How can the literacy progression be used?
The National Literacy Learning Progression can be used at a whole school, team or individual teacher level. However, the progression provides maximum student learning benefits when used as part of a whole-school strategy that involves professional learning …
How can the literacy progression be used? | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
How is the literacy progression structured?
Elements and sub-elements The National Literacy Learning Progression has three elements that reflect aspects of literacy development necessary for successful learners of the F–10 Australian Curriculum and in everyday life. The three elements, which align …
How is the literacy progression structured? | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
PuN4
uses commas in lists of nouns (add the sugar, lemon, water and juice) uses apostrophes for regular single possessives (girl’s) capitalises key events, geographic names, titles (Easter, Sydney, Ms)
PuN4 | Punctuation | Writing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
PKW4
Phonic knowledge says the most common phoneme for all single-letter graphemes writes/selects corresponding graphemes for all common phonemes blends phonemes for all common, single-letter graphemes to read VC and CVC words and applies this knowledge …
PKW4 | Phonic knowledge and word recognition | Reading and viewing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
HwK4
correctly forms all letters uses spaces between handwritten words positions letters and words on a line demonstrates keyboarding skills by typing short letter clusters and short common words as single units (er, ing, the, my) types using spaces …
HwK4 | Handwriting and keyboarding | Writing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
PKW5
Phonic knowledge gives examples of how a phoneme can be represented by more than one letter or letter combination (c, ck) says short and long vowel sounds for letters a, e, i, o, u reads single-syllable words with common double letters (ss – fuss, …
PKW5 | Phonic knowledge and word recognition | Reading and viewing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
PKW3
Phonic knowledge says the most common phoneme for taught, single-letter graphemes (b, a, m) and applies knowledge when reading decodable texts blends phonemes of taught graphemes to decode VC (at) and CVC (bat) words and applies this knowledge when …
PKW3 | Phonic knowledge and word recognition | Reading and viewing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
PKW7
Phonic knowledge reads CCVCC words (trust), CCCVC words (scrap), CCCVCC words (thrust) and applies when reading continuous texts reads words with r-controlled vowel combinations ar, er, or, ur, ir and writes words accordingly and applies when reading …
PKW7 | Phonic knowledge and word recognition | Reading and viewing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources
GrA3
Whole text level sequences sentences to reflect a logical flow of ideas uses common cohesive devices such as simple pronoun reference when the referent is close to the pronoun (I have a bird. It can talk.) uses basic text connectives repetitively …
GrA3 | Grammar | Writing | National Literacy Learning Progression | National Literacy and Numeracy Learning Progressions | Resources