Level B1 Reading and Viewing

The student work samples on this page are also available to download:

B1 Reading and Viewing proficiency levels and Achievement Standard

The students' performance in these tasks suggest that they are working within the range of Level B1 in Reading and Viewing. The assessing teacher will need to consider a range of student samples in order to determine whether each student is at the beginning of B1, consolidating B1 or at the B1 standard in Reading and Viewing.    

At beginning Level B1 students:   

  • show interest in print and recognise some environmental print including their name, can recognise and name some letters
  • show an interest in books and focus on illustrations
  • demonstrate reading-like behaviour such as holding a book, sitting and looking at a book, turning pages and looking at pictures watch and listen as texts are read aloud to them but may not join in
  • rely on peer or teacher support to complete structured activities.

At consolidating Level B1 students:   

  • show beginning understanding of the sound–symbol relationships of English
  • read some familiar words and phrases in context, and recognise, can name, and know the sounds some common letters and letter groups usually make
  • focus on illustrations and other non-print features when reading
  • retell a simple familiar story, and sequence a simple familiar process with sentences and pictures
  • show early understanding that texts are written for a variety of purposes
  • read a wide range of familiar, short, simple, repetitive, fictional and everyday texts, and complete simple, structured activities based on them
  • recognise that meaning is carried by intonation, and they listen for key words and for repetition of words and phrases in texts read aloud
  • use word lists and personal dictionaries to assist them to read new words.

At Level B1 Achievement Standard students:   

  • read short familiar texts, based on simple language structures and features, common vocabulary and familiar contexts
  • retell simply, predict likely outcomes, sequence ideas, and complete basic comprehension activities. These texts may be print or digital, including visual, multimodal and interactive.
  • show understanding of the basic purposes of texts, and choose texts appropriately
  • read and gather basic information from simple, accessible texts, with support
  • combine their basic knowledge of English letter–sound relationships, their developing oral and sight vocabulary, their beginning knowledge of the conventions of text organisation, and their emerging knowledge of English grammar as they read
  • use appropriate intonation and phrasing when reading aloud, showing an understanding of the text's meaning and the function of basic punctuation
  • show a beginning understanding of the purposes of text organisational features such as headings, labels, diagrams and contents pages.

Informative text - Reading activities on What’s My Job? (1)

Student information

The student is 11 and eight months old and has been in Australia for ten months. He is from Afghanistan and Dari is his home language. In Afghanistan, the student had three years of interrupted schooling and there was a gap of almost three years between his schooling in Afghanistan and his arrival in Australia. He has been attending an English language school for ten months in a Year 6 class.   

Task

The class had been learning about different occupations and jobs. The students had learned the vocabulary and read a variety of texts about different people and their work. Students had also delivered oral presentations to the class about the work done by people in different occupations. There are three parts to this reading activity. The first is a shared class reading of a book which describes different occupations. As a class, the students then match flashcards with descriptions of various occupations with the title of the occupation in the second activity. Finally, the students independently match the names of the occupations with descriptions of the role. In this reading task the teacher is assessing how well the student recognizes and gains meaning from short texts to demonstrate his understanding of the texts. She is observing the extent to which the student uses sight vocabulary of familiar topic-related words to comprehend texts, as well as how successfully the student can read and understand sentences that use a basic subject-verb-object pattern. The teacher is specifically interested in how well the student can:   

  • complete a simple task to demonstrate his comprehension of a text
  • sequence and recreate a text that had been cut up
  • use key words in understanding a text
  • independently read sentences about different occupations related to his community
  • read aloud in order to demonstrate his reading skills.

In the transcript, the words spoken by the student being assessed are in bold. The words spoken by other students and the teacher are in normal font.

  •            
  •            

Transcript

0:06-2:06

Okay children, we looked at this book this morning, now we're going to look at it this afternoon and you're going to try to do some reading from it, okay? What's the title of this book please? Have a look. What's the title? Ali?   

"My Job."   

It does say 'My Job'. Well done Ali, yeah.     

"What's My Job?"   

Oh.   

"What's My Job?" No, what you said was fine Ali, but the whole title is "What's My Job?" And the author's name is down the bottom, and the author's name is Wendy Blaxland. So she wrote the story and the story is going to be about this. What's My Job?  Okay, now you two boys have to share, share. Shah, you have this one yourself. Did I hear 'thank you'?     

[together] Oh, thank you Miss.   

Oh, I should think so. Okay, don't forget to let Naita look on too please, alright? Alright, let's turn into the first page.  Have a look at this Shah, this one here. Shah? This one. What can you see in the picture? What do you think this man up the top is with his white hat and his white coat on? And you should know Tom.   

Cook.   

A cook or a…?   

Baker.   

…a baker. And what about this lady in here please? Alireza?   

A dancer.   

A dancer. Oh, what about this person down the bottom? Have a look at him. Let this girl look please, both look. This one here. He works under the ground. Can you remember what we called him? It stated with an 'M', mmm.   

Mmm…   

Mine…   

Mine.   

Men.   

Oh, nearly right.   

Miner.   

Nearly right, he's a miner. Everyone say it.   

[together] Miner.   

Miner.

2:07-2:42

I'm, oh yeah, I'm, I'm a fireman.   

Farmer.   

I'm a farmer.   

See the farmer up here Ali, with his sheep?   

Can I read that?   

Yes, that's yours. Hold the book.   

I…   

J, j.   

I jump…   

Jog.   

…jog and wor…   

Work.   

…work. We are play…   

What's this thing here?   

Hm?   

What's in the picture? With a…?   

Ball. What's my job?   

Thank you.

What job would you like? Now I really want you to think about that because this book has told us about many jobs, but when you grow to be a man or a lady what would you like to do? Now I'm going to ask you, Ali? I know what you're going to say, but what is it?   

Soccer player.   

I thought so, you'd like to be a sports person. Right, now that book was all about the different people in our community and the jobs that they do, and here I've got some names of some of the people and we're going to try and read both parts of the sentences so that we can match them up so that we can put them together and it makes sense, alright?  Oh, you want to have a try? Okay, you can Ali, go.   

Ba…   

Bakes.   

Bake ba, bake, ba   

What do we bake?   

Bake…   

In the oven?   

Bakes…   

And you eat it for lunch.   

Mm.   

It's round and it's flat. B, b, b…   

B…   

Bread.   

Bread, and cakes.   

That's right, well done. So the last one, and now you've got to try and read the whole thing without Mrs Richmond helping you.   

A bread…   

Baker.   

…a baker. Baker…   

Bakes.   

Bake bread, bakes bread and…   

Cake.   

…cakes.   

Okay, Van I think Ali could hear you a little bit because you were trying to read it too, but that's okay, alright?

This sample of student work demonstrates that the student can:

  • Use a range of cues to support reading and viewing (VCEALL290)
  • Use some of the terminology of reading (VCEALL282)
  • Read sentences that use basic subject, verb and object patterns, where content and vocabulary are familiar (VCEALL283)
  • Identify common syllables and patterns within words (VCEALL288)
  • Read some familiar words and phrases (VCEALL286)
  • Understand the sequence of key words, phrases or ideas in a familiar text (VCEALL281)

Possible next steps for this student's learning

  • Identifying initial and final sounds through onset and rime to help decode new words (VCEALL288) 

Pathways and transitions considerations

A Year 6 student working within the range of Level B1 in any one language mode is not ready to transition to the English curriculum regardless of their proficiency in the other two language modes. This student will continue on Pathway B of the EAL curriculum in all language modes.   

Informative text - Reading activities on What’s My Job? (2)

Student information

The student is almost 11 years old and has been in Australia for about six months. Her first language is Vietnamese and she attended school for five years in Vietnam prior to coming to Australia. She has been attending an English language school for five and a half months.

Task

The class had been learning about different occupations and jobs. The students had learned the vocabulary and read a variety of texts about different people and their work. Students had also delivered oral presentations to the class about the work done by people in different occupations. There are three parts to this reading activity. The first is a shared class reading of a book which describes different occupations. As a class, the students then match flashcards with descriptions of various occupations with the title of the occupation in the second activity. Finally, the students independently match the names of the occupations with descriptions of the role. In this reading task the teacher is assessing how well the student recognises and gains meaning from short texts to demonstrate her understanding of the texts. She is observing the extent to which the student uses sight vocabulary of familiar topic-related words to comprehend texts, as well as how successfully the student can read and understand sentences that use a basic subject-verb-object pattern. The teacher is specifically interested in how well the student can:

  • complete a simple task to demonstrate her comprehension of a text
  • sequence and recreate a text that had been cut up
  • use key words in understanding a text
  • independently read sentences about different occupations related to her community
  • read aloud in order to demonstrate his reading skills.

In the transcript, the words spoken by the student being assessed are in bold. The words spoken by other students and the teacher are in normal font.

  •            
  •            

Transcript

0.06-2.06   

Okay children, we looked at this book this morning, now we're going to look at it this afternoon and you're going to try to do some reading from it, okay? What's the title of this book please? Have a look. What's the title? Ali?   

"My Job."   

It does say 'My Job'. Well done Ali, yeah.     

"What's My Job?"   

Oh.   

"What's My Job?" No, what you said was fine Ali, but the whole title is "What's My Job?" And the author's name is down the bottom, and the author's name is Wendy Blaxland. So she wrote the story and the story is going to be about this. What's My Job?  Okay, now you two boys have to share, share. Shah, you have this one yourself. Did I hear 'thank you'?     

[together] Oh, thank you Miss.   

Oh, I should think so. Okay, don't forget to let Naita look on too please, alright? Alright, let's turn into the first page.  Have a look at this Shah, this one here. Shah? This one. What can you see in the picture? What do you think this man up the top is with his white hat and his white coat on? And you should know Tom.   

Cook.   

A cook or a…?   

Baker.   

…a baker. And what about this lady in here please? Alireza?   

A dancer.   

A dancer. Oh, what about this person down the bottom? Have a look at him. Let this girl look please, both look. This one here. He works under the ground. Can you remember what we called him? It stated with an 'M', mmm.   

Mmm…   

Mine…   

Mine.   

Men.   

Oh, nearly right.   

Miner.   

Nearly right, he's a miner. Everyone say it.   

[together] Miner.   

Miner.

2.07-3.29

I am a cook. I move my hand and fist to music. What my job?   

Mm hm, turn over. What about you?     

A teacher.   

A teacher, and what about you Naita?   

Dancer.   

Huh?   

Dancing.   

A dancer? Right now that book was all about the different people in our community and the jobs that they do, and here I've got some names of some of the people and we're going to try and read both parts of the sentences so that we can match them up so that we can put them together and it makes sense, alright? Now your job is, you have to think about what these four people do and we're going to look here at the sentence and see if we can match it up with the name of the person in the community. So let's have a look at this one. Van?   

Make beautiful music.   

Makes beautiful music. Go and see, which do you think? Put it next to it so it makes a whole sentence, on the floor.  Now can you read the whole thing please?   

Musician make beautiful music.   

Absolutely. Lovely reading, thank you Van.

3.30-4.01

What's this one please?     

Before…   

A nurse look after sick people.   

Okay, what's this one, all of this word?   

Looks.   

Yeah, don't forget to say the sound on the end, will you, otherwise it doesn't sound right. Okay, yeah.   

A pilot flies flame.   

P, p, p, p.   

Planes.   

Planes. What's this one?     

Mechanic fixes your car.   

That's right, okay.

This sample of student work demonstrates that the student can:

  • Self-correct with guidance (VCEALL291)
  • Read some familiar words and phrases (VCEALL286)
  • Read sentences that use basic subject, verb and object patterns, where content and vocabulary are familiar (VCEALL283)
  • Understand the sequence of key words, phrases or ideas in a familiar text (VCEALL281)
  • Recognise the function of capital letters and full stops, and use them (VCEALL289)
  • Reread familiar texts to increase accuracy and fluency and to enhance understanding (VCEALL293)
  • Identify common syllables and patterns within words (VCEALL288)

Possible next steps for this student's learning

  • Practising reading through and pronouncing all the sounds in English words, especially consonant sounds that do not exist in her home language (VCEALL288) 
  • Re-reading familiar sentences to increase accuracy and fluency (VCEALL293)
  • Practising reading familiar vocabulary in different contexts, for example a simple fiction text with a jobs and occupations theme (VCEALC264)

Pathways and transitions considerations

A Year 6 student working within the range of Level B1 in any one language mode is not ready to transition to the English curriculum regardless of their proficiency in the other two language modes. This student will continue on Pathway B of the EAL curriculum in all language modes.

Imaginative text – Reading of Special Little Seahorse

Student information

The student was born in Iran and speaks Persian at home. They had age-equivalent schooling in Iran and came to Australia 4 months ago. They are in Year 5 and currently in a new arrivals program.

Task

The students recently participated in an excursion to the beach as part of a wider unit of work about the beach, in which they learned about sea creatures and the marine environment as well as beach and water activities. In the task, the student was asked to read an unseen narrative text, Special Little Seahorse, then retell and answer simple comprehension questions. The task was completed one-to-one in a familiar environment.  

The teacher is assessing the student’s ability to: 

  • use key words understand a simple text
  • read aloud in order to demonstrate their reading skills 
  • retell main events from a story in sequence
  • respond to a text by talking about what characters learned.

The words spoken by the student being assessed are in bold

Transcript

00:06 – 04:00  

Do you know which sea creature this one is?  

Yeah.  

What's this one?  

Sea creature for ... yeah.  

Yeah, what's the sea creature? Do you know the name of this one?  

No.  

No? This one is called a seahorse.  

Seahorse.  

Yeah, do you know what seahorses are?  

Yeah.  

Have you seen a seahorse before?  

In TV.  

On TV? Wow.  

Yes said father seahorse. Come on we will go over to the coral where the seahorse play…  where's the seahorse play. Father seahorse and little seahorse went over to the coral and her cr-, her is so shin- sh- shinny too. Shiny too.  

Yes, yeah.  

Oh dear said little horse. My cr- crown is not big and my crown is not sh-shiny. Little seahorse said father s-seahorse look at your especal tail. It is long and it is strong. Then little seahorse look at, at a spotty seahorse. The spotty seahorse is esplan-  especal sh-  she said and I am, I am especal too.   

The one seahorse loved to play in the coral and he going in the next to the coral he want to play. But he see one very cool seahorse.  

... and, and he want to play with ... mmm, cool seahorse. And he love… he says I'm not f- funny and good seahorse and he ... sh-, it is he or she?  

Mm-hmm.  

It is he or she?  

Looks like a she.  

She said, she said and after that she seed- she's tail is, it's long and ta- taily.  

Ah, so she had a very long tail.  

And she play with the cool seahorse.  

Uh-huh. And where's this book ... where is the setting? So where's this book? Is it at the park, or at the beach?  

It's in..  

It's in the sea.  

Oh, it's in the-  

Ocean.  

In the ocean. Great. Why did little seahorse think that spotty seahorse wouldn't want to play with her?  

Play with spotty seahorse.  

Hmm. Why do you think that spotty seahorse wouldn't want to play with her?  

It's think ... um, I’m, my tail, it's not good for play.  

Oh, I see. Yep. And what lesson did little seahorse learn?  

Learn...  

What lesson?  

Lesson. Your, your, your tail, it's long and ... taily.  

Your tail's long.  

Your tails  it's long and good.  

Yeah.  

... for swimming.  

Yeah.  

Inaudible   

Thank you.  

  

This sample of student work demonstrates that the student can:

  • Acquire some information from a small range of images (VCEALC266)
  • Respond to familiar and new content in texts (make connection between text and own experience) (VCEALA273)
  • Read sentences that use basic subject, verb and object patterns, where content and vocabulary are familiar (VCEALL283)
  • Read some familiar words and phrases (VCEALL286)
  • Identify common syllables and patterns within words (VCEALL288)
  • Self-correct with guidance (VCEALL291)
  • Understand a range of simple texts based on predictable language structures and vocabulary (VCEALC264)
  • Provide responses to texts (VCEALC268)
  • Understand the sequence of key words, phrases or ideas in a familiar text (VCEALL281)
  • Use key words to understand the main idea in short texts (VCEALC265)
  • Starting to make simple predictions or inferences about a text (VCEALC269)

Possible next steps for this student’s learning

  • Participate in shared reading, practising making simple predictions or inferences about a text (VCEALC269)
  • Continue to build a vocabulary that draws on words of interest, topic words and sight words (VCEALL287)
  • Build knowledge of common syllables and patterns within words and apply this knowledge when reading (VCEALL288)
  • Practise using capital letters and full stops when reading (VCEALL289)

Pathways and transitions considerations

A Year 5 student working within the range of Level B1 in any one language mode is not ready to transition to the English curriculum regardless of their proficiency in the other two language modes. This student will continue on Pathway B of the EAL curriculum in all language modes.


Persuasive text – Sequencing text Everyone Should Learn How to Swim

Student information

This student was born in China and speaks Chinese as their home language. They had age-equivalent schooling in Iran and have been in Australia for 5 months. They are in Year 5 and currently in their first term of a new arrivals program. 

Task

The students recently participated in an excursion to the beach as part of a wider unit of work about the beach, in which they learned about sea creatures and the marine environment as well as beach and water activities and water safety. In the task, the student was asked to read an unseen persuasive text, Everyone Should Learn How to Swim, then sort and sequence sentences to reconstruct the text. Two students worked together to complete the task in a familiar environment.   

The teacher is assessing the student’s ability to: 

  • use key words to locate information
  • read aloud in order to demonstrate their reading skills 
  • sequence ideas within a paragraph
  • use knowledge of persuasive genre to organise sentences into a whole text.


The words spoken by the student/s being assessed are in bold.

Transcript

0.00 -4.50 

(together) First is ... title.

Good ... and after the title?

(together) Introduction.

Good! ... and then we have?

(together) Series of arguments.

Good.

(together) And conclusion.

And the conclusion. We need to find the title.

Title.

This is the title.

What's the title?

(together) Everyone should learn how to swim.

Very good. The introduction…

Introduct...

... will tell us the three arguments that will be in our persuasive text.

This is the first one...

Very good. Can you find a sentence that has those three reasons?

Three reasons.

Here.

Do you want to read it for us, Jamie?

I beli- believe that everyone should learn how to swimming because it w- will ... will... will help to keep you safe. It is good for you ...

Health.

... health, and the- it is a fun activity to do.

Where are we going to put that one, Jamie?

This ...

Where does it go?

Um, here.

Now we need our ...?

(together) Series of arguments.

How many paragraphs are we going to have here?

(together) Three.

Three paragraphs. How are you going to find the first one?

Firstly ...

Is this argument finished?

Nope.

No 


No. If- I think if this ...


Can you read it for us, Jamie?

... so it is important to learn this ski- skill, as it co- could save your... leef.

Life.


So we have firstly, it will help to keep you safe. What was the second argument?

(together) It's good for your health.

Can you find the second argument? Okay. What was the third, or the last, argument?

Finally ...

Finally, it is a fun activity.

Now, we need to put these sentences into the arguments.

I think, I think ...

[crosstalk]

Finally ...

Finally, learning to swim can be a lot of ...

(together) Fun.

Can you find some examples of swimming being fun?

Is…is this ...?

Uh.

Can you read your sentence, Jamie?

There are many activities you can do with friends in the water, like surf- surfing, kayaking, and a watersports.

Okay.

Um-

Why did you choose this one?

Because this is about ... mm, the swimming is so fun.

Very good.

In Australia, many people drowned last year because they didn't know how to swim.

So this is an example that should go with one of our series of arguments. We have keeping safe, good for your health, and a lot of fun. Which paragraph does this belong to?

I think it's this, because when I read this…

What's this paragraph about, Jamie?

It's about swimming safe.

Being safe.

Being safe.

Does this example talk about why it's important to be safe?

Yes.

Because they didn't know how to swim.

We need to find the conclusion.

Conclusion ... is this.

What do you think?

Is this.

Why did you choose that one, Jamie?

Because it's in clusion.

It has “in conclusion”.

This sample of student work demonstrates that the student can:

  • Participate in simple group activities on shared texts, with some support (VCEALC270)
  • Understand the purpose and basic organisational features of simple text types (VCEALL280)
  • Use some of the terminology of reading (VCEALL282)
  • Read sentences that use basic subject, verb and object patterns, where content and vocabulary are familiar (VCEALL283)
  • Read some familiar words and phrases (VCEALL286)
  • Build a vocabulary that draws on words of interest, topic words and sight words (VCEALL287)
  • Understand the purpose and basic organisational features of simple text types (VCEALL280)
  • Understand the sequence of key words, phrases or ideas in a familiar text (VCEALL281)
  • Use knowledge of base words to read new forms - attempting to read new forms of familiar words, and self-correcting using knowledge of base words and common morphemes, such as ‘walk, walked, walks’ (VCEALL285)
  • Understand a range of simple texts based on predictable language structures and vocabulary - demonstrating understanding of simple factual or fictional texts by performing a task (VCEALC264)
  • Provide responses to texts (VCEALC268)
  • Understand the purpose and basic organisational features of simple text types (VCEALL280)

Possible next steps for this student’s learning

  • Continue to read a range of short texts and use key words to understand and talk about the main ideas (VCEALC265)
  • Continue to participate in simple group activities on shared texts, with some support, and practise constructing brief comments or responses to questions (VCEALC270)
  • Identify and compare differences between text types (VCEALL279)
  • Continue to build independence in reading familiar texts, and ability to understand the sequence of key words, phrases or ideas (VCEALL281)
  • Continue to build vocabulary drawing on words of interest, topic words and sight words (VCEALL287)

Pathways and transitions considerations

A Year 5 student working within the range of Level B1 in any one language mode is not ready to transition to the English curriculum regardless of their proficiency in the other two language modes. This student will continue on Pathway B of the EAL curriculum in all language modes.


Related pages

Student work samples: Level B1 Speaking and Listening
Student work samples: Level B1 Writing
Student work samples: Level B2 Reading and Viewing
Student work samples: Level BL Reading and Viewing