Key
skills
In
Grammar Progression
By
Fidelia
Nimmons
Year
|
Grammatical
awareness
|
Punctuation
|
R
|
Nouns,
verbs, pronouns, prepositional words
Teach:
·
use capital letters for start of their
own names
·
Write captions and labels for
pictures
·
Write sentences to match pictures
or sequences of pictures using thinking-writing skills
·
Use correct sequence of movements
to write letters
|
Punctuation to master:
Capital
letter for names
|
1
|
Nouns, verbs, pronouns,
prepositional words
Nouns- special names begin with capital letters
Describing words (make sentences
more interesting)
More (-er) most (-est)
Verbs regular past tense (-ed)
Did/ done (has)
Adverb (-ly)
Plurals (s, es)
Articles a and an
Teach: form simple sentences with
one verb
|
Capital letter for names
Capital letter for start of a sentence
Capital letter for personal pronoun
I
Capital letter for personal titles
(Mr, Mrs)
Use full stop for ending sentences
Use question marks for questions (what,
where, when, why, how?)
Punctuation to master:
. ?
|
2
|
Nouns,
verbs, pronouns, prepositional words, connectives, pronouns
Nouns- special names begin with capital letters
Describing
words (make sentences more interesting)
More
adjectives
More (-er)
most (-est)
Verbs
regular past tense (-ed)
Use past
tense consistently
Did/ done
(has), catch /caught , give/ gave
Adverb
(-ly)
Plurals
(s, es) more than one
Articles a and an
Use of
article an with words beginning
with silent h in an hour
Owning words (pronouns) my, his,
her, its, yours
Opposite words
Person verb agreement (I run, you
run, he runs, they run)
Noun / pronoun/ verb agreement ( I
ma, they are, we are, he is)
Comparative
nouns e.g. long, longer, longest
Connectives ‘and’ and ‘but’ to join two simple sentences
Collective nouns –e.g. a team of players
Teach form
simple and compound sentences.
A simple
sentence has one verb
Compound
sentences are two or more simple sentences joined together
Compound
sentences are joined by a conjunction such as ‘and’, ‘but’, ‘because’ etc
e.g. Harry fell down, broke
his wrist and was taken to the hospital in an ambulance.
|
Capital
letter for names
Capital
letter for start of a sentence
Capital
letter for personal pronoun I
Capital
letter for personal titles (Mr, Mrs)
Use full
stop for ending sentences
Use
question marks for questions words – who, when, how, what, where, which
Use comma
when we take a breath
Use comma
in a list
Use of exclamation
mark to:
Mark
surprise, humour, joy
Show fear,
anger, pain, danger,
giving an
order or shouting
identify speech
marks in reading
Shortening
words using full stops or the high comma ‘
Punctuation to master:
. ? ! , “ “
|
3
|
Nouns,
verbs, pronouns, prepositional words, connectives, pronouns
Nouns- special names begin with capital letters
Describing
words (make sentences more interesting)
More (-er)
most (-est)
Singular
and plural nouns
Verbs
regular past tense (-ed)
Use past
tense consistently
Use verb
tenses with increasing accuracy in speaking and writing
Did/ done
(has), catch /caught , give/ gave
Verbs
is/are, was/ were
Adverb
(-ly) (how words)
Find good
adverbs to describe the verb
Plurals
(s, es) more than one
Articles a and an
Use of
article an with words beginning
with silent h in an hour
Owning words (pronouns) my, his,
her, its, yours
Opposite words
Person verb agreement (I run, you
run, he runs, they run)
Noun / pronoun/ verb agreement ( I
ma, they are, we are, he is)
Comparative
nouns e.g. long, longer, longest
Connectives ‘and’ and ‘but’ to join two simple sentences
Collective
nouns –e.g. a team of players
Abstract
nouns e.g. feelings, thoughts
Main clause
& dependent clause
Figures of
speech – similes, metaphors
Other
connectives:
When,
because, until, before,
Use these
to form complex sentences (dependent clause)
Teach sentence with two verbs of
equal weight is a compound sentence.
Complex sentence contains a main
clause and a subordinate clause.
A phrase
is any group of words which taken together in a sentence, function as a
part of speech:
Noun
phrases act together as a noun - Reading a book is good hobby (what:
the subject)
Adjectival
phrase act together as an adjective – The woman in the red shiny dress
is the owner of the cafe (which woman)
A Verb
phrase forms a verb My mum will be leaving for the station in an hour
(what does or did the subject do?)
|
Capital
letter for names
Capital
letter for start of a sentence
Capital
letter for personal pronoun I
Capital
letter for personal titles (Mr, Mrs)
Use full
stop for ending sentences
Use of full stop for abbreviation
Use of full stop for when a word has been made shorter
Use question marks for questions words –
who, when, how, what, where, which
Use comma when we take a breath
Use comma
in a list
Use comma
to help make meaning clearer:
Julia says
her sister is ill. (sister ill)
Julia,
says her sister, is ill (Julia ill).
Use of exclamation mark to
Mark
surprise, humour, joy
Show fear,
anger, pain, danger,
giving an
order or shouting
identify speech marks in reading
understand
basic conventions of speech punctuation
Shortening
words using full stops or the high comma ‘
Use of apostrophe for ownership /possession
Other
uses of capitalisation:
Personal
pronoun I
Each line
of a poem
Begin
exact words spoken in inverted commas
Words in titles
Punctuation to master:
‘ . ? ! , “ “
|
4
|
Nouns,
verbs, pronouns, prepositional words, connectives, pronouns
Nouns- special names begin with capital letters
Describing
words (make sentences more interesting)
Comparative
nouns
Collective
nouns
More (-er)
most (-est)
Singular
and plural nouns
Verbs
regular past tense (-ed)
Use past
tense consistently
Use verb
tenses with increasing accuracy in speaking and writing
Did/ done
(has), catch /caught , give/ gave
Verbs
is/are, was/ were
Verb
tense: present, past, future
Adverb
(-ly) (how words)
Find good
adverbs to describe the verb
Plurals
(s, es) more than one
Articles a and an
Use of
article an with words beginning with silent h in an hour
Owning words (pronouns) my, his,
her, its, yours
Opposite words
Person verb agreement (I run, you
run, he runs, they run)
Noun / pronoun/ verb agreement ( I
ma, they are, we are, he is)
Verb /
noun agreement
Comparative
adjectives e.g. long, longer, longest
Connectives ‘and’ and ‘but’ to join two simple sentences
Collective
nouns –e.g. a team of players
Abstract
nouns e.g. feelings, thoughts
Main
clause & dependent clause
Figures of
speech – similes, metaphors, personification
Phrases,
sentences & paragraphs
Other
connectives:
When,
because, until, before,
Use these
to form complex sentences (dependent clause)
Teach
sentence with two verbs of equal weight is a compound sentence
More
connectives
Until,
before, after, unless, if
Use
alternative (powerful) adverbs and adjectives to make writing more interesting
Direct and
indirect speech
Investigate
word classes e.g.
Noun
(pleasure) Adjective (pleasant) Verb(please)
Adverb (pleasurably)
Adverbial
phrases answer the questions: how, where, when or why e.g.
Last
night, Danielle drove her car carefully down the road, as it was snowing
heavily.
How did
she drive – carefully (adverb)
Where did
she drive – down the road (adverb- where the verb is happening)
When did
she drive? Last night (adverb- when the verb happened)
Teach: Complex sentence contains a
main clause and a subordinate clause.
Complex sentence can be made up of
a single clause(a phrase with one verb) and one or more noun, adjectival or
adverbial clauses
|
Capital
letter for names
Capital
letter for start of a sentence
Capital
letter for personal pronoun I
Capital
letter for personal titles (Mr, Mrs)
Use full
stop for ending sentences
Use of full stop for abbreviation
Use of full stop for when a word has been made shorter
Use question marks for questions words –
who, when, how, what, where, which
Use comma when we take a breath
Use comma
in a list
use comma
to separate group of words
use comma
to separate connectives that come in pairs in sentences e.g. neither - nor,
use comma
to separate a subordinate clause from the main clause in a sentence
Use of exclamation mark to
Mark
surprise, humour, joy
Show fear,
anger, pain, danger,
giving an
order or shouting
identify speech marks in reading
understand
basic conventions of speech punctuation
Shortening
words using full stops or the high comma
Use of apostrophe for ownership /possession
To show
possession: The girl’s shoe
The girls’
shoes
Use in
abbreviation – to show where letters are missing: don’t (do not)
For some
unusual plurals: 7’s and 9’s; and p’s and q’s ; and A’s and B’s
Basic rules for apostrophising:
To show
possession
A single
noun add s, Jane’s hat
A plural
noun ending in s, add ‘ boys’ bags
A plural
noun not ending in s, add s – women’s bags
Boy’s hat,
boys’ hats
Other uses of capitalisation:
Personal
pronoun I
Each line
of a poem
Begin
exact words spoken in inverted commas
Words in
titles
Punctuation to master:
Respond to
punctuations
‘ . ? ! , “ “
; : - ( ) -- ... in reading
|
5
|
Nouns,
verbs, pronouns, prepositional words, connectives, pronouns , proverbs,
idioms, slangs
Nouns- special names begin with capital letters
Describing
words (make sentences more interesting)
Comparative
nouns
Collective
nouns
More (-er)
most (-est)
Singular
and plural nouns
Verbs
regular past tense (-ed)
Use past
tense consistently
Use verb
tenses with increasing accuracy in speaking and writing
Did/ done
(has), catch /caught , give/ gave
Verbs
is/are, was/ were
Verb
tense: present, past, future
Auxillary verbs – have, was, shall,
will
Verb forms – active, interrogative,
imperative
Adverb
(-ly) (how words)
Find good
adverbs to describe the verb
Plurals
(s, es) more than one
Articles a and an
Use of
article an with words beginning
with silent h in an hour
Owning words (pronouns) my, his,
her, its, yours
Pronouns – whom, who, which, it
Person – 1st, 2nd, 3rd
Opposite words
Person verb agreement (I run, you
run, he runs, they run)
Noun / pronoun/ verb agreement ( I
ma, they are, we are, he is)
Verb /
noun agreement
Comparative
adjectives e.g. long, longer, longest
Connectives ‘and’ and ‘but’ to join two simple sentences
Collective
nouns –e.g. a team of players
Abstract
nouns e.g. feelings, thoughts
Gender of
nouns
Main
clause & dependent clause
Figures of
speech – similes, metaphors, personification
Ongoing work on: Phrases, sentences
& paragraphs.
Other
connectives:
When,
because, until, before,
Use these
to form complex sentences (dependent clause)
Teach
sentence with two verbs of equal weight is a compound sentence
More
connectives
Until,
before, after, unless, if
Use
alternative (powerful) adverbs and adjectives to make writing more
interesting
Direct and
indirect speech
Investigate
word classes e.g.
Noun
(pleasure) Adjective (pleasant) Verb(please)
Adverb (pleasurably)
Adverbial
phrases – adverbs of
Manner
(how it was done)
Time (when
it was done)
Place (
where it was done)
Use of
standard English:
Concord
agreement of singular with singular and plural with plural.
Agreement
between nouns & verbs
Consistency
of tense and subject
Avoidance
of double negatives
Avoidance
of non-standard dialect words
Teach: Revise composition of
simple, compound and complex sentences and the essential points of Grammar at
this stage.
Teach: independent use of
dictionaries, thesauri, reference books,
internet research skills etc.
Know all parts of speech
|
Capital
letter for names
Capital
letter for start of a sentence
Capital
letter for personal pronoun I
Capital
letter for personal titles (Mr, Mrs)
Use full
stop for ending sentences
Use of full stop for abbreviation
Use of full stop for when a word has been made shorter
Use
question marks for questions words – who, when, how, what, where, which
Use comma
when we take a breath
Use comma
in a list
use comma
to separate group of words
use comma
to separate connectives that come in pairs in sentences e.g. neither nor,
use comma
to separate a subordinate clause from the main clause in a sentence
Use of
exclamation mark to
Mark
surprise, humour, joy
Show fear,
anger, pain, danger,
giving an
order or shouting
identify
speech marks in reading
understand basic conventions of
speech punctuation
only put
speech marks round actual words spoken
when a
quotation is interrupted in mid-sentence, you don’t need a capital letter
when you restart the speech.
Before
closing or reopening quotation marks there must always be a point of
punctuation, usually a comma otherwise a full stop, question mark, or
exclamation mark
A new line
should be used for each new speaker.
If a
speaker quotes someone else, use single quotation marks for the words the
speaker is quoting e.g. “ I heard the man shout ‘Run!’, “Amy cried.
Shortening
words using full stops or the high comma
Use of
apostrophe for ownership /possession
Basic
rules for apostrophising
Boy’s hat,
boys’ hats
Other
uses of capitalisation:
Personal
pronoun I
Each line
of a poem
Begin
exact words spoken in inverted commas
Words in
titles
Colon: to signal a list or explanation
To
introduce a list or example
Separate
two statements where the second explains the first
To
introduce a lengthy quotation
To
punctuate speech in plays
Punctuation to master:
Respond to
punctuations
‘ . ? ! , “ “
; : - ( ) -- ... in reading
‘ . ? ! , “ “
; : - ( ) in writing
|