Where Arabic sits inside Cambridge Lower Secondary
On Wednesday, my Year 7s were buzzing about family words—then stalled when I asked for a short self-introduction that hit all four skills over the week. That’s the fit issue I bump into with Cambridge Lower Secondary Arabic: the framework pushes steady growth in listening, speaking, reading, and writing, plus vocabulary and grammar knowledge, not just themed word hunts. Stages 7–9 expect learners to move beyond transliteration by Stage 7’s end, apply patterns (sound plurals, basic verb conjugations), and start shaping short, purposeful texts.
Plenty of “on-topic” sets cover school, food, or travel, but they wobble when they mix dialect with Modern Standard Arabic, skip right-to-left layout cues, or set writing targets that are too long too soon. I keep a simple alignment map—skills, text types, and grammar per stage—and park resources that don’t match. If you want a sense of what the broader world-languages community is sharing, the community library is useful as a quick scan, but I still check each piece against my stage notes.