Australian Curriculum: German
This section provides direct access to the complete Australian Curriculum: German.
Understand how German works
Context statement
German is an official language of Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Liechtenstein, Belgium, Luxembourg and in South Tyrol in Italy.
PDF documents
Resources and support materials for the Australian Curriculum: Languages - German are available as PDF documents.
Filters
Year levels:
Curriculum elements
Strands:
Foundation to Year 2
Foundation to Year 2 Band Description
The nature of the learners
Children enter the early years of schooling with established oracy skills in one or more languages and varying degrees of early literacy capability. For young students, learning typically focuses on their immediate world of family, home, school, friends and neighbourhood. They are learning how to socialise with new people, share with others and participate in structured routines and activities at school. Typically they have little to no experience of German language and culture.
German language learning and use
At this stage, games, music, movement, familiar routines, and imaginative activities such as role-plays provide essential scaffolding and relevant contexts for language development. Learners engage with the sounds, shapes and patterns of German through activities such as rhymes, songs, clapping and action games. They identify and use simple formulaic expressions, one- or two-word responses to prompts and cues, and non-verbal German communication strategies. They learn to write by tracing and copying, forming letters legibly. They learn to write words and simple sentences independently using modelled language, for example, by matching pictures with single words, labels or captions.
Contexts of interaction
The primary context of interaction is the language classroom, as learners interact with the teacher and with one another. Their use of German relates primarily to classroom routines and activities, draws on curiosity about the world around them, and engages their interest in play, movement and games.
Texts and resources
Learners engage with a variety of spoken, written and digital texts. They listen and respond to teacher talk, share ideas, and join in stories, songs, play and simple conversations. Physical, virtual and digital resources provide access to additional German language and cultural interactions, connecting learners' social worlds with those of their peers in other German-speaking contexts.
Features of German language use
Learners 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 to instructions, and participating in games, performances and simple shared tasks. They learn to write single words and simple phrases, noticing the use of the Eszett and how an Umlaut changes the sound of vowels. They notice similarities and differences between German and English. They use modelled language to produce their own short texts and to interact. They begin to notice that language behaves differently in different situations and that German speakers communicate in some ways that are different from their own. As they communicate about differences and similarities, they begin to understand that they are part of a connected world. This introduction to the reflective dimension of intercultural language learning begins to develop an understanding of culture.
Level of support
Support is provided through visual and tactile materials such as pictures, realia, objects and charts, and through the use of gesture and movement. The teacher provides prompts, cues, and opportunities for repetition and recycling to help learners identify and remember frequently used words and simple phrases. Learners rely on modelled language, scaffolded tasks, feedback and encouragement to build their language capability.
The role of English
Learners are encouraged to use German whenever possible, particularly when engaging in classroom interactions and routines. The teacher uses German as much as possible for instruction. English is used for explanation and discussion, allowing learners to communicate about differences and similarities they notice between German and their own language(s), to ask questions about language and culture, and to consider their experience of learning German.
Foundation to Year 2 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: self, family; Key processes: interacting, greeting, thanking] (ACLGEC103 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: play, performance, action learning; Key processes: participating, taking turns] (ACLGEC104 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: roles, routines; Key processes: following instructions, participating, listening] (ACLGEC105 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: literacy, text; Key processes: locating, matching, ordering] (ACLGEC106 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: identity, belonging; Key processes: naming, labelling, describing] (ACLGEC107 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: imagination, performance, setting; Key processes: participating, responding] (ACLGEC108 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: role-play, discussion, imagination; Key processes: performing, expressing] (ACLGEC109 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: representation, difference; Key processes: noticing, comparing] (ACLGEC110 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: vocabulary, representation; Key processes: sorting, matching, noticing] (ACLGEC111 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: language, culture, difference; Key processes: noticing, comparing, observing] (ACLGEC112 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: self, identity; Key processes: expressing, describing, noticing] (ACLGEC113 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: pronunciation, intonation; Key processes: listening, imitating, recognising] (ACLGEU114 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: word order, connections, gender; Key processes: noticing patterns, making connections, selecting] (ACLGEU115 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: structure, form; Key processes: noticing, recognising, comparing] (ACLGEU116 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: register, language conventions, social practice; Key processes: noticing, comparing] (ACLGEU117 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: multilingualism, culture, community; Key processes: observing, exploring, recognising] (ACLGEU118 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: place, culture; Key processes: noticing, exploring] (ACLGEU119 - Scootle )
Foundation to Year 2 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 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 sentences to identify and describe people and objects in the family and school domains such as der Lehrer, eine Freundin, Das ist mein Stift, including some pronouns, for example, ich, du, er, sie, es, wir and possessive adjectives, mein/e, dein/e. They use nein and nicht for negation, and verb forms bin, bist and ist, with an adjective. Students explain the meaning and use of different German words and expressions, and create texts in German and English for their immediate learning environment. They identify similarities and differences between German and their own language(s) and culture(s), noticing that using a language involves behaviours as well as words.
Students identify ways that German sounds different to English but recognise that it uses the same alphabet. They identify some words that are written the same in both German and English but pronounced differently. They identify features of different types of texts. They give examples of words that German and English borrow from each other and from other languages, and identify different ways of greeting and interacting with people. They make connections between the languages people use and who they are and where they live.
Foundation to Year 2 Work Sample Portfolios
Years 3 and 4
Years 3 and 4 Band Description
The nature of the learners
At this level, children are developing awareness of their social world and membership of various groups, including that of the German class. They have developed initial literacy in English, and this assists to some degree in learning German, such as writing in the Roman alphabet. They benefit from varied, activity-based learning that builds on their interests and capabilities and makes connections with other areas of learning.
German language learning and use
The development of oral proficiency at this stage continues to rely on rich language input in different modes and from different sources. Learners build active listening and comprehension skills, using contextual, grammatical, phonic and non-verbal cues. Language is authentic with some modification, involving familiar vocabulary and simple structures. The balance between listening and speaking gradually shifts as learners are supported to use the language themselves in familiar contexts and situations, exchanging simple ideas and information, and participating in predictable activities and interactions, shared tasks, performance and play. They continue to build vocabulary that can be adapted for different purposes, and to use simple grammatical forms with some accuracy to communicate in familiar contexts.
A balance between language knowledge and language use is established by integrating focused attention to grammar, vocabulary building, pronunciation, and non-verbal and cultural dimensions of language use with opportunities for purposeful communication.
Contexts of interaction
The contexts in which learners interact in learning and using German are primarily local – the classroom, school, home and community – with some access to wider communities of German speakers through audiovisual and digital technologies.
Texts and resources
Learners develop literacy skills and textual knowledge through supported engagement with a range of spoken, written, visual and multimodal texts. Imaginative texts (such as picture books, fairy tales, puppet plays, songs and digital games) involve the expressive and cultural dimensions of language. Procedural, informative and descriptive texts (such as recipes, annotated posters, and family and class profiles) show how language is used for a variety of purposes.
Features of German language use
Learners notice features of German communication such as the use of gestures, facial expressions and intonation patterns. They become familiar with the idea of grammatical gender and become familiar with how to use singular and plural forms. Learning German contributes to the process of making sense of their personal/social worlds that characterises this stage of learners' development. As they encounter German language and culture they make comparisons with their own language(s) and culture(s) and consider their own ways of communicating. This leads to exploring concepts of identity, commonality and difference, and to becoming aware of themselves as communicators in particular cultural contexts and communities.
Level of support
This stage of learning involves extensive support. Form-focused activities build learners' grammatical knowledge and understanding, developing accuracy and control in spoken and written German. Teachers provide models and examples; introduce language, concepts and resources needed to manage and complete the task; make time for experimentation, drafting and redrafting; and provide support for self-monitoring and reflection.
The role of English
Learners use German for classroom routines and structured learning tasks, and for listening to and viewing German texts. English is used for class discussions, such as noticing and discussing aspects of German language and culture; for comparing English and German languages and cultures; and for reflecting on the process of learning another language.
Years 3 and 4 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: friendship, identity; Key processes: describing, expressing] (ACLGEC120 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: participation, creativity; Key processes: exchanging, negotiating, planning] (ACLGEC121 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: support, learning strategies; Key processes: requesting, clarifying, responding] (ACLGEC122 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: community, family, friends; Key processes: reading, listening, selecting, organising] (ACLGEC123 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: family, friends; Key processes: describing, presenting, collating] (ACLGEC124 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: character, events; Key processes: describing, retelling] (ACLGEC125 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: fantasy, entertainment, amusement; Key processes: performing, creating, presenting] (ACLGEC126 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: meaning, interconnection; Key processes: comparing, interpreting, explaining] (ACLGEC127 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: vocabulary, translation; Key processes: labelling, matching, translating] (ACLGEC128 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: communication, difference, respect; Key processes: noticing, comparing, describing] (ACLGEC129 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: self, family, friends; Key processes: exploring, comparing, identifying] (ACLGEC130 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: pronunciation, intonation, accents; Key processes: distinguishing sounds, recognising, practising] (ACLGEU131 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: word order, connections, syntax, cases; Key processes: noticing patterns, making connections] (ACLGEU132 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: text function, structure, features of texts; Key processes: classifying, comparing, explaining] (ACLGEU133 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: variation, register; Key processes: noticing, comparing, exploring] (ACLGEU134 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: global language, culture, identity; Key processes: identifying, exploring, researching] (ACLGEU135 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: connections, values, traditions; Key processes: identifying, describing] (ACLGEU136 - Scootle )
Years 3 and 4 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 4, students interact with teachers and peers in classroom routines, action-related talk and play. They respond to instructions and use formulaic expressions to interact, ask questions, seek assistance, and make statements related to their personal worlds, for example, bitte schön; Ich bin dran; Welche Farbe? Wie viele Geschwister hast du? Mein Lieblingsspiel ist Lotto. They reproduce German short and long single vowel and diphthong sounds, including Umlaute, and Eszett, and initial consonants and blends, for example, Post/los, mein, die, Bruder/Brüder, heißen, ja, rot, singen, Sport, Winter, zwei. They answer questions related to their personal worlds with factual information, and respond to imaginative texts by identifying favourite elements, sequencing main events and producing short scaffolded summaries. They create short, simple sentences from modelled language and use coordinating conjunctions, for example, und, aber, oder, to compose short original texts. They use some forms of common regular verbs in the present tense, (for example, heißen, kosten, spielen, wohnen), some irregular verb forms, (for example, bin, bist, ist, sind, hast, hat), and limited forms of modal verbs, (for example, kann, mag, möchte, muss), simple past tense verbs, (for example, hatte, ging, war) and the accusative case, (for example, Ich habe einen Hund.). They respond to and use interrogatives, such as was, wann, wer, wie, wie viele, wo and some ja/nein questions. They refer to time, manner and place using familiar words and phrases, for example, morgen, sehr gut, im Wald. They compare aspects of German and English language and culture that are reflected in texts they have viewed, listened to or read and they create texts in German and English for the classroom and school community. They identify ways in which culture influences aspects of communication in routine exchanges such as greetings, and describe their own sense of identity, including elements such as family, cultural heritage and friends.
Students identify German as an important European and global language and give examples showing how it is related to English. They differentiate statements, questions, imperatives and exclamations according to intonation, sentence structure and punctuation. They identify the purpose of the Eszett and show how the Umlaut alters the pronunciation of particular vowels (ä, ö, ü). They identify single letters, some consonant clusters (sch) and vowel combinations (au, ei, eu, ie). They identify the audience and purpose of familiar personal, informative and imaginative texts. They give examples of how language use varies according to the participants, purpose and context of an exchange. They give examples of how language and culture are intrinsically linked, and identify cultural values, traditions or practices that are conveyed in words and expressions they and others use.
Years 3 and 4 Work Sample Portfolios
Years 5 and 6
Years 5 and 6 Band Description
The nature of the learners
At this level, students are expanding their social networks, experiences and communication repertoire in both their first language and German. They continue to need guidance and participate in structured, collaborative tasks that both recycle and extend language. They are gaining greater independence and becoming more conscious of their peers and social context, and of the world around them. They are noticing additional similarities and differences between German language and culture and their own.
German language learning and use
Learners use German with one another and the teacher for an increasing range of purposes: exchanging information, expressing ideas and feelings, and functioning within a German learning environment. They are able to work increasingly independently, but enjoy working collaboratively as well as competing with one another. Learners' ability to communicate within familiar contexts is developing in terms of fluency and accuracy. Their pronunciation, intonation and phrasing are more confident, and they control and access wider vocabulary resources and use an increasing range of strategies to negotiate meaning. Shared tasks develop social, cognitive and language skills, and provide a context for purposeful language experience and experimentation. Focused attention to language structures and systems, literacy skills development, and exploration of cultural elements of communication are conducted at least in part in German. Learners use digital technologies to support their learning in increasingly independent and intentional ways, such as exchanging resources and information with one another and with young people of the same age in German-speaking communities, accessing music and media resources, maintaining blogs and other web pages, creating presentations, and participating in social networks.
Oracy development at this level includes active listening to a range of input from different sources and building more elaborated conversational and interactional skills. This involves turn-taking, 'reading' language for cultural and contextual meaning, building on others' contributions, and making appropriate responses and adjustments. Learners begin to engage in debate and discussion. Individual and group oral presentation and performance skills are developed through researching and organising information; structuring, rehearsing and resourcing the content of presentations; and selecting appropriate language to engage particular audiences.
Contexts of interaction
The contexts in which learners interact in learning and using German are sometimes extended beyond the classroom, school, home and community as they have some access to German speakers and cultural resources in wider contexts and communities such as through the use of digital technologies.
Texts and resources
Literacy development involves increasingly independent engagement with a wider range of texts. Learners use a range of cues and decoding strategies to assist comprehension. They make connections between ideas, contexts and language within and between texts. Learners are able to provide simple summaries of and responses to texts. They begin to produce clearly structured original texts for different audiences and purposes. With support they are able to edit their own written work for common grammatical and orthographic errors.
Features of German language use
Learners increase their range of German vocabulary, pronunciation, and grammar and textual knowledge. They use present tense forms of regular
and irregular verbs, including some modal verbs and common separable verbs, and use plural forms of nouns and possessive adjectives. They add detail and expand simple sentences by using adverbs, phrases and some conjunctions. They move between statement, question and imperative forms and use simple negative constructions. They develop metalanguage to comment on grammar and vocabulary. As they use German to interact in different situations and to engage with different resources, learners develop an understanding of how language and culture influence each other. They learn to recognise how language features and expressions reflect cultural values and experiences, for example, language variation relating to age, gender, and relationship between participants, and how grammatical forms or vocabulary choices can affect the 'meaning' that is made, for example, using informal or formal forms of address, or using adjectives expressing approval or disapproval. This leads to considering their own ways of communicating and using language, and to thinking about the construction of personal identity and the notion of multiple identities.
Level of support
While learners work more independently at this level, ongoing and systematic scaffolding, feedback and review support the interactive process of learning. Modelling and scaffolding are incorporated into task activity. Support materials include models, stimulus materials, and resources such as word charts, vocabulary lists, dictionaries and electronic reference resources.
The role of English
While the use of German in the classroom increases at this level, the use of English for discussion, reflection and explanation ensures the continued development of learners' awareness of the nature and function of language generally as well as of their own emerging intercultural capability. Using both German and English in the classroom develops a sense of what it means to be bilingual.
Years 5 and 6 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: school, home, routines, relationships; Key processes: listening, describing] (ACLGEC137 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: collaboration, organisation, responsibility; Key processes: organising, planning, budgeting] (ACLGEC138 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: process, progress, outcome; Key processes: discussing, monitoring, reflecting] (ACLGEC139 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: environment, lifestyles, relationships; Key processes: researching, collating, reading, viewing] (ACLGEC140 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: youth issues, audience; Key processes: representing, transposing, comparing] (ACLGEC141 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: plot, mood, character; Key processes: recounting, describing, sequencing] (ACLGEC142 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: imagination, adaptation, character, setting; Key processes: imagining, creating, interpreting] (ACLGEC143 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: equivalence, meaning; Key processes: interpreting, explaining, predicting] (ACLGEC144 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: bilingualism, meaning; Key processes: translating, selecting, connecting] (ACLGEC145 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: language, culture, reaction; Key processes: observing, evaluating, reflecting] (ACLGEC146 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: reflection, perception; Key processes: reflecting, analysing, comparing] (ACLGEC147 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: pronunciation, writing systems, punctuation; Key processes: spelling, making connections, applying rules] (ACLGEU148 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: verb tenses and forms, variation, metalanguage; Key processes: applying, noticing patterns, understanding] (ACLGEU149 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: context, audience, functionality; Key processes: identifying, classifying, transforming] (ACLGEU150 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: variation, place, identity; Key processes: observing, comparing, analysing] (ACLGEU151 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: change, borrowing, impact; Key processes: discovering, exploring, understanding] (ACLGEU152 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: norms, values; Key processes: observing, comparing, connecting] (ACLGEU153 - Scootle )
Years 5 and 6 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 6, students use written and spoken German for classroom interactions, to carry out transactions, and to share ideas and opinions, relate experiences and express feelings. They use complete sentences in familiar contexts to ask questions such as, Bist du fertig? Was machst du jetzt? Verstehst du das? respond to requests and share experiences of learning, for example, Ich kann gut sprechen, aber ich finde das Lesen und Schreiben schwierig. They use descriptive and expressive vocabulary, including adjectives such as aufgeregt, glücklich, nervös, sauer and traurig, to express feelings and make statements such as Ich nehme ein Käsebrötchen. They use appropriate intonation for simple statements, questions and exclamations, and correct pronunciation, for example, for the two different pronunciations of ch. They gather and compare information from different sources about social and natural worlds, and convey information and opinions in different formats to suit specific audiences and purposes. They describe characters, events and ideas encountered in texts, and re-create imaginative texts to reflect their imaginative experience. When creating texts, they manipulate modelled language to describe current, recurring and future actions, for example, Wir gehen morgen schwimmen. Kommst du mit? Es geht mir nicht gut. and produce original sentences with common regular and irregular verbs in the present tense, including limited forms of the modal verbs dürfen and müssen and some common separable verbs such as mitbringen and fernsehen. They use adjectives, adverbs and adverbial phrases to qualify meaning, for example, viel Wasser, neue Schuhe; lieber, oft, jeden Tag. They explain aspects of German language and culture, recognising that there are not always equivalent expressions in English, and create a range of bilingual texts to support their own language learning and the school community. They describe aspects of their intercultural interactions that are unfamiliar or uncomfortable, and discuss their own reactions and adjustments.
Students give examples of how German language and culture are continuously changing and are influenced by other languages and cultures. They identify and apply some of the systematic sentence structure and word order rules of German. They identify rules for pronunciation and apply phonic and grammatical knowledge to spell and write unfamiliar words, for example, words containing ch, j, w and z, and diphthongs such as au, ei, eu and ie. They apply the conventions of commonly used text types, and identify differences in language features and text structures. They give examples of the variety of ways German is used by different people in different contexts. They make connections between culture and language use, and identify ways that language use is shaped by and reflects the values, ideas and norms of a community.
Years 5 and 6 Work Sample Portfolios
Years 7 and 8
Years 7 and 8 Band Description
The nature of the learners
These years represent a transition to secondary school. Students in this sequence bring with them an established capability to interact in different situations, to engage with a variety of texts and to communicate with some assistance about their immediate world and that of German-speaking communities. They have experience in analysing the major features of the language system and in reflecting on the nature of intercultural exchanges in which they are involved.
German language learning and use
German is used for a range of classroom interactions and transactions, and for creating and maintaining a new class dynamic, explaining and practising language forms, reflecting on ways of thinking and learning, and developing cultural understanding. Learners are encouraged to socialise and interact with users of German beyond the classroom. Additional opportunities for interaction in the target language are provided by purposeful and integrated use of digital technologies, including social media and a range of applications. Learners work collaboratively and independently in the target language, exploring different modes and genres of communication with particular reference to their current social, cultural and communicative interests and needs. They pool information, language knowledge and resources to plan, problem-solve, monitor and reflect. They use and adapt modelled and rehearsed language in familiar and unfamiliar contexts, increasingly generating original language. They make cross-curricular connections and explore intercultural experiences and perspectives, such as the notion of a shared understanding.
Contexts of interaction
While the primary context for learning is usually the German language classroom, there may be opportunities for interacting with peers in German-speaking contexts and with other learners of German, such as through the use of technology or relationships with partner schools. Learners may also have some contact with German speakers and cultural events in the local community.
Texts and resources
Learners listen to, read, view and interact with a widening range of texts for a variety of purposes (informative, transactional, imaginative, expressive). They apply learnt processing strategies and language knowledge, drawing on their grammatical and vocabulary knowledge and their understanding of text conventions and patterns to obtain meaning from texts. They make connections between texts and cultural frames, and reflect on aspects of the variability of language, identifying how cultural values and perspectives are embedded in language and how language choices determine how people, issues and circumstances are represented. They plan, create and present more complex and varied imaginative, informative and persuasive texts (shared stories, poetry, songs/raps, blogs, advertisements, reports, journal entries), applying appropriate conventions of text types. They design interactive events and collaborative tasks, and participate in discussions, games and competitions.
Features of German language use
Learners gain more control of grammatical and textual elements such as the case system, prepositions and tenses, using the present perfect (Perfekt) tense of verbs conjugated with haben and sein and the simple past (Imperfekt) tenses. They use German with increasing accuracy and fluency, drafting and editing texts to improve structure and effect and to clarify meaning. Learners build on their cumulative experience of learning languages to analyse the relationship between language and culture more critically. They identify cultural references in texts and consider how language frames and communicates perspectives and values. They make comparisons between their own language(s) and German, and reflect on the complexities involved in moving between languages and cultural systems. They monitor and reflect on their own intercultural experience and capability as second language learners, and identify their own personal and community practices and identities that reflect cultural influence.
Level of support
Particular support is required at this stage of second language learning to manage the transition to post-primary schooling and to encourage continued engagement. Opportunities to review and consolidate prior learning are balanced with provision of engaging and relevant new experiences and connections. Students are supported to develop increasing autonomy as language learners and users, to self-monitor, and to reflect on and adjust language in response to their experience in diverse contexts.
The role of English
While German is used in more extended and elaborated ways at this level, English is used when appropriate to allow for explanation, analysis and reflection in relation to abstract concepts.
Years 7 and 8 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: neighbourhood, school, leisure; Key processes: discussing, commenting, comparing] (ACLGEC154 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: exploratory talk, exchange of ideas, task management; Key processes: transacting, negotiating] (ACLGEC155 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: interaction, learning strategies, exchange; Key processes: responding, participating, advising] (ACLGEC156 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: resources, values, issues; Key processes: summarising, reading, listening, analysing] (ACLGEC157 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: representations, perspectives; Key processes: comparing, classifying, organising] (ACLGEC158 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: plot, character, emotions; Key processes: expressing, reviewing, comparing] (ACLGEC159 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: imagination, audience, entertainment; Key processes: composing, performing, experimenting] (ACLGEC160 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: relationship, meaning, idioms; Key processes: interpreting, explaining, translating] (ACLGEC161 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: representation, organisation; Key processes: selecting, categorising, evaluating, translating] (ACLGEC162 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: values, society, reaction; Key processes: adjusting, evaluating, reflecting] (ACLGEC163 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: perspective, values, membership; Key processes: reflecting, connecting, discussing] (ACLGEC164 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: pronunciation, punctuation, systems; Key processes: comparing, making connections, noticing] (ACLGEU165 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: syntax, systems, verb tenses, grammar patterns; Key processes: noticing, selecting, linking] (ACLGEU166 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: structure, conventions, purpose; Key processes: analysing, applying, describing] (ACLGEU167 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: register, variation; Key processes: identifying, comparing, analysing] (ACLGEU168 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: change, globalisation, evolution; Key processes: investigating, analysing, understanding] (ACLGEU169 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: cultural attitudes and values, assumptions; Key processes: recognising, discussing, analysing] (ACLGEU170 - Scootle )
Years 7 and 8 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 8, students use written and spoken German to interact with teachers, peers and others; to make decisions, solve problems and negotiate transactions; and to exchange and justify ideas, opinions and views. When interacting, they use both rehearsed and spontaneous language to ask and respond to open-ended questions and express, compare and justify opinions, for example, Sie glaubt, dass … Ich bin dafür, weil … They apply rules of pronunciation, rhythm, stress and intonation to a range of sentence types and words, including loan words from English. They obtain, summarise and evaluate information from a range of sources. They express opinions and feelings in response to imaginative texts, and make connections with their own experiences and other texts. They plan, draft and present original imaginative and informative texts, following models to link and sequence events and ideas using both adverbs such as danach, dann, früher, vorher and common subordinating conjunctions, for example, als, wenn, weil, dass. They use some modal verbs and imperative forms, for example, Was soll ich machen? Du kannst … Kauf die neue App! They refer to a person, object or place using definite and indefinite articles, personal pronouns, and some demonstrative and interrogative adjectives such as dieser, jeder and welcher. They produce original present tense sentences and use familiar examples of the Perfekt and Imperfekt tenses. They use a range of everyday and topic-based prepositions, adverbs and adverbial phrases, for example, nach der Schule, zu Hause, in der Stadt, gegen die Wand, links, hier, oben, im Süden. They interpret and/or translate terms associated with the culture of German-speaking communities or their own culture, and explain specific values and traditions reflected in the language. They create a range of bilingual resources for the wide community and to assist their own and others' language learning. They explain the importance of shared understanding, discussing adjustments made as a result of reactions and responses to intercultural experience.
Students explain how language changes over time and identify reasons for change. They identify and apply the German case system (nominative, accusative and dative) and name some grammatical terms and their functions. They describe the similarities and differences between German and English punctuation, including capitalisation, numbers (ordinals, decimals) and quotation marks. They explain reasons for differences in a range of text types, for example, personal, informative and persuasive texts, including differences in text structure and language features. They give examples of how language use varies according to audience, context and purpose. They identify different aspects of the cultural dimension of learning and using German, and explain how language use reflects cultural ideas, assumptions and perspectives.
Years 7 and 8 Work Sample Portfolios
Years 9 and 10
Years 9 and 10 Band Description
The nature of the learners
At this level, students bring to their learning existing knowledge of German language and culture and a range of learning strategies and experiences. They are increasingly aware of the world beyond their own and are engaging with youth-related and social and environmental issues. They require continued guidance and mentoring but work increasingly independently to analyse, reflect on and monitor their language learning and intercultural experiences. They are considering future pathways and options, including how German could be part of these.
German language learning and use
Learners interact with peers, teachers and other German speakers in immediate and local contexts relating to their social and learning worlds, and with unfamiliar German-speaking communities and cultural resources through a range of physical, virtual and online environments. This is a period of language exploration and vocabulary expansion, and of experimentation with a wider range of modes of communication, for example, digital, collaborative performance and group discussions. Greater control of language structures and systems, and understanding of the variability of language use increase confidence and interest in communicating in a growing range of contexts. Learners use German to initiate, sustain and extend interactions in situations such as negotiating a resolution to a disagreement; to access and exchange information; to express feelings and opinions; to participate in imaginative and creative experiences; to develop, analyse, interpret and translate a wider range of texts and experiences; and to reflect on and evaluate learning experiences. They use German more fluently, with a greater degree of self-correction and repair, and reference the accuracy of their target language use against a stronger frame of knowledge of grammar. They demonstrate understanding of language variation and change; of how intercultural experience, technology, media and globalisation influence language use and forms of communication. Task characteristics and conditions are more complex and challenging. They provide opportunities for collaborative language planning and performance, the development of translating and interpreting tools, and strategic use of language and cultural resources.
Contexts of interaction
The contexts for learning and using German are regularly extended beyond the classroom. Learners interact with teachers, peers and members of German-speaking communities face-to-face and via online technologies. They have opportunities to engage with German speakers and cultural events in the wider community, such as in the media, guest speakers, exchange assistants/students, film festivals, community events or in-country travel.
Texts and resources
Learners build on and extend their knowledge of different types of text and language functions through balancing focused attention to language forms and structures with text creation and performance. They work with a wider range of fiction and nonfiction texts, which allows for exploration of themes of personal and societal relevance, for example, global issues, identity and relationships, diversity and inclusivity. They develop additional analytical tools, including consideration of literary form and devices, and ways in which language choices empower, build identity and are influenced by audience, context and purpose. They identify how texts shape perspectives and meaning.
Features of German language use
Learners expand their knowledge and control of grammatical elements such as register, future tense, reflexive verbs and subordinate clauses. In-depth investigation of the links between German, English and other languages they know strengthens learners' intercultural capability. They examine the processes involved in learning and using a different language, recognising them as cognitive, cultural and personal as well as linguistic. They explore the reciprocal nature of intercultural communication: how moving between different languages and cultural systems impacts on ways of thinking and behaving; and how successful communication requires flexibility, awareness and openness to alternative ways. They develop the capacity to 'decentre' from normative ways of thinking and communicating, to consider themselves through the eyes of others, and to communicate in interculturally appropriate ways.
Level of support
Learners are increasingly aware of and responsible for their own learning, working independently and collaboratively to address their learning needs. Resources are required to support this process, such as technological support for vocabulary expansion, graphic organisers, modelled texts, dictionaries and teacher feedback. Students require continued explicit instruction on the grammatical system and opportunities to discuss, practise and apply their knowledge. They monitor their own progress and learning, such as through the use of e-journals or folios, using these to reflect on their language learning and intercultural experience.
The role of English
While sustained use of German is expected at this level, English continues to be used when necessary for substantive discussion, explanation and analysis. This allows learners to communicate in depth and detail about their experience of learning German and to express ideas, views and experiences at a level beyond their current level of proficiency in German. English may be used in conjunction with German to conduct research, to translate or to communicate bilingually.
Years 9 and 10 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: perspectives, future, past; Key processes: sustaining interactions, discussing, justifying, proposing] (ACLGEC171 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: information exchange, issues, collaboration; Key processes: planning, negotiating, communicating] (ACLGEC172 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: reflection, metalanguage; Key processes: reflecting, expressing, evaluating] (ACLGEC173 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: representation, community, world issues; Key processes: researching, synthesising, evaluating, representing] (ACLGEC174 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: representation, discovery, interconnection; Key processes: presenting, representing, reporting] (ACLGEC175 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: imagery, metaphor, emotion, themes; Key processes: analysing, comparing, persuading] (ACLGEC176 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: imagination, perspectives, setting, character; Key processes: entertaining, composing, performing] (ACLGEC177 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: culture, context, idioms; Key processes: interpreting, translating, comparing, analysing] (ACLGEC178 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: interconnection, assumptions, sensitivity; Key processes: explaining, translating, relating interculturally] (ACLGEC179 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: judgement, reciprocity, cultural behaviour; Key processes: questioning, modifying behaviour, taking responsibility] (ACLGEC180 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: cultural mediation, perspective, diversity; Key processes: evaluating, exploring, explaining] (ACLGEC181 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: stress, rhythm, application; Key processes: exploring, reproducing, applying] (ACLGEU182 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: syntax, mood, modality, grammar patterns; Key processes: classifying, applying, experimenting, manipulating] (ACLGEU183 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: connections, textual conventions, text types; Key processes: structuring, applying, describing, transforming] (ACLGEU184 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: register, constraints; Key processes: analysing, comparing, explaining] (ACLGEU185 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: influence, power, diversity; Key processes: reflecting, understanding] (ACLGEU186 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: culture, connections, perceptions; Key processes: reflecting, analysing, discussing] (ACLGEU187 - Scootle )
Years 9 and 10 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 10, students use written and spoken German to initiate and sustain interactions with teachers, peers and others in a range of settings and for a range of purposes. They use language spontaneously in the classroom environment to seek clarification and advice, assist others, initiate conversations and discussions, debate a course of action, share learning strategies and comment on the contribution of others, for example, Meinen Sie, dass …? Was würdest du an meiner Stelle tun? Simon hat Unrecht. Meiner Meinung nach ist Kims Geschichte am lustigsten. Ich sehe deutsche Filme, um meine Aussprache zu verbessern. They describe plans and aspirations using future tense, for example, Wir werden bald in Deutschland sein. Ich werde sicher die 12. Klasse zu Ende machen, und dann werde ich hoffentlich studieren. They state facts and relate experiences, such as, Wir haben fast alle unsere Lernziele für das Halbjahr erreicht. Mit 5 Jahren spielte ich mit Puppen und konnte lesen., using past tense forms, Perfekt and Imperfekt, of regular and irregular verbs. When speaking, they use appropriate pronunciation, intonation and stress in a range of sentence types, including variations such as contractions. They locate, synthesise and evaluate information on local and global issues from a range of perspectives and sources. They present ideas, information and views in a range of texts selected to suit audience, purpose and context. They analyse the main ideas and themes in imaginative texts and use evidence to support their views. They plan, draft and present imaginative texts using literary devices (imagery, similes, onomatopoeia) to engage a range of audiences. When creating informative, persuasive and imaginative texts, students use a variety of conjunctions, relative clauses and other cohesive devices to build cohesion, for example, Ich skype oft mit den Austauschschülern, die letztes Jahr bei uns waren. They specify and describe people, places and objects by applying knowledge of the case system to articles, common demonstratives and possessives followed by adjectives, for example, Ich habe mit meinem neuen Computer große Probleme. They interpret and/or translate excerpts from German texts, identifying and explaining culture-specific aspects, and create texts that reflect and explain aspects of culture and language for different German-speaking and Australian audiences. They identify and challenge their own assumptions and take responsibility for modifying language and behaviours in relation to different cultural perspectives.
Students identify ways that language influences people's actions, values and beliefs, and appreciate the scale and importance of linguistic diversity. They explain the roles of different German cases (nominative, accusative, dative and genitive) and tenses, and variations in spoken and written German in relation to pronunciation, spelling and punctuation. They explain the relationship between text type, audience and purpose. They identify the role culture plays in the creation and interpretation of texts, and explain how language and text features (layout, structure and formal/informal register) are used differently in a range of texts. They explain ways in which language and culture are interrelated and influence each other.
Years 9 and 10 Work Sample Portfolios
Years 7 and 8
Years 7 and 8 Band Description
The nature of the learners
Students are beginning their study of German and typically have had little prior exposure to the language and associated cultures. Many will have learnt an additional language in primary school, and some have proficiency in different home languages and bring existing language-learning strategies and intercultural awareness to the new experience of learning German. Students' textual knowledge developed through English literacy learning supports the development of literacy in German. Skills in analysing, comparing and reflecting on language and culture in both languages are mutually supportive. Students may need encouragement to take risks in learning a new language at this stage of social development and to consider how the experience of learning a new language impacts on the sense of the 'norms' associated with their first language and culture.
German language learning and use
Learners are offered the necessary scaffolding to listen to, view, read, speak, perform and write German in a range of simple classroom interactions and transactions with the teacher and peers. The teacher speaks increasingly in German in order to provide rich language input and to maximise exposure to the target language. Learners work collaboratively and independently, pooling information, language knowledge and resources to plan, problem-solve, monitor and reflect. They use modelled and rehearsed language in guided situations with familiar contexts and roles, and begin to use and adapt the language learnt to express their own personal meanings. They reflect on intercultural perspectives and their experience of interaction and make cross-curricular connections. Opportunities are provided for real and simulated interactions with other German speakers within and beyond the school community, including via purposeful and integrated use of ICT such as social media and applications.
Contexts of interaction
The German classroom is the primary context for learning, with ICT resources and community links providing access to additional resources and learning experiences. Learners may communicate with peers in German-speaking countries using teacher-guided digital technologies such as wikis, email or online chat. They may also access German-language events or resources in the wider community, such as interschool activities, film festivals or cultural performances.
Texts and resources
Learners listen to, read, view and interact with a growing range of simple texts for a variety of purposes (social, informative, transactional, imaginative, expressive). They apply learnt processing strategies, drawing on their vocabulary and grammatical knowledge and understanding of text conventions and patterns to gain meaning and to produce texts. They plan, create and present short, simple informative and imaginative texts (personal profiles, letters, timetables, poetry, songs/raps, blogs, advertisements)
Features of German language use
Students become familiar with the sounds of German, including pronunciation, rhythm, intonation and stress. They recognise similarities with many English words, noting differences in pronunciation (Computer, Buch, Auto). They approximate the pronunciation and phrasing of single words and short phrases, including distinctive sounds such as ch, r, th, u and z, diphthongs such as au, ei, eu and ie, and the impact of the Umlaut. They understand and apply elements of German grammar such as subject-verb-object word order, simple verb forms, and gender and number agreement of nouns and pronouns. Students understand that language is organised as text and that texts use different structures and language features to achieve different purposes. They create their own short texts, mainly using the present tense of regular and common irregular verbs, enriched by the use of adjectives and adverbs. They understand that language use reflects and shapes values and attitudes, and explore how language choices determine how people, events or circumstances are represented.
Level of support
Learners rely on teacher instruction, modelling, feedback and structured opportunities for practising and understanding new language. Support resources and activities include word lists, dictionaries, visual organisers, images and gestures. Learners support one another through structured pair and group tasks that have clear roles and expectations. Opportunities are required for monitoring and evaluating their language and culture learning.
The role of English
The teacher provides rich and supported German language input, using English as a medium for most explanation and discussion. Learners are supported to use German as much as possible for classroom routines and interactions, structured learning tasks, language experimentation and practice. As their first language capabilities far exceed their proficiency in German at this stage, it is likely that they will use mainly English for discussion, clarification, explanation and analysis.
Years 7 and 8 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: family, relationships; Key processes: interacting, describing] (ACLGEC001 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: collaboration, transaction; Key processes: planning, transacting, participating] (ACLGEC002 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: roles, routines; Key processes: participating, responding, contributing] (ACLGEC003 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: lifestyles, school, home; Key processes: listening, reading, identifying, classifying] (ACLGEC004 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: personal world, community, presentation; Key processes: representing, reporting, speaking, writing] (ACLGEC005 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: character, imagination, representation; Key processes: responding, describing, performing] (ACLGEC006 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: interpretation, imagination, creativity; Key processes: interpreting, expressing] (ACLGEC007 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: representation, equivalence; Key processes: interpreting, translating, explaining] (ACLGEC008 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: resources, context, meaning; Key processes: explaining, comparing] (ACLGEC009 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: exchange, awareness; Key processes: reflecting, responding, noticing] (ACLGEC010 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: exchange, identity; Key processes: reflecting, comparing, connecting] (ACLGEC011 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: pronunciation, spelling, intonation; Key processes: listening, imitating, recognising] (ACLGEU012 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: grammar features and structures, tenses, gender, syntax; Key processes: noticing patterns, making connections, applying] (ACLGEU013 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: text structure, genre; Key processes: analysing, recognising, organising] (ACLGEU014 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: variation, register, place; Key processes: comparing, observing, applying] (ACLGEU015 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: relationships, global language; Key processes: recognising, comparing] (ACLGEU016 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: attitudes, social norms, values; Key processes: observing, comparing, connecting] (ACLGEU017 - Scootle )
Years 7 and 8 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 8, students share information about their personal worlds, including personal details, family, friends, interests, likes, dislikes and preferences. They interact with others to carry out transactions, participate in class routines and socialise. They use modelled language and simple expressions to ask and respond to familiar questions and give and respond to instructions, such as, Hört gut zu!; Hol' einen Laptop!; Wer ist das?; Woher kommt dein Vater?; Hast du Geschwister?, request help or permission, for example, Ich möchte … , bitte.; Hilfe, bitte!; Darf ich bitte auf die Toilette gehen?, ask for information, clarification or assistance, such as, Wie bitte? Hast du mein Buch? Wie sagt man das auf Deutsch?, and clarify answers, for example, Das ist meine Freundin und sie kommt aus China. ... Ja, ich habe zwei Brüder, sie heißen Nick und Max.. When socialising, they make simple statements such as Ich mag Fuβball, aber Toms Lieblingssport ist Basketball. They use key features of pronunciation, stress and intonation, including short and long vowel sounds, single consonants, blends and diphthongs, in different words, phrases and sentences, such as,ja, rot, singen, Sport, Winter, zwei, ich auch. They obtain key points of information and identify main ideas in simple texts relating to own world and that of teenagers in German-speaking countries, using contextual clues to help make meaning. They use high-frequency vocabulary to describe characters, events and ideas encountered in imaginative texts, and create short informative and imaginative texts using modelled sentence structures and formulaic expressions with present tense forms of regular and some irregular verbs, and correct word order. They use a range of grammatical elements to describe people, objects, actions, events and relationships, including articles, such as, der/ein, personal pronouns and some possessive adjectives, for example, mein, dein, sein, ihr in the nominative and accusative. They qualify meaning with reference to time, manner and place using everyday adverbs and phrases, for example, am Montag; besser; in der Schule, and link words, phrases and sentences using und, aber and oder, and other connectives such as dann, später and zuerst. They work with German and English to translate texts and create simple bilingual texts for peers and family, noticing where equivalence is not possible. They identify the relationship between language and culture, giving examples of adjustments made as a result of reactions and intercultural experiences. They explain how aspects of their own identity impact on intercultural exchange.
Students identify German as an important European and global language and that it is related to English. They identify some of the common variations in German used in different contexts by different people. They differentiate statements, questions, imperatives and exclamations according to intonation, sentence structure and punctuation. They understand and apply grammatical concepts such as gender and number, and nominative and accusative case. They identify key similarities and differences between the phonological and orthographic systems of English and German, including the Umlaut and Eszett, capitalisation, and punctuation used in numbers (ordinals, decimals). They identify features of common spoken, written and multimodal texts. They understand and give examples of how language use is shaped by and reflects the values, ideas and norms of a community.
Years 7 and 8 Work Sample Portfolios
Years 9 and 10
Years 9 and 10 Band Description
The nature of the learners
At this level, students bring to their learning existing knowledge of German language and culture and a range of learning strategies and experiences. They are increasingly aware of the world beyond their own and are engaging with youth-related and social and environmental issues. They require continued guidance and mentoring but work increasingly independently to analyse, reflect on and monitor their their language learning and intercultural experiences. They are considering future pathways and options, including how German could be part of these.
German language learning and use
Learners interact with peers, teachers and other German speakers in immediate and local contexts relating to their social and learning worlds, and with unfamiliar German-speaking communities and cultural resources through a range of physical, virtual and online environments. This is a period of language exploration and vocabulary expansion, and of experimentation with a wider range of modes of communication, for example, digital, collaborative performance and group discussions. Greater control of language structures and systems, and understanding of the variability of language use increase confidence and interest in communicating in a growing range of contexts. Learners use German to initiate, sustain and extend interactions in situations such as negotiating a resolution to a disagreement; to access and exchange information; to express feelings and opinions; to participate in imaginative and creative experiences; to develop, analyse, interpret and translate a wider range of texts and experiences; and to reflect on and evaluate learning experiences. They use German more fluently, with a greater degree of self-correction and repair, and reference the accuracy of their target language use against a stronger frame of grammar knowledge. They demonstrate understanding of language variation and change; of how intercultural experience, technology, media and globalisation influence language use and forms of communication. Task characteristics and conditions are more complex and challenging. They provide opportunities for collaborative language planning and performance, the development of translating and interpreting tools, and strategic use of language and cultural resources.
Contexts of interaction
Learners interact with teachers, peers and members of German-speaking communities face-to-face and via digital technologies. They may also have opportunities to engage with German speakers and cultural events in the wider community, such as in the media, guest speakers, exchange students, language assistants, film festivals, community events or in-country travel.
Texts and resources
Learners build on and extend their knowledge of different types of text and language functions through balancing focused attention to language forms and structures with text creation and performance. They work with a wider range of fiction and nonfiction texts, which allows for exploration of themes of personal and societal relevance, for example, global issues, identity and relationships, diversity and inclusivity. They develop additional analytical tools, including consideration of literary form and devices, and ways in which language choices empower, build identity and are influenced by audience, context and purpose. They identify how texts shape perspectives and meaning.
Features of German language use
Learners expand their knowledge and control of grammatical elements such as register, future tense, reflexive verbs and subordinate clauses. In-depth investigation of the links between German, English and other languages they know strengthens learners' intercultural capability. They examine the processes involved in learning and using a different language, recognising them as cognitive, cultural and personal as well as linguistic. They explore the reciprocal nature of intercultural communication: how moving between different languages and cultural systems impacts on ways of thinking and behaving; and how successful communication requires flexibility, awareness and openness to alternative ways. They develop the capacity to 'decentre' from normative ways of thinking and communicating, to consider themselves through the eyes of others, and to communicate in interculturally appropriate ways.
Level of support
Learners are increasingly aware of and responsible for their own learning, working independently and collaboratively to address their learning needs. Resources are required to support this process, such as technological support for vocabulary expansion, graphic organisers, modelled texts, dictionaries and teacher feedback. Students require continued explicit instruction on the grammatical system and opportunities to discuss, practise and apply their knowledge. They monitor their own progress and learning, such as through the use of e-journals or folios, using these to reflect on their language learning and intercultural experience.
The role of English
While sustained use of German is expected at this level, English continues to be used when necessary for substantive discussion, explanation and analysis. This allows learners to communicate in depth and detail about their experience of learning German and to express ideas, views and experiences at a level beyond their current level of proficiency in German. English may be used in conjunction with German to conduct research, to translate or to communicate bilingually.
Years 9 and 10 Content Descriptions
Communicating
Socialising
[Key concepts: routines, relationships, community; Key processes: interacting, participating, describing] (ACLGEC018 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: roles, transactions, tasks; Key processes: collaborating, negotiating, discussing] (ACLGEC019 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: task, communication, learning strategies; Key processes: participating, discussing] (ACLGEC020 - Scootle )
Informing
[Key concepts: social issues, information, representation; Key processes: selecting, analysing, researching] (ACLGEC021 - Scootle )
Creating
[Key concepts: themes, imagination; Key processes: responding, modifying, transposing] (ACLGEC023 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: expression, humour, imagination; Key processes: composing, experimenting, expressing] (ACLGEC024 - Scootle )
Translating
[Key concepts: equivalence, representation, adjustments; Key processes: interpreting, translating, comparing] (ACLGEC025 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: representation, meaning, culture; Key processes: translating, interpreting] (ACLGEC026 - Scootle )
Reflecting
[Key concepts: impact, reciprocity; Key processes: evaluating, questioning, taking responsibility] (ACLGEC027 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: identity, culture, values; Key processes: reflecting, analysing, discussing] (ACLGEC028 - Scootle )
Understanding
Systems of language
[Key concepts: metalanguage, variation, context; Key processes: explaining, comparing, imitating, experimenting] (ACLGEU029 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: grammatical systems, connections, syntax; Key processes: applying, analysing, describing] (ACLGEU030 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: text construction, textual conventions; Key processes: comparing, analysing, applying] (ACLGEU031 - Scootle )
Language variation and change
[Key concepts: variation, register, style; Key processes: analysing, comparing, explaining] (ACLGEU032 - Scootle )
[Key concepts: evolution, influence; Key processes: noticing, analysing, investigating] (ACLGEU033 - Scootle )
Role of language and culture
[Key concepts: diversity, culture; Key processes: questioning, analysing, reflecting] (ACLGEU034 - Scootle )
Years 9 and 10 Achievement Standards
Achievement Standard
By the end of Year 10, students initiate and maintain interactions in written and spoken German to communicate ideas, thoughts, feelings and information related to relationships, school experiences, the community and future plans. They interact with others to make decisions, solve problems, and negotiate and plan action in response to issues. When interacting, they use both rehearsed and spontaneous language. They ask and respond to familiar questions, for example, Wir sind in den Ferien oft ins Schwimmbad gegangen. Was hast du gemacht? Ich finde meine Schule gut, und du? Wie findest du deine Schule? and make comparisons, such as, Meine Freundin ist fleiβiger als ich. They give opinions explain problems and ask for advice or clarification, for example, Ich wohne gern auf dem Land, weil ... , Ich habe mein Passwort vergessen. Was soll ich machen? Wie lernt man die deutschen Verben?. They apply rules of pronunciation, intonation and stress, including variations such as contractions. They locate, analyse and record information, feelings and opinions from a range of texts. They respond to and re-create imaginative texts, and use descriptive and expressive vocabulary to communicate about experiences and emotions. They modify meaning with a range of adverbs and adverbial phrases, such as, Wir haben das schon am Montag mit Frau Rolf gemacht. They create personal, descriptive, informative and imaginative texts for different purposes, audiences and contexts. They use a range of grammatical elements to describe, situate and link people, objects and events in time and place. They use articles, for example, der/ein, personal pronouns, some demonstrative and interrogative adjectives such as dieser, jeder and welcher, possessive adjectives in the nominative, accusative and dative case, and a range of prepositions in everyday and topic-based phrases. They use present and future tensesof a range of regular and irregular verbs, including some modal, separable and inseparable verbs. They describe past events and experiences using the present perfect and simple past tenses with a range of common verbs. They use some common reflexive verbs in the present tense, such as, Ich dusche mich morgens.; Interessierst du dich für Geschichte? They use a variety of conjunctions and cohesive devices, for example, als, dass, wenn, weil; dann, früher, danach, vorher, to create cohesion and interest. They translate and interpret excerpts from informative and imaginative texts, identifying and explaining challenges and adjustments required when transferring meaning between languages and cultures. They explain the importance of audience and context in intercultural exchanges. They explain how cultural identity is both shaped by and influences ways of communicating and thinking.
Students give examples of how language changes over time and identify reasons for change. They apply the German case system (mainly nominative, accusative, dative) and explain the relationships between noun gender, article, pronoun, adjectival ending and case. They name some grammatical terms and their functions. They identify variations in the features of spoken and written German in relation to pronunciation, spelling and punctuation. They identify textual conventions in a range of texts and explain how they shape meaning and influence responses. They identify how features of German in familiar spoken and written texts vary according to audience, context and purpose. They reflect on their own cultural identity in light of their experience of learning German, identifying how their ideas and ways of communicating are influenced by their membership of cultural groups.
Years 9 and 10 Work Sample Portfolios
Last updated 8 August 2019
Australian Curriculum Version 8.4 in Queensland
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