Communication Skills
Develop your speaking and writing skills in your additional language. At Phase 1–2, you communicate using rehearsed phrases, basic vocabulary, and simple sentence structures on familiar topics.
What Criteria C & D Assess
| Criterion | Skill | Phase 1–2 Expectation |
|---|---|---|
| C | Speaking & Writing | Communicate using rehearsed phrases and basic vocabulary on familiar topics |
| D | Language Accuracy | Use basic grammar, spelling, and punctuation correctly in simple sentences |
Writing Basics
Good writing at Phase 1–2 means using simple, correct sentences that communicate your ideas clearly.
Key Vocabulary — Communication
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Connective | A word linking ideas (and, but, because, so, then) |
| Register | Level of formality — formal (letters to teachers), informal (texts to friends) |
| Audience | Who you are communicating with |
| Greeting formula | Standard phrases to open communication (Dear…, Hi…, Bonjour…) |
| Closing formula | Standard phrases to end communication (Yours sincerely, Regards, Au revoir) |
Building Simple Sentences
- Subject + Verb — every sentence needs a subject (who) and a verb (action). Example: “I play.”
- Add detail — extend with an object, place, or time. Example: “I play football at school.”
- Use connectives — link two ideas together. Example: “I play football at school and I like it.”
- Add opinions — say what you think. Example: “I play football at school and I like it because it is fun.”
Common Connectives
| Purpose | Connectives |
|---|---|
| Adding | and, also, as well |
| Contrasting | but, however |
| Giving reasons | because, so |
| Sequencing | first, then, next, finally |
Writing Text Types
At Phase 1–2, you will write short texts in specific formats. Each text type has conventions you need to follow.
Text Types at Phase 1–2
| Text Type | Key Features | Example Opening |
|---|---|---|
| Postcard | Short, informal, describes a place or holiday | “Hi! I am on holiday in…” |
| Email (informal) | Greeting, body, sign-off; personal tone | “Hi [name], How are you?” |
| Email (formal) | Polite greeting, clear purpose, formal sign-off | “Dear Mr/Ms [name],” |
| Self-introduction | Name, age, family, hobbies, school | “Hello, my name is… I am 12 years old.” |
| Description | Adjectives, present tense, sensory detail | “My school is big and modern.” |
| Dialogue/conversation | Questions and answers, everyday phrases | “A: How are you? B: I am fine, thank you.” |
Checklist for Any Written Task
- Have I used the correct text type format? (greeting, body, closing)
- Have I answered all parts of the task?
- Have I used connectives to link my ideas?
- Have I checked spelling and grammar?
- Is my register appropriate (formal or informal)?
Speaking Skills
Speaking at Phase 1–2 involves using rehearsed phrases and basic vocabulary in conversations about familiar topics.
Tips for Speaking Tasks
- Prepare rehearsed phrases — learn standard greetings, introductions, and common questions by heart
- Speak clearly and slowly — it is better to be clear than fast. Pronunciation matters.
- Use what you know — stick to vocabulary and grammar you are confident with
- Respond to questions — listen carefully and answer with a full sentence, not just “yes” or “no”
- Ask questions too — a good conversation involves both asking and answering
Essential Phrases for Conversations
| Function | Example Phrases |
|---|---|
| Greeting | Hello / Good morning / How are you? |
| Introducing yourself | My name is… / I am [age] years old / I live in… |
| Giving opinions | I like… / I don’t like… / I think… / My favourite is… |
| Asking questions | What is your name? / How old are you? / Do you like…? |
| Thanking / Closing | Thank you / Goodbye / See you later |
Formal vs Informal Register
Register is the level of formality in your language. Choosing the right register depends on who you are writing or speaking to.
Comparing Registers
| Feature | Formal | Informal |
|---|---|---|
| Who for | Teachers, employers, strangers | Friends, family, classmates |
| Greeting | Dear Mr/Ms [surname] | Hi [first name] / Hey! |
| Tone | Polite, professional, respectful | Casual, friendly, relaxed |
| Vocabulary | Complete words, no slang | Abbreviations, colloquialisms |
| Closing | Yours sincerely / Yours faithfully | See you! / Love / Bye! |
When to Use Each Register
- Formal: letters to teachers, school applications, emails to adults you don’t know
- Informal: messages to friends, postcards, diary entries, conversations with classmates
- Neutral: school presentations, newspaper articles, general informational texts
Language Accuracy
Criterion D assesses how accurately you use grammar, spelling, and punctuation. At Phase 1–2, the focus is on getting simple structures correct.
Common Errors to Avoid
| Error Type | Wrong | Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Subject-verb agreement | “I is happy” | “I am happy” |
| Capital letters | “my name is tom” | “My name is Tom” |
| Punctuation | “i like dogs cats birds” | “I like dogs, cats, and birds.” |
| Spelling | “becuase” | “because” |
| Word order | “I football play” | “I play football” |
Proofreading Checklist
- Does every sentence start with a capital letter?
- Does every sentence end with a full stop, question mark, or exclamation mark?
- Do all names and places start with capital letters?
- Do the subject and verb agree (I am, she is, they are)?
- Have I checked spelling of key vocabulary words?
- Have I used connectives to link ideas?