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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year a new language starts to click for everyday use. Students hold short conversations, write simple notes, and understand the gist of what they hear or read on familiar topics like family, school, food, and free time. They also start to notice how the new culture does things differently, from greetings to holidays, and compare it to their own. By spring, students can introduce themselves, ask and answer basic questions, and share a few sentences about their daily life in the new language.

  • Basic conversation
  • Listening and reading
  • Everyday vocabulary
  • Culture comparisons
  • Self introductions
Source: Illinois Illinois 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 started with the language

    Students learn to greet people, introduce themselves, and share basic facts like age, where they live, and what they like. Parents may hear short phrases practiced at home.

  2. 2

    Talking about daily life

    Students describe family, school, food, and free time using short sentences. They start asking and answering simple questions with a partner instead of just repeating phrases.

  3. 3

    Exploring culture and comparing

    Students look at how people live, eat, and celebrate in places where the language is spoken. They notice what feels familiar and what feels different from their own day.

  4. 4

    Reading, listening, and presenting

    Students follow simple stories, videos, and signs in the language, then share what they understood. Short presentations and written notes start to feel manageable.

  5. 5

    Using the language beyond class

    Students try the language outside school through music, menus, messages, or short chats with speakers. They also set small goals for what they want to learn next.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 7.
Communication
  • Learners understand, interpret

    Checkpoint A

    Students listen to, read, or watch simple content in the new language and show they understood the main idea or key details.

  • Learners interact and negotiate meaning in spoken, signed

    Checkpoint A

    Students hold short back-and-forth conversations in the language they are learning, sharing opinions and reactions with a partner, not just reciting rehearsed lines.

  • Learners present information, concepts

    Checkpoint A

    Students share information or tell a story out loud, in writing, or through media, adjusting how they speak or write based on who is listening or reading.

Cultures
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at everyday habits and routines in another culture, such as greetings, meals, or celebrations, and explain what those customs reveal about how people in that culture see the world.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students explore everyday objects, traditions, and customs from another culture and explain what those things reveal about how people in that culture see the world.

Connections
  • Learners build, reinforce

    Checkpoint A

    Students use the new language to explore topics from other classes, like science or history, and practice thinking through problems in a different tongue.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students read, listen to, or watch real material in the language they are learning to find information and see how people from that culture think about the world.

Comparisons
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students notice what makes the new language different from their own, such as how words are built or sentences are ordered, and use those comparisons to understand how language works.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at everyday life in another culture (meals, greetings, holidays) and compare what they find to their own. They practice putting those observations into words in the language they're learning.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students use the language they are learning to talk and work with others, both in class and out in the world. This goes beyond drills and worksheets, toward real conversations with real people.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students pick a personal goal for using a new language, then look back at what they have learned and how far they have come. The focus is on growth they can use outside the classroom.

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

    Students can handle short everyday exchanges like greetings, ordering food, asking for directions, and talking about family, school, and free time. They understand simple spoken and written messages on familiar topics and can put together a few sentences to share basic information.

  • How can families help at home if no one speaks the language?

    Ask students to teach a word or phrase at dinner, label a few household items, or watch a short video together with subtitles. Five minutes of regular practice does more than an hour once a week, and showing interest matters more than knowing the language.

  • How should the year be sequenced for a beginning class?

    Start with high-frequency topics students can use right away: introductions, classroom language, family, food, and daily routines. Build speaking and listening before pushing heavy grammar, and circle back to the same vocabulary in new contexts so students keep using what they learned in the fall.

  • Is memorizing vocabulary lists the main goal?

    No. Students need to use words in real sentences, not just recite them. Practice that asks students to answer a question, describe a picture, or write a short message will stick better than flashcards alone.

  • Why is culture part of a language class?

    Language and culture are tied together. Students learn how greetings, meals, holidays, and school life work in places where the language is spoken, and they compare those practices to their own. That comparison is part of what students are expected to do at this level.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching at this level?

    Listening comprehension and spontaneous speaking. Students often memorize scripts but freeze when a question is reworded. Build in unscripted partner talk, short listening clips at natural speed, and quick recycling of past units so the language stays active.

  • How can students get practice outside of class?

    Music, short videos, cooking recipes, and free apps all count. Following a few social media accounts in the language or messaging a pen pal gives students a reason to use what they know. The point is contact with the language, not perfection.

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

    Students should hold a short conversation on familiar topics without rehearsing, understand the main idea of a simple text or audio clip, and write a short paragraph about themselves or their world. They should also be able to compare a cultural practice to one of their own with a few sentences of explanation.