Grade 1 Language Art Curriculum
Family-facing version of the grade 1 Language Arts curriculum
Quarterly Overview of Grade 1 Language Arts
The objectives and outcomes for each unit are common across FCPS and based on the Virginia Standards of Learning. Below is the organized pacing by quarter.
Unit Themes
FCPS has adopted Benchmark Advance for the Language Arts basal resource. Benchmark Advance provides 9 common knowledge-building units across K-6. The units integrate social studies, science, and literary topics. There are multiple text sets per topic, including fiction and nonfiction.
Units and Details
This unit helps to build a community of readers and writers, establish routines, and build foundational skills.
Students will understand:
- Every living thing has a life cycle in which it grows and changes.
- Many stories include animal characters that grow and change.
Students will be able to:
- Match spoken words to written words.
- Recognize directionality with a return sweep.
- Understand punctuation (periods, exclamation marks, question marks) and text features like italics.
- Recognize and produce rhymes.
- Categorize, blend, segment, and manipulate phonemes.
- Learn the short 'a', 'i', and 'o' sounds; 's' as /z/; digraph 'ck' as /k/; plural nouns (-s); and double final consonants.
- Practice phrasing, intonation, and expression while reading.
- Ask questions and create mental images.
- Reread to clarify or confirm understanding.
- Identify the main topic and retell key details.
- Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information.
- Retell key story details and describe major story events using key details.
- Identify similarities and differences between two texts on the same topic.
- Compare and contrast the adventures and experiences of characters.
- Identify real-life connections between words and their use.
- Sort words into categories to demonstrate understanding.
- Write personal responses.
- Use common and proper nouns.
- Use verbs to convey a sense of past, present, and future.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- Stories of all kinds, including fairy tales, fables, fantasies, and realistic fiction, have characters who face challenges.
- Stories can teach us that families and communities work best when people make responsible choices and help one another.
Students will be able to:
- Understand punctuation (periods, question marks, exclamation marks) and quotation marks.
- Recognize uppercase letters.
- Recognize and produce rhyming words and alliteration.
- Blend, segment, categorize, and manipulate phonemes.
- Learn the short 'e' and 'u' sounds; possessive nouns; inflectional ending -s; l-blends; alphabetical order; short 'a', 'i', and 'o' sounds; 's' as /z/; digraph 'ck' as /k/; plural nouns (-s); and double final consonants.
- Practice phrasing, expression, and self-correcting while reading.
- Draw inferences and determine text importance.
- Reread to understand the text.
- Describe characters, settings, and major events in a story.
- Use illustrations and details to describe characters, settings, or events.
- Compare and contrast the adventures and experiences of characters.
- Distinguish shades of meaning among verbs.
- Write narrative texts.
- Use singular and plural nouns with matching verbs in basic sentences.
- Use articles and demonstratives.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- When people exhibit the qualities of good citizenship, communities become safer and more enjoyable.
- Responsible citizens follow laws and principles that include respect for the rights, opinions, and property of others.
Students will be able to:
- Understand end punctuation and uppercase letters.
- Categorize, blend, substitute, delete, segment, and manipulate phonemes.
- Recognize and produce rhyming words.
- Learn r-blends, s-blends, l-blends, abbreviations, contractions, final consonant blends, short vowels, and inflectional endings (-ed).
- Practice pitch, intonation, pausing, expression, self-correcting, and recognizing features of a sentence while reading.
- Make connections and summarize and synthesize information.
- Read more slowly and think about words to clarify understanding.
- Use text features, like the table of contents, to locate key facts or information.
- Identify the reasons an author gives to support points.
- Answer questions about relevant details using photographs and identify relevant details in the text.
- Identify and use context clues.
- Write informative texts.
- Use personal, possessive, and indefinite pronouns.
- Ensure noun-verb agreement with singular and plural nouns/pronouns.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- Realistic stories tell about characters, settings, and events that could exist. Fantasy stories include elements that could not happen in real life.
- Reading stories from different points of view allows us to learn about other people’s perspectives.
Students will be able to:
- Understand punctuation in context, including dashes, commas, quotation marks, periods, exclamation marks, and question marks.
- Recognize uppercase letters.
- Identify, categorize, blend, substitute, add, segment, and manipulate phonemes.
- Learn consonant digraphs (th, sh, ng, ch, tch, wh), closed syllables, three-letter blends, plural ending -es, inflectional ending -ing, and short vowels.
- Practice self-correction, rate (pausing), and expression while reading.
- Ask questions and create mental images.
- Read out loud to support comprehension.
- Identify who is telling the story and ask and answer questions about key details.
- Describe characters, settings, and major events using key details.
- Identify words and phrases that appeal to the senses.
- Identify root words and their inflectional forms.
- Define words by category and key attributes.
- Use context as a clue to word meaning.
- Write opinion texts.
- Use adjectives and commas in dates and to separate words in a series.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- The use of technology can help people work more quickly and efficiently.
- People create technology to solve problems and improve the way people live and do work.
Students will be able to:
- Understand end punctuation, return sweep directionality, commas in context, and uppercase letters.
- Categorize, blend, substitute, add, delete, segment, and manipulate phonemes.
- Learn long 'a' and 'o' sounds (final -e); contractions with ’ll, ’re, and “not”; soft 'c' and 'g'; short vowels; consonant blends and digraphs.
- Practice self-correcting, pausing, expression, rate, and mood while reading.
- Draw inferences and determine text importance.
- Stop and think about the author’s purpose.
- Know and use text features to locate key facts or information.
- Use illustrations and details to describe key ideas.
- Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information in a text.
- Describe characters, settings, and major events in a story, and draw inferences.
- Identify the main topic and retell key details.
- Sort words into categories and distinguish shades of meaning among verbs.
- Write explanatory texts.
- Use different sentence types and prepositions.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- Stories, such as fables, folktales, and realistic fiction, can teach the reader a moral or lesson.
- Teamwork can help people solve problems that they may not have been able to solve on their own.
Students will be able to:
- Understand punctuation in context (dashes, colons, quotation marks) and general punctuation (periods, question marks, exclamation points).
- Recognize return sweep directionality and uppercase letters.
- Categorize, blend, substitute, add, segment, and manipulate phonemes.
- Learn long 'i', 'u', 'e', and 'a' sounds (final -e); VCe syllables; long 'a' vowel teams; inflectional endings (drop final -e, double final consonant); and short vowels.
- Practice self-correcting, pausing, rate, phrasing, and expression while reading.
- Make connections and summarize and synthesize information.
- Confirm or correct word recognition and understanding.
- Describe characters, settings, and major events using key details.
- Understand the central message of a text.
- Compare and contrast the adventures and experiences of characters.
- Use context and affixes as clues to word meaning.
- Write opinion texts.
- Produce simple and compound sentences.
- Use frequently occurring conjunctions.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- Knowledge of the past is important to understand the present and plan for the future.
- People use tools, such as timelines and maps, to help organize and understand events of the past.
Students will be able to:
- Understand literary elements like onomatopoeia and sound words.
- Recognize end punctuation (periods, question marks, exclamation points), dashes, ellipses, hyphens, and text features like italics.
- Isolate, categorize, and manipulate phonemes.
- Add and substitute syllables in compound words.
- Segment phonemes and syllables.
- Learn long 'o', 'e', 'i', and 'a' spellings; alphabetical order to two letters; prefixes 'un-' and 're-'; open syllables; and final 'e' long vowel sound-spellings.
- Practice rate, pausing, and self-correcting while reading.
- Apply cumulative metacognitive strategies.
- Reread to clarify or confirm understanding and read more slowly while thinking about the words.
- Identify the main topic and retell key details.
- Use text features like captions, glossaries, and timelines to locate information.
- Distinguish between information in pictures and text.
- Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information.
- Use context clues to determine or clarify the meaning of words and phrases.
- Write how-to process texts.
- Use possessive nouns and ensure noun-verb agreement with singular and plural nouns.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- By observing and exploring, we develop knowledge about Earth, the sun, the moon, and the stars.
- In many cultures, people tell stories to explain what they observe in the night sky.
Students will be able to:
- Understand punctuation in context, including commas and quotation marks, as well as end punctuation (periods, question marks, exclamation points), return sweep, and uppercase letters.
- Identify, blend, segment, and manipulate phonemes.
- Delete syllables in compound words and segment syllables.
- Learn r-controlled vowels (/är/, /ôr/, /ûr/), compound words, approximate sounds (schwa), r-controlled syllables, and long vowel sound-spellings.
- Practice rate, intonation, expression, and self-correcting while reading.
- Apply cumulative metacognitive strategies.
- Confirm or correct word understanding, read out loud to support comprehension, and stop to think about the author’s purpose.
- Describe characters, settings, and major events using key details.
- Distinguish between information in pictures and text and explain differences between stories and informational text.
- Use illustrations and details to describe key ideas.
- Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or pieces of information.
- Identify the main topic and retell key details.
- Understand the central message of a text.
- Distinguish shades of meaning among verbs and use context as a clue to word meaning.
- Write opinion texts.
- Use pronouns and past-, present-, and future-tense verbs of being.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions.
- State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Students will understand:
- The exchange of goods and services is an essential part of living in a community.
- There are many different ways to create goods and provide services.
Students will be able to:
- Understand punctuation, including commas and ending marks, and capitalization of the first word. Recognize reading directionality (left to right, top to bottom, return sweep).
- Categorize, blend, isolate, segment, and manipulate phonemes. Substitute parts of blends.
- Learn vowel diphthong sound-spellings (ou, ow, oi, oy), comparative inflectional endings (-er, -est), suffix -ly, vowel sound-spellings (oo), vowel team syllables, r-controlled vowel sound-spellings, and long-vowel sound-spellings.
- Practice rate, pausing, phrasing, inflection, intonation, stress, and self-correcting while reading.
- Apply cumulative metacognitive strategies. Reread to clarify or confirm understanding, gain information from text and pictures, and read slowly while thinking about the words.
- Describe the connection between two individuals, events, ideas, or information. Identify the reasons an author gives to support points. Identify the main topic and retell key details.
- Identify similarities and differences between two opinion texts.
- Use illustrations and details to describe characters, setting, or events. Retell stories and demonstrate understanding of the central message.
- Use context as a clue to determine word meaning. Identify root words and their inflectional forms.
- Write informative texts, such as research reports.
- Use commas and adjectives.
- Engage effectively in whole-class and peer discussions. State, clarify, and support ideas in a constructive conversation.
Virginia Department of Education Resources
Assessments
Student assessments are part of the teaching and learning process.
- Teachers give assessments to students on an ongoing basis to
- Check for understanding
- Gather information about students' knowledge or skills.
- Assessments provide information about a child's development of knowledge and skills that can help families and teachers better plan for next steps in instruction.
For testing questions or additional information about how schools and teachers use test results to support student success, families can contact their children's schools.
In Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS), first grade tests focus on basic literacy and numeracy development.