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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year a new language stops feeling like vocabulary lists and starts feeling like real conversation. Students hold back-and-forth talks about familiar topics, share opinions, and read or listen to short pieces well enough to explain what they mean. They also compare how people live in places where the language is spoken with their own daily life. By spring, students can introduce themselves, ask and answer questions, and write a short paragraph in the language.

Illustration of what students learn in Checkpoint B World Languages
  • Everyday conversation
  • Reading and listening
  • Writing paragraphs
  • Sharing opinions
  • Cultural comparisons
Source: New York P-12 Learning 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

    Getting back into the language

    Students warm up by listening, reading, and talking about familiar topics like school, family, and weekend plans. Parents may hear short conversations at home and notice students reading simple stories or articles in the language.

  2. 2

    Holding real conversations

    Students move past memorized phrases and start trading opinions, reactions, and questions in the language. Expect students to ask follow-up questions and explain what they think, not just what they know.

  3. 3

    Looking at daily life and culture

    Students dig into how people in the cultures they study eat, celebrate, work, and spend free time. They compare those habits to their own and explain why people might do things differently.

  4. 4

    Writing and presenting longer pieces

    Students write paragraphs, give short talks, and put together posters or slides to tell a story, explain an idea, or convince a listener. Work gets longer and more organized than in earlier grades.

  5. 5

    Pulling it together

    Students take on bigger topics like school life, the environment, or current events, using the language to read articles, discuss ideas, and share their own point of view with different audiences.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 9.
Classical Languages - Communication
Standard Definition Code

Read and interpret texts on varied topics

Checkpoint B

Students read or listen to passages in a classical language and pull out the main ideas, details, and meaning. At this checkpoint, topics go beyond the basics and require closer reading to understand what the text is really saying.

NY-WL.CL.B.1

Conversations in a classical language

Checkpoint B

Students hold a back-and-forth conversation in a classical language, speaking or writing to share ideas, react to what the other person said, and express a real opinion.

NY-WL.CL.B.2

Presenting ideas in a classical language

Checkpoint B

Students write or speak in a classical language (like Latin or Ancient Greek) to share facts, make an argument, or tell a story, adjusting their words to fit the audience and purpose.

NY-WL.CL.B.3
Classical Languages - Cultures
Standard Definition Code

Why ancient cultures did what they did

Checkpoint B

Students read, discuss, and write in the classical language to explain why a culture did things the way it did, connecting its customs and artifacts to the beliefs and values behind them.

NY-WL.CL.B.4

Comparing ancient cultures to your own

Checkpoint B

Students compare ancient Roman or Greek culture to their own, using the language they are studying to explain what is similar, what is different, and what those differences reveal.

NY-WL.CL.B.5
Modern Languages - Communication
Standard Definition Code

Reading and listening in a new language

Checkpoint B

Students listen to, read, or watch material in the target language on different topics and pull out the main ideas and details. This goes beyond basic comprehension: students explain what a message means and why it matters.

NY-WL.ML.B.1

Conversations in a new language

Checkpoint B

Students hold back-and-forth conversations in the language they are learning, asking questions, responding, and adjusting what they say so both sides understand each other.

NY-WL.ML.B.2

Presenting ideas in a new language

Checkpoint B

Students prepare and deliver presentations in a second language, choosing the right words and format for the audience, whether that means a short speech, a written piece, or a visual.

NY-WL.ML.B.3
Modern Languages - Cultures
Standard Definition Code

How cultures shape daily life and products

Checkpoint B

Students explain, in the language they are learning, why a cultural tradition, object, or custom exists and what it reveals about how that culture sees the world.

NY-WL.ML.B.4

Comparing your culture to others in [target language]

Checkpoint B

Students compare their own cultural traditions and daily life with those of a country where the target language is spoken. They use the language itself to notice differences and explain what they find.

NY-WL.ML.B.5
Assessments
The state tests students at this grade and subject take.
World language

Checkpoint B World Language Assessment

A locally developed end-of-course assessment that measures speaking, listening, reading, and writing in a language other than English at the Novice-High to Intermediate-Low level. Schools use it to award the high school world language credits Advanced Designation diplomas require.

When given:
End of Checkpoint B (typically grade 10)
Frequency:
Course-end
Official source
Common Questions
  • What does this stage of language learning actually look like?

    Students move past memorized phrases and start holding real conversations on familiar topics like school, family, food, travel, and current events. They read short articles or stories, write paragraphs, and give short talks. They are not fluent, but they can get through a real exchange without falling back on English.

  • How can I help at home if I do not speak the language?

    Ask students to teach a phrase or read a paragraph aloud at dinner. Watch a short video or show in the language with subtitles together. Five to ten minutes of daily exposure matters more than long study sessions, and curiosity from a parent goes a long way.

  • My child says they cannot understand native speakers. Is that normal?

    Yes. Classroom audio is slower and clearer than real life. Encourage short, regular listening: a song, a news clip for learners, a cooking video. The goal is to catch the gist, not every word. Comprehension grows quickly once students stop panicking about missed words.

  • How should the year be sequenced across the three communication modes?

    Plan units around topics, then build all three modes inside each unit: listening and reading inputs first, then paired conversation, then a presentation or written piece. Recycling vocabulary across units matters more than covering new grammar each week.

  • What does mastery look like by the end of this stage?

    By the end of the year, students should handle a short unrehearsed conversation on a familiar topic, read a short text and explain the main idea, and write or present a paragraph with connected sentences. Errors are expected. The test is whether a sympathetic listener follows the meaning.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Verb tenses in spontaneous speech, question formation, and connecting sentences with words like because, however, and then. Students often know these on a worksheet but lose them in real conversation. Short daily speaking warm-ups help more than another grammar handout.

  • How do I work culture in without it feeling like a side trip?

    Anchor each unit in a real product or practice from the target culture, then ask students to compare it to their own. A meal, a holiday, a school day, a public sign. Culture lands better when it shows up inside the language work, not as a separate Friday activity.

  • Does my child need to memorize long vocabulary lists?

    Some memorization helps, but using words in sentences matters more than reciting them. If students can answer a question, describe a picture, or write three sentences using new words, they know them well enough. Drilling lists in isolation rarely sticks.

  • How do I know students are ready for the next stage?

    Readiness shows up in independence. Students can start and keep a conversation going, ask for clarification in the language, and write a short piece without translating word by word from English. If they reach for the language first instead of English, they are ready.