National Curriculum KS1 Y1: Vocabulary, Grammar and Punctuation

Statutory requirements

Pupils should be taught to:

  • develop their understanding of the concepts set out in English Appendix 2 by:
    • leaving spaces between words
    • joining words and joining clauses using and
    • beginning to punctuate sentences using a capital letter and a full stop, question mark or exclamation mark
    • using a capital letter for names of people, places, the days of the week, and the personal pronoun I
    • learning the grammar for year 1 in English Appendix 2 [see the table below on this page]
  • use the grammatical terminology in English Appendix 2 [see the table below on this page] in discussing their writing.
Detail of content to be introduced
Word Regular plural noun suffixes –s or –es [for example, dog, dogs; wish, wishes], including the effects of these suffixes on the meaning of the noun.
Suffixes that can be added to verbs where no change is needed in the spelling of root words (e.g. helping, helped, helper).
How the prefix un– changes the meaning of verbs and adjectives [negation, for example, unkind, or undoing: untie the boat].
Sentence How words can combine to make sentences.
Joining words and joining clauses using and.
Text Sequencing sentences to form short narratives.
Punctuation Separation of words with spaces.
Introduction to capital letters, full stops, question marks and exclamation marks to demarcate sentences.
Capital letters for names and for the personal pronoun I.
Terminology for pupils letter, capital letter, word, singular, plural, sentence, punctuation, full stop, question mark, exclamation mark.

Notes and guidance (non-statutory)

Pupils should be taught to recognise sentence boundaries in spoken sentences and to use the vocabulary listed in English Appendix 2 (‘Terminology for pupils’) [see the table above on this page] when their writing is discussed.

Pupils should begin to use some of the distinctive features of Standard English in their writing. ‘Standard English’ is defined in the Glossary.

Welcome!

Englicious is totally free for everyone to use!

But in exchange, we ask that you register for an account on our site.

If you’ve already registered, you can log in straight away.

Since this is your first visit today, you can see this page by clicking the button below.

CLOSE

Englicious (C) Survey of English Usage, UCL, 2012-21 | Supported by the AHRC and EPSRC. | Privacy | Cookies