Communication skills and strategies including:
communicating ideas and opinions in a growing range of situations and rephrasing when meaning is unclear
(ACEEA152)
collaborating as a way to solve problems or to create texts
(ACEEA154)
adopting expected listening behaviours in some unfamiliar situations
(ACEEA155)
interacting and using forms of address appropriately in familiar and classroom contexts
(ACEEA156)
demonstrating some understanding of common idiomatic and colloquial expressions.
(ACEEA157)
Comprehension skills and strategies including:
drawing on background knowledge or contextual cues to guess the meaning of unknown words
(ACEEA158)
translating from home language or dialect to SAE
(ACEEA159)
describing characters and settings presented in literary texts and recounting plot details
(ACEEA160)
using a range of strategies, such as retrieval charts or note-taking, to extract accurate information from a growing variety of texts
(ACEEA161)
identifying emotive language and sociocultural references in a growing range of situations
(ACEEA163)
identifying and explaining common cultural references, idiomatic language and simple colloquialisms
(ACEEA164)
employing ICT and investigative strategies to locate information from other sources.
(ACEEA165)
Language and text analysis skills and strategies including:
articulating the purposes of a growing range of text types, including academic texts
(ACEEA166)
identifying dialogue, and first-person and third-person narration used in literary texts
(ACEEA167)
identifying common differences in lexis and grammar between spoken and written language in familiar texts
(ACEEA168)
understanding cultural variations in the use of language in everyday activities and relationships such as family, leisure activities or attitudes
(ACEEA169)
identifying common variations of language and structure across different mediums.
(ACEEA170)
Create a range of texts:
using appropriate form, content and style for a range of common purposes and audiences
(ACEEA171)
using first-person and third-person narration
(ACEEA172)
using a growing range of fonts and layouts for effect
(ACEEA173)
using commonly used technologies and media
(ACEEA174)
using some subject-specific vocabulary, synonyms, antonyms and collocations
(ACEEA175)
using modal auxiliaries such as ‘will’, ‘would’, ‘can’, ‘should’, ‘might’
(ACEEA176)
using description, imagery and an awareness of characterisation
(ACEEA177)
using a growing range of strategies for planning and refining work, including editing for correct simple tenses, common punctuation, and a variety of simple and compound sentences.
(ACEEA179)