Machine Readable Australian Curriculum

Achievement Standard

About this resource:

URI:
http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/d77fef36-422f-427a-9414-30284d420f35
Statement label:
Achievement standard
Description:

The achievement standards for the Framework for Aboriginal Languages and Torres Strait Islander Languages Second Language Learner Pathway are generalised in order to cater for the range of languages that may be learnt as an L2 in the school context. The achievement standards will need to be adapted for specific Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages.

By the end of Year 2, students interact with the teaching team, visiting Elders and community members to talk about themselves, family, friends and immediate environment using familiar language supported by gestures. When interacting with Elders and community speakers, they use appropriate forms of address and terms of respect. They use movement, gestures and rehearsed language to participate in guided group activities, such as adapting and performing action songs. They interact in familiar classroom routines by responding to requests, following instructions and using routine classroom language, for example, to request classroom objects. Students listen to, read, view and comprehend texts that are short, clearly structured and supported by visuals and paralinguistic elements, for example, tone of voice, facial expression, gesture and repetition and recycling of structures and vocabulary. They demonstrate their understanding of the target language region, for example, by making simple statements and giving descriptions of animals, food and artefacts, labelling and sorting these into categories, or by pointing to key topographical features on a map or at pictures of food sources, plants and animals in response to questions. They respond to texts such as stories, songs, dance and visual art through singing, miming, play-acting, drawing, action and movement. They demonstrate understanding by naming key characters, significant places, landscapes or topographical features and by identifying key messages. Students use familiar words, patterns and support materials to create and present shared stories, songs and performances. They translate and explain in English the meaning of target language words, simple phrases and gestures used in everyday contexts and situations. They create simple bilingual texts for the classroom environment, such as captions, labels and wall charts. They identify markers of their own identity, such as family, school/class and language/s, and compare these to the importance of language, place and family in the formation of identity in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Students identify similarities and differences in the ways they interact when communicating in English and the target language.

Students distinguish between the sounds of the target language and English and link sounds to written symbols and conventions. They use simple metalanguage to describe elemental structures of the target language, such as word order and word types. They identify how messages in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander languages can be communicated in a number of ways, such as Elders’ story-telling or through song, dance and visual design. Students identify kinship terms used for immediate family members and recognise that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have their own personal relationships with place, natural species and phenomena. They identify which stories belong to which natural features, including animals and natural species. They know that different forms of address and kinship terms are used and depend on relationship and context. They identify some words in the language that have been borrowed from other languages. They identify regions, places and communities where the target language is spoken and recognise that there are many different languages spoken in their class, their local community and in Australia. They recognise that language speakers are the most important primary source of language knowledge and that language use reflects where and how people live and what is important to them.

Rights holder:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Rights:
© Copyright Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Subject:
http://vocabulary.curriculum.edu.au/framework/LAU
Part of:
http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/5460b64c-2581-404d-a8c6-6aa2fff88275
Child of:
Last modified:
2018-02-23T01:37:23+00:00

About this record:

http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/d77fef36-422f-427a-9414-30284d420f35.rdf
Rights holder:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Attribution name:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Attribution URL:
http://rdf.australiancurriculum.edu.au/elements/2018/05/d77fef36-422f-427a-9414-30284d420f35
Creator:
Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/au/
Last modified:
2019-03-03T11:44:31+00:00