MFL
MFL in Key Stage 1
Although the teaching of MFL is not statutory in Key Stage One. We encourage children to participate in cultural celebrations and learning basic greetings in different languages.
MFL in Key Stage 2
At Charles Saer, children are taught French from Year 3 – Year 6. Children are provided with an appropriate balance of spoken and written language which helps to secure the foundations for further foreign language teaching at key stage 3. Our overall aim at Charles Saer is to create open minded children with a desire to learn different languages in the future and appreciate worldwide cultures.
Pupils are taught to:
- Listen attentively to spoken language and show understanding by joining in and responding.
- Explore the patterns and sounds of language through songs and rhymes and link the spelling, sound and meaning of words.
- Engage in conversations; ask and answer questions; express opinions and respond to those of others; seek clarification and help.
- Speak in sentences, using familiar vocabulary, phrases and basic language structures.
- Develop accurate pronunciation and intonation so that others understand when they are reading aloud or using familiar words and phrases.
- Present ideas and information orally to a range of audiences.
- Read carefully and show understanding of words, phrases and simple writing.
- Appreciate stories, songs, poems and rhymes in the language
- Broaden their vocabulary and develop their ability to understand new words that are introduced into familiar written material, including through using a dictionary.
- Write phrases from memory, and adapt these to create new sentences, to express ideas clearly.
- Describe people, places, things and actions orally and in writing.
- Understand basic grammar appropriate to the language being studied, including (where relevant): feminine, masculine and neuter forms and the conjugation of high-frequency verbs; key features and patterns of the language; how to apply these, for instance, to build sentences; and how these differ from or are similar to English.