiar topics, read simple articles and stories, and write paragraphs to share opinions and explain ideas. They also start comparing how the new language and culture work next to their own, noticing why people say and do things differently. By spring, they can introduce themselves, ask and answer questions, and write a short paragraph about everyday life.
Students start the year using the new language for real exchanges. They ask and answer questions about daily life, share opinions, and keep a back-and-forth going without falling back on English for every word.
Students work with articles, videos, and audio made for native speakers. They pull out the main idea, catch important details, and explain what a piece is really saying instead of just translating word by word.
Students look at how people in other countries live, eat, celebrate, and create. They connect everyday practices and objects to the reasons behind them, and compare those choices to their own.
Students give short talks and write pieces that inform, persuade, or tell a story. They pick words and examples that fit the audience, whether it is a classmate, a younger student, or a wider online viewer.
Students use the language outside the classroom through projects, online exchanges, or community events. They set goals for their own learning and notice how the language opens up new books, shows, music, and people.
Students listen to, read, or watch material on different topics in the target language and show they understand what it means, not just word for word but what the message is really saying.
Students hold back-and-forth conversations in another language, asking questions, sharing opinions, and adjusting what they say based on how the other person responds.
Students prepare and deliver presentations on a range of topics, choosing the right format and language for the audience, whether speaking, writing, or creating something visual.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Learners understand, interpret Checkpoint B | Students listen to, read, or watch material on different topics in the target language and show they understand what it means, not just word for word but what the message is really saying. | RI-WL.1.1.wl-checkpoint-b |
| Learners interact and negotiate meaning in spoken, signed Checkpoint B | Students hold back-and-forth conversations in another language, asking questions, sharing opinions, and adjusting what they say based on how the other person responds. | RI-WL.1.2.wl-checkpoint-b |
| Learners present information, concepts Checkpoint B | Students prepare and deliver presentations on a range of topics, choosing the right format and language for the audience, whether speaking, writing, or creating something visual. | RI-WL.1.3.wl-checkpoint-b |
Students explain why people in another culture do things the way they do, connecting everyday habits and traditions to the values or beliefs behind them.
Students look at everyday objects, traditions, or art from another culture and explain what those things reveal about how people in that culture see the world.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Learners use the language to investigate, explain Checkpoint B | Students explain why people in another culture do things the way they do, connecting everyday habits and traditions to the values or beliefs behind them. | RI-WL.2.1.wl-checkpoint-b |
| Learners use the language to investigate, explain Checkpoint B | Students look at everyday objects, traditions, or art from another culture and explain what those things reveal about how people in that culture see the world. | RI-WL.2.2.wl-checkpoint-b |
Learning a new language becomes a tool for thinking across subjects. Students use the language they're studying to dig into ideas from science, history, math, or the arts and work through real problems in a new way.
Students read, watch, or listen to real content in another language to find information and understand how people from that culture see the world.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Learners build, reinforce Checkpoint B | Learning a new language becomes a tool for thinking across subjects. Students use the language they're studying to dig into ideas from science, history, math, or the arts and work through real problems in a new way. | RI-WL.3.1.wl-checkpoint-b |
| 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 and understand how people from that culture see the world. | RI-WL.3.2.wl-checkpoint-b |
Students notice how the language they are learning works differently from their own. They compare things like word order, verb forms, or sentence patterns to understand both languages better.
Students look at how daily life, customs, or traditions differ between another culture and their own, then explain what those differences reveal about both ways of living.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Learners use the language to investigate, explain Checkpoint B | Students notice how the language they are learning works differently from their own. They compare things like word order, verb forms, or sentence patterns to understand both languages better. | RI-WL.4.1.wl-checkpoint-b |
| Learners use the language to investigate, explain Checkpoint B | Students look at how daily life, customs, or traditions differ between another culture and their own, then explain what those differences reveal about both ways of living. | RI-WL.4.2.wl-checkpoint-b |
Students use the language they're learning to talk and work with others, both inside school and in real situations outside it, like conversations with community members or people from other countries.
Students set a personal goal for using a new language outside class, then look back at how they did. They might track progress in reading, watching, or listening to something they chose for fun or for work.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Learners use the language both within and beyond the classroom to interact and… Checkpoint B | Students use the language they're learning to talk and work with others, both inside school and in real situations outside it, like conversations with community members or people from other countries. | RI-WL.5.1.wl-checkpoint-b |
| Learners set goals and reflect on their progress in using languages for… Checkpoint B | Students set a personal goal for using a new language outside class, then look back at how they did. They might track progress in reading, watching, or listening to something they chose for fun or for work. | RI-WL.5.2.wl-checkpoint-b |
Students should hold a real conversation on familiar topics, read a short article or story and pull out the main ideas, and write or speak for a few minutes about something they care about. They are moving from memorized phrases to putting their own sentences together.
Short and daily beats long and once a week. Try ten minutes of a podcast, song, or short video in the language, then ask students to say two or three sentences about what they heard. Cooking a recipe, labeling things around the house, or texting a friend in the language all count.
Yes. Listening and reading almost always run ahead of speaking and writing at this stage. The fix is low-pressure talking time, such as describing photos on a phone, narrating a chore, or chatting with a tutor or language partner for ten minutes a week.
Anchor each unit in a real-world theme, such as food, school life, or travel, and pull communication, culture, and comparison work into that theme. Spiral the grammar across themes rather than teaching it in isolation. Save the bigger research and presentation tasks for later in the year once students have more language to work with.
At mastery, a student can sustain a simple conversation, understand the main idea of an authentic text or video on a familiar topic, and present on something they prepared using connected sentences. Errors are still common, but the message gets across.
Plan on about fifteen to twenty minutes most nights, plus a little listening or reading on weekends. Vocabulary review, a short reading, and one speaking or writing task per week is a healthy mix. Cramming the night before a quiz does not build the language.
Verb tenses beyond the present, question formation, and the difference between formal and informal address tend to slip the most. Build short warm-ups that recycle these across the year rather than reteaching them as full units.
Tie each theme to a real product or practice from the cultures studied, then ask students to compare it to their own experience in the language. A unit on food can include a menu from a real restaurant, a short interview clip, and a written reflection on what students notice.
Ask them to describe their day, tell a short story about last weekend, and read a short article aloud and summarize it. If they can do all three without switching back to English for whole sentences, they are in good shape for the next course.