National Curriculum
79 lessons across 12 units
Asking and answering intonation questions about cultural events
Describing francophone musicians using être and adjectives
Reading a short French poem — "Sept Couleurs Magiques"
Reading a short text about the French Revolution using present and perfect tenses
Reading and describing life in Montreal — habitual vs one-off past
Talking about celebrations and festivals using 'on' in the present tense
Talking about environmental problems and solutions
Describing your family using avoir and être
Plural family — numbers, plural nouns, plural avoir and être
Ordering food in a French restaurant or café
Reading a French menu
Talking about food and drink you like
Giving opinions with reasons (parce que / car)
Plural present-tense verbs to talk about what people do
Saying what you want, can and must do using modal verbs
Sports and physical activities in French
Talking about free time and hobbies you do regularly
Talking about future plans using aller + infinitive
Talking about hobbies using faire
Talking about hobbies using regular present-tense verbs
Talking about healthy and unhealthy lifestyles
Talking about parts of the body and saying what hurts
-RE verbs in the present + mettre / remettre
Perfect tense with être for verbs of movement
Saying where you go using à and en with countries and places
Saying you never do something — ne … jamais
Talking about a past holiday using the perfect tense
Using connaître and savoir to talk about people and places you know
Where you went on holiday — places and prepositions
Describing Paris and Nice — adjective placement
Describing your local area and what there is to do
Giving and asking for directions
Saying where you and other people go using plural aller
Talking about places you go using aller
Using transport: trains, buses and the métro
Talking about social media and technology in your life
Asking and answering inversion questions about school life
Common -RE and -IR present-tense verbs at Y7 level
Talking about your school day
Asking questions using est-ce que and intonation
Comparing things using plus / moins / aussi … que
Conjugating regular -ER verbs in the present tense
Days of the week, months and dates in French
Definite articles le, la, l', les
Describing daily routines using the reflexive pronoun se
Describing what something was like in the past with c'était / il y avait
Describing what you wear — clothes and colours
Describing yourself with adjectives that agree in gender and number
Forming the perfect tense of regular -ER verbs with avoir
French phonics: silent letters, nasal sounds, accents
Giving extended opinions with reasons and justifications
Giving simple opinions: j'aime / je n'aime pas / j'adore / je déteste
Greetings and saying hello in French
Introducing yourself: name, age, where you live
Listening to a short French conversation and answering questions
Listening to authentic French audio and answering detailed questions
Listening to extended French passages and noting key information
Numbers 0–60 in French
Numbers 60+ and dates in French
Recapping French phonics, alphabet, gender and noun rules from Y7
Saying what you don't do using ne … pas
Talking about past habitual events using the imperfect tense
Talking about the weather in French
Talking about your belongings using avoir and indefinite articles
Talking about your daily life as a refugee using reflexive pronouns me and te
Talking about your daily routine
The simple future tense of regular verbs
Translating short paragraphs between English and French
Translating short paragraphs in both directions accurately
Translating short sentences between English and French
Using the perfect and imperfect tenses together
Using three tenses in a single piece of writing
Writing a postcard or short blog post from holiday
Writing a short personal description in French
Future career plans using aller + infinitive and negation
Talking about jobs using avoir and être, with feminine job nouns
Talking about why you want a job using modals + infinitive and -ment adverbs
Talking about work experience using plural modal verbs
Using il faut and il ne faut pas to say what you must and must not do