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What does a student learn in ?

This is the checkpoint where students move past memorized words and start using the new language to actually talk, listen, read, and write about familiar topics. Students hold short conversations, ask and answer questions, and share simple opinions about daily life. They also notice how the new culture does things differently, from greetings to food to holidays. By the end, students can introduce themselves, describe their family or school day, and understand a short message in the new language.

  • Basic conversation
  • Listening and reading
  • Everyday topics
  • Cultural awareness
  • Comparing languages
Source: New Jersey New Jersey Student 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

    First words and greetings

    Students start with the basics of a new language. They learn to say hello, introduce themselves, and talk about their family, school, and what they like.

  2. 2

    Listening and reading for meaning

    Students practice picking out familiar words in short conversations, simple stories, and signs. They learn to get the main idea even when they do not catch every word.

  3. 3

    Everyday conversations

    Students hold short back-and-forth chats about daily life, like food, weather, weekend plans, and school. They learn to ask questions and answer with more than one or two words.

  4. 4

    Culture and comparisons

    Students look at how people live, eat, celebrate, and speak in places where the language is used. They compare those habits to their own and notice what is similar and what is different.

  5. 5

    Sharing in the language

    Students give short presentations, write simple messages, and use the language outside class when they can. They also start setting their own goals for what 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 material in the new language and show they understood what it was about, picking out key details and explaining what they mean.

  • Learners interact and negotiate meaning in spoken, signed

    Checkpoint A

    Students hold short conversations in another language, sharing opinions, reactions, and basic information with a partner. The focus is on actually communicating back and forth, not just reciting memorized phrases.

  • Learners present information, concepts

    Checkpoint A

    Students share information or tell a story in a new language for an audience, choosing words and format that fit who is listening or reading.

Cultures
  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at everyday habits and traditions from another culture and explain what those customs reveal about how people there see the world.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at everyday objects, foods, or traditions from another culture and explain what those things reveal about how people in that culture think and live.

Connections
  • Learners build, reinforce

    Checkpoint A

    Learning a new language doubles as a lesson in other subjects. Students use the language to think through problems, make connections to what they already know from math, science, or social studies, and apply ideas across subjects.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students read, watch, or listen to real content in another 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 works differently from their own, then use those comparisons to understand both languages better.

  • Learners use the language to investigate, explain

    Checkpoint A

    Students look at everyday life in another culture (food, school, greetings, celebrations) and compare what they find to their own life. They use the language they are learning to talk through what is similar and what is different.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students practice the new language outside of class, not just during lessons. They use it to talk with real people, work on shared projects, and connect with speakers in other places.

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

    Checkpoint A

    Students pick a personal goal for using the language outside class, then look back at how far they've come. The focus is on learning for real life, not just for a grade.

Common Questions
  • What does this stage of language learning actually look like?

    Students are beginners. They learn to understand and use short, familiar phrases on everyday topics like family, food, school, and free time. Most of what they say and write will be memorized words and simple sentences, not full conversations.

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

    Ask students to teach a few words at dinner, label objects around the house, or play a short video or song in the language. Five minutes a day of light exposure beats a long study session once a week. Curiosity matters more than correct grammar.

  • Should students be able to hold a real conversation yet?

    Not a flowing one. Expect short exchanges: greetings, asking a question, ordering food, saying what someone likes or wants. Pauses, mixed-up words, and gestures are normal and a sign students are trying.

  • How should the year be sequenced?

    Start with high-frequency topics students can use right away, such as introductions, classroom language, family, and food. Build outward to school, hobbies, and daily routines. Recycle vocabulary often so earlier units keep showing up in later ones.

  • How much culture should be built into lessons?

    Culture should sit inside the language work, not bolted on at the end of a unit. When teaching food vocabulary, look at real menus and meal customs. When teaching greetings, compare how people greet each other in different places.

  • What usually needs the most reteaching?

    Sound and spelling patterns, basic verb forms, and the difference between memorized phrases and sentences students can build themselves. Plan short, frequent review cycles instead of one big grammar unit.

  • Does memorizing vocabulary lists still matter?

    Some memorization helps, but using words in real sentences matters more. Quick practice with flashcards is fine for five minutes, then ask students to use the words in a sentence about their own life.

  • How will students know if they are making progress?

    Progress shows up in small wins: understanding more of a song, reading a short sign, ordering food, writing a few sentences about themselves. Keep a simple log of what students can now do that they could not do a month ago.

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

    By the end of this stage, students should handle short, predictable conversations, understand the main idea of simple texts and audio, and write a short paragraph about familiar topics. They will still rely on memorized chunks, and that is expected.