Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Level 2

Filter
Filter
Showing selections

German: F–10 Sequence

German: F–10 Sequence Level Description

Students become familiar with the sounds and rhythms of German, approximating the pronunciation and phrasing of single words and short phrases, including distinctive sounds such as ch, r, th, u and z, and diphthongs such as au, ei, eu and ie. They use simple basic sentence structures and familiar vocabulary for everyday functions such as greetings, asking and answering questions, responding...

Show more

German: F–10 Sequence Content Descriptions

Communicating

Socialising
  1. Interact and socialise with peers and teacher to exchange greetings and information about self and family, and express likes and dislikes (VCDEC103)
  2. Participate in guided group activities using simple repetitive language in songs, rhymes, games and transactions (VCDEC104)
  3. Recognise and respond to instructions and questions about activities, games and classroom routines, and make polite requests (VCDEC105)
Informing
  1. Identify key words and information in simple shared texts related to personal worlds (VCDEC106)
  2. Convey factual information about self, family and possessions through pictures, labels, captions and short descriptions, using familiar words and modelled language (VCDEC107)
Creating
  1. Engage with a range of imaginative texts through action, dance, singing, drawing, shared reading and collaborative retelling (VCDEC108)
  2. Express ideas and experiences in a variety of ways using familiar words and modelled language, such as through imaginative role-play, mime, drawing, oral discussion or scaffolded writing activities (VCDEC109)
Translating
  1. Share with peers and family what they know in German, identifying different words and expressions, moving between languages depending on the audience (VCDEC110)
  2. Create print or digital texts such as labels, posters, word banks and wall charts for the immediate learning environment in both German and English (VCDEC111)
Reflecting
  1. Notice similarities and differences when using German compared to own language, such as how it feels, sounds and looks, and involves behaviours as well as words (VCDEC112)
  2. Express aspects of self, such as family, school/class, age and language(s), noticing how these are part of one’s sense of identity (VCDEC113)

Understanding

Systems of language
  1. Recognise and reproduce the sounds and rhythms of spoken German, including distinctive sounds (VCDEU114)
  2. Understand some first elements of German grammar, such as simple verb forms, definite articles and pronouns, to identify and describe people and objects in the family and school domains (VCDEU115)
  3. Understand that language is organised as ‘texts’, which take different forms and use different structures and features to achieve their purposes (VCDEU116)
Language variation and change
  1. Recognise that in German, as in English and other languages, there are different ways of greeting and interacting with people (VCDEU117)
  2. Recognise that Australia has speakers of many different languages, including German, and that German and English borrow words and expressions from each other (VCDEU118)
Role of language and culture
  1. Notice that the languages people use relate to who they are and where and how they live (VCDEU119)

German: F–10 Sequence Achievement Standard

By the end of Level 2, students interact with teachers and peers through action-related talk and play. They introduce themselves, exchange greetings and farewells, for example, Ich heiße … Auf Wiedersehen! and express likes and dislikes. When interacting, they use short formulaic expressions, for example, Morgen! Danke! Alles Gute zum Geburtstag! Frohe Weihnachten! Guten Appetit! and make simple statements, such as Das ist … Ich wohne in … Ich mag … They use repetitive language and respond to simple instructions when participating in games, shared activities and classroom routines. They use visual, non-verbal and contextual cues such as intonation, gestures and facial expressions to help make meaning, and reproduce some distinctive sounds and rhythms of spoken German, including ch, u, r and z. Students identify specific words and information, such as names of people, places or objects, in simple shared texts related to personal worlds. They convey factual information about self, family and possessions at word and simple sentence level. They respond to and create simple spoken and written texts, using modelled examples and formulaic language. They use short phrases and simple...

Show more