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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year a new language starts to feel like a real tool, not a list of vocabulary words. Students hold simple back-and-forth conversations, read short passages, and share basic ideas about themselves, their families, and daily life. They also notice how the new culture does things differently, from greetings to food to holidays, and compare it to their own. By spring, students can introduce themselves, ask and answer everyday questions, and understand the gist of a short text or video.

  • Basic conversation
  • Everyday vocabulary
  • Cultural traditions
  • Listening and reading
  • Language comparisons
Source: Maine Maine Learning Results
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

    First words and greetings

    Students start with the basics of a new language. They learn to greet people, introduce themselves, and share simple facts about family, school, and what they like.

  2. 2

    Everyday topics and conversations

    Students build short conversations about food, weather, hobbies, and daily routines. They begin to ask questions, react, and share opinions instead of only memorizing phrases.

  3. 3

    Culture and daily life

    Students look at how people live in places where the language is spoken. They compare holidays, meals, school, and family routines to their own, and notice what is similar and what is different.

  4. 4

    Reading, listening, and short writing

    Students read simple stories, menus, and signs, and listen to short clips and conversations. They write a few sentences or a short paragraph about familiar topics.

  5. 5

    Using the language beyond class

    Students present a short talk, video, or project for a real audience. They also set goals for using the language outside of school, through music, shows, or talking with other speakers.

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 material in the new language and show they understood the main idea and key details. Topics can range from everyday conversations to simple stories or signs.

  • 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 or reactions and adjusting what they say based on how the other person responds.

  • Learners present information, concepts

    Checkpoint A

    Students practice speaking or writing in the new language to share information, tell a story, or make a case for something. They adjust how they communicate based on who is listening or reading.

Cultures
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students explore how people in other cultures do everyday things, like greetings, celebrations, or mealtime routines, and explain why those practices matter to the people who share them.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at everyday objects from another culture, such as food, clothing, or celebrations, and explain what those things reveal about how people in that culture think and what they value.

Connections
  • Learners build, reinforce

    Checkpoint A

    Learning a new language gives students a way to practice skills from other subjects. They use the language to think through problems, make connections to what they already know, and look at familiar topics from a new angle.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students read, watch, or listen to real materials in the new language to find information and see how people in that culture think about the world.

Comparisons
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students notice how the language they are learning differs from their own, looking at things like word order, spelling patterns, or how questions are formed. Those comparisons help them understand how language itself works.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at how everyday life in another culture (meals, greetings, holidays) is similar to or different from their own, then use the new language to describe what they notice.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students practice the language outside class too, talking with people in their community or connecting with others around the world. The goal is real conversation, not just classroom exercises.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students pick a goal for using the language outside class, then look back at how they did. The focus is on using language for real life, not just schoolwork.

Common Questions
  • What does Checkpoint A actually mean for a beginner language student?

    Checkpoint A is the first stop on the road to using a new language. Students learn to understand short, familiar phrases, ask and answer simple questions, and share basic information about themselves, their family, and daily life. Think tourist-level survival language, not fluency.

  • How can a parent help at home if they do not speak the language?

    Ask students to teach a few words at dinner, like food, weather, or numbers. Watch a short video or song in the language together and ask what they caught. Five minutes of regular exposure beats a long study session once a week.

  • What should a beginner be able to do by the end of the year?

    Students should greet someone, introduce themselves, ask simple questions, and understand short messages about familiar topics like school, food, and free time. Most of their speaking will be memorized phrases and short sentences, and that is exactly where they should be.

  • How do you sequence a first year so students keep talking and not just memorizing?

    Start with topics students can use the same day: greetings, names, ages, likes and dislikes. Recycle vocabulary across units so a food unit reuses numbers and opinions from earlier. Build short conversations every week so speaking stays a habit, not a test event.

  • My child says they cannot understand the audio clips. Is that normal?

    Yes. Beginners pick up maybe one word in five at first, and that is enough to get the gist. Encourage listening to the same clip two or three times instead of looking for a translation, and ask what one word or idea they recognized.

  • How much culture should be built into the year, and how?

    Culture belongs in almost every unit, not as a separate Friday activity. Tie it to the language students are already using: meal customs during a food unit, school schedules during a daily routine unit. The goal is for students to notice how a practice or product connects to how people think.

  • How do students get practice outside of class without a tutor?

    Short, low-pressure exposure works best. Label items at home in the language, follow one social media account or podcast aimed at learners, or message a classmate a daily greeting. Ten minutes most days does more than an hour on Sunday.

  • What usually needs the most reteaching at this level?

    Verb endings, gender or noun agreement where it applies, and the difference between formal and informal address. Students also tend to translate word-for-word from English, so plan regular comparison activities where they notice how the two languages handle the same idea differently.

  • How do you know a student is ready for the next checkpoint?

    Look for students who can hold a short unrehearsed conversation on a familiar topic, write a simple paragraph about themselves or their day, and get the main idea from a short text or audio clip. Memorized chunks should be turning into sentences students build on their own.