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ICSE Class 10 Modern Foreign Languages Group 1 Syllabus 2026-27



ICSE CLASS 10 — MODERN FOREIGN LANGUAGES (Group I)

Complete Study Guide 2026-27


Board: CISCE | Exam Year: 2028 | Theory: 80 Marks | Internal Assessment: 20 Marks


Exam Structure — All Languages

Component

Marks

Theory (Written Paper — 3 hours)

80

Internal Assessment

20

TOTAL

100


SECTION A: GENERAL MFL GROUP I

Chinese (25), Tibetan (15), Modern Armenian (23), Thai (38), Portuguese (43)

Note: Candidates opting for a Modern Foreign Language as a Second Language in Group I cannot opt for a Modern Foreign Language in Group II. Question Papers will be set in Modern Foreign Languages on request. The rubric for all the Modern Foreign Languages will be the same.


Aims

  1. To develop and integrate the use of the four language skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing.

  2. To use the language effectively and appropriately on topics of everyday life situations.

  3. To develop an interest in the appreciation of the language.

  4. To develop an intercultural awareness.

  5. To enhance the ability of the candidates to express their ideas and feelings in their own words and for them to understand the use of correct language.

  6. To appreciate the language as an effective means of communication.

  7. To understand language when spoken at normal conversational speed in everyday life situations.

  8. To understand the basic structural patterns of the language, vocabulary and constructions.


Theory Syllabus — 80 Marks (3 hours)


1. Composition Candidates will be required to write, in the language, one short composition which may include short explanations, directions, descriptions or narratives. There will be a choice of subjects which will be varied and may be suggested by language or other stimuli such as pictures or objects.

2. Letter Candidates will be required to write a letter from a choice of either a formal or an informal letter. Suggestions may be given. The layout of the letter with address, introduction, conclusion, etc., will form part of the assessment.

3. Comprehension An unseen passage of about 150 words will be given in the language. Questions based on the given passage will be set, to be answered in the language, so as to test the candidates' understanding of the content of the passage.

4. Grammar This will consist of tests in vocabulary, syntax and idiom, e.g., synthesis in sentence construction, formation of sentences in correctly embodying given words or forms. The question will not require detailed knowledge of grammatical definitions.

5. Translation and/or Dialogue Writing

  • One short passage will be set for translation from the language into English.

  • One passage will be set for translation from English into the language.

  • Dialogue writing (around 150 words) based on situations faced in everyday life. Hints may be given.

Note: No textbooks are prescribed.

Note: The Class X ICSE examination paper will be set on the entire syllabus prescribed for the subject. The Class IX internal examination is to be conducted on the portion of this syllabus that is covered during the academic year. CISCE has not prescribed bifurcation of the syllabus for this subject.


Annexes — Communication Skills


Communication (oral and written) skills that can be covered from any book used for teaching:

1. Myself

  • Self, Family and Friends

  • Important Events

  • Interests and Hobbies

  • Home and Locality

  • Daily Routine

  • School

2. Holiday Time and Travel

  • Travel, Transport and Tourism

  • Accommodation

  • Restaurant

  • Directions

  • Holiday Activities

  • Services

3. Work and Lifestyle

  • Home Life

  • Everyday Living and Health

  • Work Experience

  • Leisure

  • Shopping

  • The Environment


Internal Assessment — 20 Marks


Schools will prepare, conduct and record assessments of the Listening, Speaking and Creative Writing Skills of candidates as follows:

  • Class IX: Three assessments in the course of the year

  • Class X: Two assessments in the course of the year


Pattern of Assessment

a) Listening Skills A passage of about 300 words is read aloud by the examiner twice at normal reading speed (about 110 words a minute). Candidates may make brief notes during the readings. They then answer an objective type test based on the passage, on the paper provided.

b) Speaking Skills Each candidate is required to make an oral presentation for about two minutes, which will be followed by a discussion on the subject with the examiners, for about three minutes. Subjects for presentation may include narrating an experience, providing a description, giving directions, expressing an opinion, giving a report, relating an anecdote or commenting on a current event. A candidate may refer to brief notes in the course of the presentation but reading or excessive dependence on notes will be penalised. It is recommended that candidates be given an hour for preparation of their subject for presentation and that they be given a choice of subject, on a common paper.

c) Creative Writing Skills Each candidate is required to write short compositions based on the suggested assignments.


Suggested Assignments for Class X

Aural: Listening to a conversation/talk/reading of a short passage and then writing down the relevant or main points in the specified number of words and answering the given questions.

Oral: Prepared speech/declamation; impromptu speech/debate/discussion; report/interview; elocution; role-play/general conversation on selected topics.

Creative Writing: Students are to write short compositions, the stimuli may be:

  • A piece of recorded music

  • A series of recorded sounds

  • A picture/photograph

  • An opening sentence or phrase

  • A newspaper/magazine clipping or report

  • One piece of factual writing which should be informative or argumentative

  • One piece of expressive writing which is descriptive and imaginative

  • Preparation of film/book review

It is also suggested that students be made aware of contemporary forms of written communication, such as fax, memo, etc.


Evaluation

The assessment will be conducted jointly by the subject teacher and the external examiner who will each assess the candidate. The External Examiner may be a teacher nominated by the Head of the School who could be from the faculty but not teaching the language in the section/class. For example, a teacher of the language of Class VIII may be deputed to be an External Examiner for Class X Language projects.

Evaluator

Marks

Subject Teacher (Internal Examiner)

10 marks

External Examiner

10 marks

Total

20 marks

The total marks obtained out of 20 are distributed as follows: Listening Skills: 5 marks; Speaking Skills: 5 marks; Creative Writing: 10 marks.

The total marks obtained out of 20 are to be sent to CISCE by the Head of the School via the CAREERS portal. Schools are required to maintain a record of all assessments conducted in Listening, Speaking and Creative Writing Skills for candidates of Class X, including copies of assessment tests, topics for presentation and marks awarded. This record will be maintained for a period of up to 2 months after the declaration of the results of ICSE examinations.


Internal Assessment Marking Criteria


Creative Writing — Class X

Grade

Content / Analysis of Idea, Thought / Feeling

Expression / Effective Expression of Idea

Structure / Organisation of Material

Vocabulary / Use of Words, Phrases

Originality / Imaginative / Innovative

Marks

I

The candidate analyses the ideas, feelings and experiences effectively. Reasoning is logical and effective.

The candidate expresses the ideas, thoughts and feelings effectively.

The work is very well structured with an introduction, body and conclusion, paragraphing and appropriate sentence construction.

The use of vocabulary exhibits a high level of competence in handling language.

The work is imaginative, interesting and engrossing.

4

II

The candidate analyses the ideas, feelings and experiences with well-defined explanations; reasoning is logical and persuasive.

The candidate expresses the ideas, thoughts and feelings well and with clarity.

The work is very well structured with some sense of conclusion and of paragraph lengths.

The vocabulary exhibits competence of word usage; correctness of grammar and spelling.

The candidate's work is quite interesting and engrossing.

3

III

The candidate analyses the ideas, feelings and experiences with a fair degree of detail and explanation. Reasoning is fairly logical and persuasive.

The candidate expresses the ideas, thoughts and feelings fairly well and with a fair degree of clarity.

The work is fairly well structured; candidate follows simple paragraphing.

The candidate uses straightforward vocabulary and a fairly good pattern of spellings.

The candidate demonstrates the ability to sustain the interest of the reader.

2

IV

The candidate attempts to analyse ideas, feelings and experiences with simple explanation and detail. Reasoning and arguments are not very convincing.

The candidate expresses the ideas, thoughts and feelings intelligibly and in simple language.

The work shows some understanding of paragraphing and structure.

The candidate's vocabulary is limited and the spelling, punctuation and grammar is sometimes poor.

The candidate is, to some extent, able to sustain the interest of the reader.

1

V

The candidate attempts a basic analysis of ideas, feelings and experiences with few simple explanations and few details. Is unable to present proper arguments.

The candidate is unable to express the ideas, thoughts and feelings; uses simple language and work is not very intelligible.

The candidate does not display an understanding of structure and paragraphing.

There is consistent weakness in spelling, punctuation and grammar.

The candidate is unable to sustain the interest of the reader.

0


Preparation Tips — General MFL Group I


Composition:

  • Practise writing short compositions from varied stimuli — pictures, directions, descriptions, narratives

  • Structure every composition clearly: introduction, body, conclusion

  • Use a varied range of vocabulary; avoid repeating the same words

  • No word limit is specified — aim for a well-developed, complete response

Letter:

  • This is different from Group II — you must know BOTH formal and informal letter formats

  • Memorise layout: address, date, salutation, body, closing

  • Formal letters require formal register throughout — no informal phrases

  • Informal letters allow a conversational tone but must still follow the correct layout

  • Layout is explicitly part of the assessment

Comprehension:

  • Practise reading unseen passages and identifying key ideas

  • Answer in the target language — do not translate mechanically

  • Identify the main idea first, then answer detail questions

Grammar:

  • Focus on correct usage — no grammatical terms required

  • Practise sentence formation, idioms, and synthesis exercises

  • Study vocabulary by topic: travel, health, school, environment, etc.

Translation and Dialogue Writing:

  • Practise translation in BOTH directions: language into English, and English into the language

  • Translate meaning and sense — not word-for-word

  • For Dialogue Writing (150 words): practise everyday situational conversations — shopping, restaurant, directions, health, school

  • Hints may be given in the exam — read them carefully before writing

Internal Assessment — Class X (2 assessments only):

  • Speaking: practise a 2-minute oral presentation followed by 3-minute discussion

  • Prepare presentations on: narrating an experience, providing a description, giving directions, expressing an opinion, giving a report, relating an anecdote, commenting on a current event

  • You may use brief notes — but excessive reading from notes will be penalised

  • Creative Writing: practise writing from all stimuli types listed in the suggested assignments

  • Listening: a passage of 300 words will be read aloud twice — take brief notes during both readings; focus on main idea and key points


FAQs — General MFL Group I


Q1. How long is the theory paper? 3 hours for 80 marks.

Q2. Are textbooks prescribed? No. The syllabus explicitly states: "No textbooks are prescribed."

Q3. What is the difference between Group I and Group II for this general MFL section? Group I has 5 theory components including two-way Translation and Dialogue Writing. Group II has Translation in one direction only and no Dialogue Writing. Group I internal assessment includes Creative Writing (10M); Group II does not. Group I listening uses a passage read aloud by the examiner; Group II uses audio clips played on a device.

Q4. How many internal assessments are there in Class X for Group I? Two assessments in the course of the year. This is fewer than Group II (which has four).

Q5. How is the 20-mark internal assessment split in Group I? Listening Skills: 5 marks; Speaking Skills: 5 marks; Creative Writing: 10 marks. Total: 20 marks.

Q6. Is translation from English into the foreign language required? Yes — Group I explicitly requires translation from English into the language, in addition to translation from the language into English. Group II only requires translation from the language into English.

Q7. What is Dialogue Writing and how long should it be? Dialogue Writing is a written conversation of around 150 words based on a situation faced in everyday life. Hints may be given in the exam. It is part of Component 5 alongside translation.

Q8. How is the Speaking assessment conducted in Group I? Each candidate makes a 2-minute oral presentation on a chosen subject, followed by a 3-4 minute discussion with the examiners. Candidates are given about 1 hour for preparation and a choice of subject.

Q9. How is the Listening assessment conducted in Group I? A passage of about 300 words is read aloud by the examiner twice at normal reading speed (approximately 110 words per minute). Candidates may make brief notes, then answer an objective type test.

Q10. Who evaluates the internal assessment? Both the Subject Teacher (10 marks) and an External Examiner (10 marks), assessed jointly. The External Examiner is a teacher nominated by the Head of School, not teaching the language in that class/section.


SECTION B: FRENCH (27) — Group I


Note: The French language syllabus remains the same for both Group I and Group II. Subject code under Group I is 27. CEFR Level: A2.

Note: Candidates opting for a Modern Foreign Language as a Second Language in Group I cannot opt for a Modern Foreign Language in Group II.

Aims

  1. To equip learners with basic competencies in the four language skills: reading, writing, listening and speaking.

  2. To use the language effectively and appropriately on topics of everyday life situations.

  3. To develop an intercultural awareness and appreciation of the global diversity of languages.

  4. To understand the basic structural patterns of the language, vocabulary and constructions.


Overview of Language Competencies at A2 Level

Skill

Competencies

Reading Comprehension

Understands texts on familiar topics such as news articles, personal letters, and brochures. Extracts key ideas and information by analysing magazine articles and blog posts. Demonstrates comprehension of stories/simple articles/blogs.

Written Expression

Writes personal and semi-formal emails, short messages with a focus on structure, tone, and clarity. Writes short essays elaborating on events, experiences, dreams, hopes, ambitions, ideas and personal opinions. Drafts travel itineraries, picture descriptions, etc.

Listening Skills

Understands and responds appropriately to a range of everyday situations in simple spoken language. Recognises the main ideas, keywords and details from spoken texts, including some nuances like tone and attitude. Understands informal speech and expressions used in everyday language by native speakers at a defined pace.

Oral / Speaking Skills

Shares/narrates personal interests, experiences and plans using past, present, and future tense as per requirement. Explains/justifies opinions on a range of familiar topics. Participates in conversations on subjects like travel, health, education, lifestyle. Engages in focused, structured conversations.

Theory Syllabus — 80 Marks (3 hours)


1. Composition — 15 Marks Candidates will be required to write, in French, one composition of around 120–150 words. Possible types of composition: a narrative text recounting a past event, a descriptive text such as a picture description, or a simple opinion text such as an article, blog, forum or magazine. There will be a choice of subjects which will be varied and may be suggested by language or other stimuli such as pictures or objects.

2. Email Writing — 15 Marks Candidates will be required to write an email (around 80–100 words) from a choice of either an informal or a semi-formal communication. (demande de renseignement, remerciement, invitation, etc.) Cues may be given. The layout of the email with a relevant subject line, introduction, etc., will form part of the assessment.

3. Comprehension — 30 Marks Candidates will be required to complete 3–4 reading tasks based on simple documents related to daily life. The texts can be short and simple, drawn from everyday life. Suitable document types include postcards, announcements (e.g., store opening hours), job advertisements, menus, and classified ads, etc. Questions (such as MCQs, True or False with justification, etc.) based on the given passage will be set to be answered in French.

4. Grammar — 20 Marks Candidates will complete short, focused tasks to assess grammatical accuracy and range. Questions will include conjugation exercises (for testing verbs), fill-in-the-blank questions (for testing articles, pronouns, and prepositions), correcting errors (for testing adjectives, negation, comparative, etc.), making questions and negative sentences, correcting jumbled sentences, multiple-choice questions, sentence transformations, etc. Tasks can be situation-based, requiring the application of grammar in everyday contexts. The question will not require detailed knowledge of grammatical definitions, as the focus will be more on the functional use of grammar.


Grammar Topics — Full CISCE List


Articles: Definite | Indefinite | Partitive | Contracted

Verbs:

  • Regular ER, IR and RE verbs

  • Irregular ER, IR, RE verbs

  • Pronominal verbs/reflexive verbs

  • Transitive and Intransitive verbs

Tenses:

  • Present tense

  • Past Simple (passe compose) — past participles and agreement

  • Imperfect tense

  • The past perfect (Plus que parfait)

  • Near Future Tense

  • Simple Future Tense

  • Recent Past Tense

  • Present progressive

Moods:

  • Imperative — Affirmative and Negative (for instructions and commands)

  • Present conditional: wish and hypothetical events (IF conditions)

  • Reported Speech (in conversation and narrations)

  • Subjunctive — very basic for awareness

  • Active-Passive Voice

  • Gerunds and present participle

  • Past conditional: regret and hypothesis

Pronouns:

  • Personal pronouns

  • Interrogative pronouns: Where, When, What, How much, etc.

  • Relative pronouns — who, that/which, where, of whom/which; pronouns with prepositions

  • Demonstrative pronouns

  • Direct and Indirect object pronouns, double pronouns

  • Possessive pronouns

  • Adverbial pronouns — y, en

Adjectives:

  • Agreement and Position of Adjectives

  • Interrogative adjective

  • Demonstrative adjective

  • Possessive adjective

Adverbs: of quantity (a few, a lot), time, manner, place, intensity, frequency, etc.

Other Topics:

  • Affirmative and Negative sentences

  • Negations; Answering a negative question

  • Interrogation (the 3 forms) — Qui est-ce? / Qu'est-ce que c'est? / Pourriez-vous

  • Il y a (There is/There are) — C'est, ce sont, voici! voila!

  • Les indicateurs de temps (dans, depuis, il y a)

  • Nominalisation

  • Prepositions of time, place: city, country, etc.

  • Comparatives and Superlatives of adjectives and adverbs

  • Impersonal phrases and verbs with 'il': Il est interdit de, Il est utile de, Il est important de, etc.

  • Linkers/connectors/conjunctions (and, or, but, because, moreover, then, later on, however, so, still, etc.)


Suggested Books


  • Imagine 2, Didier Publications

  • Edito A2, Didier Publications

  • Decibel, Goyal Publications

  • Explore, Goyal Publications

Note: The Class X ICSE examination paper will be set on the entire syllabus prescribed for the subject. CISCE has not prescribed bifurcation of the syllabus for this subject.


Internal Assessment — 20 Marks

Internal Assessment for Class X includes an assessment of Listening and Speaking Skills only. Schools will prepare, conduct and record assessments of the Listening and Speaking Skills of candidates.


Class X: Four assessments (of both listening and speaking skills) in the course of the year, with the fourth one to be assessed by an External Examiner at the end of the year.

Assessment

Examiner

Assessment 1

Subject Teacher

Assessment 2

Subject Teacher

Assessment 3

Subject Teacher

Assessment 4 — Final ICSE Board Examinations

External Examiner

All assessments except the final board examination in Class X are to be assessed by the Subject Teacher, or a teacher nominated by the Head of the School.

Note: The External Examiner may be a teacher from another school or institution, appointed and approved by the CISCE. For example, a qualified French teacher from a neighbouring school may be designated as an External Examiner for the board examination.


Award of Marks

Skill

Marks

Listening Skills

10 marks

Speaking Skills

10 marks

Total

20 marks

The total marks obtained out of 20 are to be sent to CISCE by the Head of the School via the CAREERS portal. Schools are required to maintain a record of all assessments conducted in Listening and Speaking Skills for candidates of Class X, including copies of assessment tests, topics for presentation and marks awarded. This record will be maintained for a period of up to two months after the declaration of the results of ICSE examinations.


Pattern of Assessment


A. Listening Skills

  • 2–3 short audio clips of 1–2 minutes duration may be used

  • Each audio clip is to be played twice at a moderately slow pace

  • Students may make brief notes during the playing of the audio clip

  • Students then answer objective-type questions based on the audio clip on the paper provided

  • Nature of audio clips: announcements (train station, supermarket, airport), voicemail message, short dialogue, radio message, etc.

  • The listening files or audio clips are to be played on a school-provided device or gadget and should NOT be read out

Question formats:

  • Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs) — to assess understanding of key details and overall meaning

  • True or False Statements (with justification) — candidates may be asked to justify their answers by quoting or paraphrasing from the audio

  • Matching tasks

Note: This component is designed to assess only the candidate's listening comprehension skills. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure will not be taken into account while grading this component. The goal is to assess how well students can extract key information, understand tone and speaker intent, and interpret meaning in real-world communicative situations.


B. Speaking Skills (6–8 minutes total; 10 minutes preparation for Tasks 2 and 3)

Task 1 — Interaction (1 minute) The examiner asks questions in French about the candidate's daily life. Topics include: your family, your interests, your work, or your activities. Example questions: What is your name? / What is your nationality? / What are your hobbies? / Tell me about your family / your studies / your holidays.

Task 2 — Monologue (2 minutes) The candidate is assessed through a prepared individual oral presentation on a given theme which can be from any of the topics under the Annexe. The examiner will listen to the candidate and may ask two or three follow-up questions.

Task 3 — Role Play (3–4 minutes) The candidate must engage in a conversation with the examiner to solve a real-life situation.


Annexe Topics — French (integrated into all 4 skills)

Topic A: Identity and Culture

Personal identity and relationships:

  • Present oneself

  • Personal life (preferences and choices, job, family, educational background, neighbourhood)

  • Generation gap, friendship and pets

  • Routine activities/daily life

  • Describing family

  • People, physical description, personality, and sentiments (happiness, sadness, disappointment, worries, fear, regret, surprise, curiosity, indifference)

Important Events:

  • Festivals: religious, national, international, and family

  • Celebrations, special occasions, etc.

Free time/leisure:

  • Leisure: sports, outings, hobbies and interests, intellectual and artistic pursuits

  • Discuss hobbies and daily activities

  • Books: short stories, novels, magazines, weekly, monthly, comics, fables

Culture and traditions:

  • Festivals, culture, customs and traditions in France, Francophone countries and one's own country

  • Cultural activities/events

  • Basic etiquette (e.g., polite forms of address)

  • France (geography), French cuisine, music, regions, historical sites, art, etc.


Topic B: Holidays, Tourism and Travel

Travel and Transport:

  • Vacations, modes of transport, duration, itinerary

  • Travel plans — past, present, future, experiences and memories, etc.

Tourism and activities:

  • Eco-tourism, important tourist sites/places, and weather forecast

  • Visits, excursions, accidents, etc.

  • Countries, cities, countryside, regions, natural reserves, etc.

  • Holiday activities

Accommodation and directions:

  • Types of accommodation (the house, interior, exterior)

  • The stay, holiday homes, hotels, rent/hire a place, reservations

  • Traffic rules, road safety, giving directions, following and understanding maps

Shopping:

  • Fashion and lifestyle

  • Money and payments (modes of payment, budget, expenses)

  • Enquire about goods in a shop and buy what one needs (quantity, measures, weight)

  • Brands, clothes and accessories, consumption

  • Sale, shopping malls, grocery shopping, local markets, supermarkets, etc.

Cuisine:

  • Food habits, different cuisine, preferences and choices

  • Ordering food, menu, recipes, etc.

  • Place an order for a meal / eating out in a restaurant / at the cafe (with or without the menu)


Topic C: Health, Education and Technology

Home Life:

  • Domestic animals, guests and outings, family life, etc.

  • Household chores and pocket money

Fitness and Well-being:

  • Food choices and lifestyle

  • Stress, pressure, anxiety, etc.

  • The human body, health and illness, advice and precautions, visit to a doctor, pharmacist, etc.

  • Present one's medical problem to a doctor, social activities, fitness and body care

  • Medical emergency and assistance

Media and Technologies:

  • Current affairs, stories, social trends, TV programmes, press, Internet, print and visual media, journals, radio and TV

  • Read notices, posters, catalogues, timetables, brochures, menus, advertisements, signs, etc.

  • Technology in everyday life, social media, mobile and current technology trends, etc.

Studies and Future Plans:

  • Institutions, the school system, the classroom subjects, the academic year, and school activities; school experiences

  • Education system and training, learning tools and subjects

  • Life at school/college

  • Higher education and career choices

  • Future plans and ambition

  • Language learning


Topic D: The World Around

Home and Locality:

  • City/village life

  • Description of one's home and the surroundings, shops and places in the vicinity

The Environment:

  • The natural world, seasons, climate and the weather

  • Social issues: charity/voluntary work

  • Global issues: poverty/homelessness, deforestation, natural environmental problems/disasters, causes and solutions, World Environment Day, Earth Day, etc.

Entertainment:

  • Cinema, concerts, theatre, park, entertainment, social media/network, television, newspapers, etc.

Services:

  • Basic services at public places: hotel, airport, shops, train station, restaurant, library, post office, a bank, etc.

  • Buy tickets (film, train, play, etc.)


Writing Marking Criteria — French Group I (Class X)


Composition (15 marks)

Grade

Content (4M)

Coherence and Cohesion (4M)

Vocabulary (3M)

Grammar (4M)

I — Expectations fully met (12–15M)

The candidate can: write a text in line with the question; narrate an event, past activities, or a personal experience; provide details with examples and can describe feelings and reactions; write a short, well-defined text with explanations and reasoning that fully meet the requirements; provide additional details to enhance their writing.

The candidate can link statements using commonly used connectors and expressions to produce a logical and coherent text.

The candidate can use a varied and relevant vocabulary appropriate to the question. The candidate is also able to express themselves without difficulty on familiar and common topics. Spelling is usually correct.

The candidate can accurately use syntactic structures and grammatical forms, while also using some common, more complex structures. The candidate is able to frame grammatically well-structured phrases.

II — Expectations partially met (8–11M)

The candidate can: write a series of simple sentences to briefly describe an event or recount a personal or professional experience; express their impressions in simple terms but lacks clarity.

The candidate can produce simple sentences and link them with basic connectors, but there are frequent breaks in meaning, making the text sometimes difficult to follow. The overall coherence is limited.

The candidate can correctly use basic words and expressions to address the task. Spelling is generally correct for basic words, but some errors exist, and certain words are occasionally written phonetically.

The candidate can use simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms but may make occasional errors.

III — Expectations not met (2–7M)

The candidate writes short, isolated sentences that are insufficient to effectively complete the task.

The candidate writes isolated sentences with no connectors. The text is often unclear or incomplete, making it difficult to follow. The text lacks coherence.

The candidate uses a very limited set of basic words, but these are often insufficient to complete the task effectively. Spelling is correct for only a few basic words, with most words written phonetically.

The candidate makes errors even while using basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms.

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted (copie blanche) or the content is off-topic or too minimal to assess.

Email Writing (15 marks)

Grade

Content (6M)

Coherence and Cohesion

Sociolinguistic Competence (3M)

Vocabulary

Grammar

I — Expectations fully met (12–15M)

The candidate can: write a short text in line with the task; narrate an event, past activities, or a personal experience; provide details with examples and describe feelings and reactions; write a short text that fully meets the requirements of the task; provide additional details to enhance their writing.

The candidate can link statements using the most commonly used connectors to produce a short, coherent text in clear paragraphs.

The candidate can express themselves using the most commonly used terms of politeness (les formules de politesse) and in a tone (formal/informal) that is suitable to the situation.

The candidate can use a varied vocabulary to express themselves without difficulty on familiar and common topics. Spelling is usually correct.

The candidate can accurately use basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms, while also using some common, more complex structures.

II — Expectations partially met (8–11M)

The candidate can write a series of simple sentences to briefly describe an event or recount a personal or professional experience. Can express their impressions in simple terms but lacks clarity.

The candidate can produce simple sentences and link them with basic connectors, but there are frequent breaks in meaning, making the text sometimes difficult to follow. The overall coherence is limited.

The candidate can use basic terms of politeness (les formules de politesse). However, some confusion in tone (formal/informal) occurs.

The candidate can correctly use basic words and expressions to address the task. Spelling is generally correct for basic words, but some errors exist, and certain words are occasionally written phonetically.

The candidate can use simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms but may make occasional errors.

III — Expectations not met (2–7M)

The candidate writes short, isolated sentences that are insufficient to effectively complete the task.

The candidate writes isolated sentences with no connectors. The text is often unclear or incomplete, making it difficult to follow. The text lacks coherence.

The candidate makes errors even in using the basic terms of politeness and struggles to choose the correct tone (formal/informal).

The candidate uses a very limited set of basic words, but these are often insufficient to complete the task effectively. Spelling is correct for only a few basic words, with most words written phonetically.

The candidate makes errors even while using basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms.

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted (copie blanche), or the content is off-topic or too minimal to assess.

Listening Marking Criteria — French Group I (Class X)

Note: This component assesses only listening comprehension skills. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure are not evaluated. The goal is to assess how well students can extract key information, understand tone and speaker intent, and interpret meaning in real-world communicative situations.

Question formats assessed: Multiple Choice Questions | True or False with justification | Matching tasks

No separate grade rubric is provided in the CISCE document for this component beyond the formats above and the note that writing accuracy is not penalised.


Speaking Marking Criteria — French Group I (Class X)

Grade

Task 1: Interaction

Task 2: Monologue

Task 3: Role Play

Grammar and Vocabulary

Phonetics

Marks

I — Expectations fully met (8–10M)

The candidate can introduce themselves and describe aspects of their daily environment, as well as talk about past projects or activities, providing brief justifications or explanations. The candidate can respond to the examiner's questions and engage in exchanges without apparent difficulty on familiar topics.

The candidate can give a brief presentation on the given topic, explain why they like or dislike something, and state their preferences. The speech is coherent and is capable of using commonly used connectors.

The candidate can successfully complete the task by using appropriate speech acts and interact in predictable everyday situations effortlessly, even taking the initiative. The candidate can express themselves in a generally appropriate tone (formal/informal), using terms of politeness (les formules de politesse) correctly.

The candidate can use a varied vocabulary to express themselves effortlessly on familiar and everyday topics. The candidate can correctly use most simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms, as well as some common complex structures.

The candidate has generally correct pronunciation. Occasional difficulties may still arise, especially with more complex words.

8–10

II — Expectations partially met (5–7M)

The candidate is capable of using simple short sentences to introduce themselves and talk about their immediate surroundings. The candidate can answer the examiner's questions, but responses are brief and limited. The candidate may struggle to elaborate or expand on their answers.

The candidate can express themselves on the given topic using simple, short sentences and briefly explain why they like or dislike something. The speech is generally coherent, but may require occasional prompting from the examiner.

The candidate is capable of completing the task but often requires guidance or a prompt from the examiner. They can establish basic social contact using simple terms of politeness (les formules de politesse), but the candidate is inconsistent in their usage of tone (formal/informal).

The candidate can use basic words and expressions, along with simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms, though these tend to be repetitive. Some basic errors occur, but they do not significantly hinder communication.

The candidate can correctly pronounce simple expressions and familiar words. The examiner may need to ask for certain words to be repeated, but the overall communication remains understandable throughout.

5–7

III — Expectations not met (2–4M)

The candidate provides minimal information about their identity and surroundings. They require prompts from the examiner. The candidate provides very basic, disjointed and incomplete sentences about their surroundings and daily activities. Frequent breaks in meaning make it difficult to understand, and the candidate struggles to respond even with prompting from the examiner.

The candidate provides very basic, disjointed and incomplete sentences about their surroundings and daily activities. Frequent breaks in meaning make it difficult to understand, and the candidate struggles to respond even with prompting from the examiner.

The candidate struggles to complete the task and often needs significant help from the examiner. Has difficulty establishing social contact and may use very limited or incorrect terms of politeness (les formules de politesse).

The candidate has a limited grasp of even simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms. Has a limited repertoire of basic expressions, words and vocabulary, which often prevents them from fully completing the task. Errors are frequent.

The candidate struggles with pronunciation, often mispronouncing basic words and expressions. Frequent clarification or repetition from the examiner is needed, and communication may be unclear at times.

2–4

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

Vocabulary is extremely limited or inappropriate. Frequent and major grammatical errors prevent communication.

Pronunciation and intonation are unclear. The examiner struggles to understand, even with repetition or prompting.

0–1

Preparation Tips — French Group I


Composition:

  • Practise all three types: narrative, descriptive, opinion — you will not know which type comes in the exam

  • Aim for exactly 120–150 words — count during practice sessions

  • Use connectors: donc, cependant, de plus, ensuite, pourtant, car, puis

  • Write in paragraphs — no paragraph structure means a lower Coherence and Cohesion score

Email Writing:

  • Memorise the email layout: Objet (subject), Salutation, Introduction, Body, Conclusion, Closing

  • Know formal closings: Veuillez agreer, Madame/Monsieur, l'expression de mes salutations distinguees

  • Know informal closings: Amicalement, Bisous, A bientot

  • Do not mix formal and informal tone in the same email

Comprehension:

  • Read all questions before reading the passage

  • For True/False with justification — quote or paraphrase from the text; do not add personal opinion

  • For MCQs — eliminate clearly wrong options first

Grammar — High Priority Topics:

  • Passe compose vs imperfect — this distinction is tested consistently

  • Pronoun order — direct plus indirect, y and en

  • Subjunctive basics — awareness level only

  • Negation forms: ne...pas, ne...jamais, ne...rien, ne...personne, ne...plus

  • Conditional sentences with si

Speaking:

  • Task 1: Prepare a 30-second self-introduction in French covering name, nationality, family, hobbies

  • Task 2: Prepare 5–6 topic monologues from the Annexe topics

  • Task 3: Practise role-plays — restaurant, hotel, doctor, train station scenarios

  • Use connectors when speaking: d'abord, ensuite, finalement, par exemple, cependant

Listening:

  • Spelling and grammar do not affect your listening score

  • Focus on extracting: who, what, where, when, why

  • Write keywords during first listening; complete answers during second listening


FAQs — French Group I

Q1. Is the French syllabus different for Group I and Group II? No. The syllabus explicitly states it is the same for both groups. The only difference is the subject code — Group I is 27, Group II is 77.

Q2. How long should the composition be? Around 120–150 words.

Q3. How long should the email be? Around 80–100 words.

Q4. Do I need to know the Subjunctive fully? No. The syllabus states: "Subjunctive — very basic for awareness."

Q5. Will spelling mistakes in listening answers lose marks? No. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure are not evaluated in the listening component.

Q6. Who conducts the 4th speaking assessment in Class X? An External Examiner — a qualified French teacher from another school/institution, appointed and approved by CISCE.

Q7. Can the audio clips be read aloud by the teacher instead of played? No. The document explicitly states audio clips must be played on a school-provided device and should not be read out.

Q8. How many reading tasks are in the Comprehension section? 3–4 reading tasks based on simple everyday documents.


SECTION C: GERMAN (28) — Group I


Note: The German language syllabus remains the same for both Group I and Group II. Subject code under Group I is 28. CEFR Level: A2.

Note: Candidates opting for a Modern Foreign Language as a Second Language in Group I cannot opt for a Modern Foreign Language in Group II.


Aims

  1. To equip learners with basic competencies in the four language skills: reading, writing, listening and speaking.

  2. To use the language effectively and appropriately on topics of everyday life situations.

  3. To develop an intercultural awareness and appreciation of the global diversity of languages.

  4. To understand the basic structural patterns of the language, vocabulary and constructions.


Overview of Language Competencies at A2 Level

Skill

Competencies

Reading Comprehension

Understands texts on familiar topics such as news articles, personal letters, and brochures. Extracts key ideas and information by analysing magazine articles and blog posts. Demonstrates comprehension of stories/simple articles/blogs.

Written Expression

Writes personal and semi-formal emails, short messages with a focus on structure, tone, and clarity. Writes short essays elaborating on events, experiences, dreams, hopes, ambitions, ideas and personal opinions. Drafts travel itineraries, picture descriptions, etc.

Listening Skills

Understands and responds appropriately to a range of everyday situations in simple spoken language. Recognises the main ideas, keywords and details from spoken texts, including some nuances like tone and attitude. Understands informal speech and expressions used in everyday language by native speakers at a defined pace.

Oral / Speaking Skills

Shares/narrates personal interests, experiences and plans using past, present, and future tense as per requirement. Explains/justifies opinions on a range of familiar topics. Participates in conversations on subjects like travel, health, education, lifestyle. Engages in focused, structured conversations.

Theory Syllabus — 80 Marks (3 hours)


1. Composition — 15 Marks Candidates will be required to write, in German, one composition of a minimum/around 100–120 words. Possible types of compositions include a narrative text (Erzahlungstext) recounting a past event, a descriptive text (Beschreibungstext) such as a picture description, or a simple opinion text (Meinungstext) such as Artikel, Blog, or Zeitschriftsartikel. There will be a choice of subjects, which will be varied and may be suggested by language or other stimuli such as pictures or objects.

2. Email Writing — 15 Marks Candidates will be required to write an email (80–100 words) from a choice of either an informal or a semi-formal communication (nach Informationen fragen, sich bedanken, Einladung, etc.). Cues may be given. The layout of the email with a relevant subject line, introduction, etc., will form part of the assessment.

3. Comprehension — 30 Marks Candidates will be required to complete 3–4 reading tasks based on short texts related to daily life. The texts can be short and simple, drawn from everyday life. Suitable document types include postcards, announcements (e.g., store opening hours), job advertisements, menus, and classified ads, etc.

4. Grammar — 20 Marks Candidates will complete short, focused tasks to assess grammatical accuracy and range. These may include conjugation exercises (for testing verbs), fill-in-the-blank questions (for testing articles, pronouns, and prepositions), correcting errors (for testing adjectives, negation, comparative, etc.), making questions and negative sentences, correcting jumbled sentences, multiple-choice questions, sentence transformations, etc. Tasks can be situation-based, requiring the application of grammar in everyday contexts. The question will not require detailed knowledge of grammatical definitions, as the focus will be more on the functional use of grammar. For example, completing a dialogue with the correct verb forms or rewriting a sentence using der/die/das oder die in place of a noun.


Grammar Topics — Full CISCE List


Artikel: definiter, indefiniter, demonstrativ, possessiv

Verben:

  • regelmassige, unregelmassige, trennbare, reflexive, Modalverben und Hilfsverben

  • Verben mit festen Prapositionen (warten auf, denken an, teilnehmen an, usw.)

Satzstruktur: W-Frage, Ja/nein Frage, Aussagesatz (Haupt- und Nebensatz)

Tenses and Forms:

  • Prasens, Partizip II

  • Prateritum von sein, haben und Modalverben

  • Imperative mit du, ihr und Sie Formen

  • Vorschlage machen (mit sollen und sollten)

Pronomen: Nominativ, Akkusativ und Dativ

  • Personalpronomen: ich – mich – mir, du – dich – dir, usw.

  • Fragewörter: was, wo, wie usw. — wer, wen, wem, wessen

  • Relativpronomen: der, den, dem, die, der, dessen, deren

  • Demonstrativpronomen: dies (auch welch-)

  • Possessivpronomen: mein – meinen – meinem, dein – deinen – deinem, usw.

Prapositionen: mit allen 4 Fallen (ohne, mit, wahrend usw.); Wechselprapositionen

Adjektive: Independent and dependent (Deklination); positiv, komparativ und superlativ

Negation: nicht, nein, doch

Nominalisierung der Verben

Konnektoren: und, aber, denn, weil, obwohl, wegen, ob, usw. (Haupt- und Nebensatz)

Finalsatze: um….zu, damit


Suggested Books

  • Beste Freunde B1.1 (For both years) — Hueber Publications, published in India by Goyal Publishers

  • Get Ready (For Class 10)

Note: The Class X ICSE examination paper will be set on the entire syllabus prescribed for the subject. CISCE has not prescribed bifurcation of the syllabus for this subject.


Internal Assessment — 20 Marks

Internal Assessment for Class X includes an assessment of Listening and Speaking Skills only.


Class X: Four assessments (of both listening and speaking skills) in the course of the year, with the fourth one to be assessed by an External Examiner at the end of the year.

Assessment

Examiner

Assessment 1

Subject Teacher

Assessment 2

Subject Teacher

Assessment 3

Subject Teacher

Assessment 4 — Final ICSE Board Examinations

External Examiner

Note: The External Examiner may be a teacher from another school or institution, appointed and approved by the CISCE.


Award of Marks

Skill

Marks

Listening Skills

10 marks

Speaking Skills

10 marks

Total

20 marks

Pattern of Assessment


A. Listening Skills

  • 2–3 short audio clips of 1–2 minutes duration may be used

  • Each audio clip is to be played twice at a moderately slow pace

  • Students may make brief notes during the playing of the audio clip

  • Students then answer objective-type questions on the paper provided

  • Nature of audio clips: announcements (train station, supermarket, airport), voicemail message, short dialogue, radio message, etc.

  • The listening files or audio clips are to be played on a school-provided device or gadget and should NOT be read out

Question formats: Multiple Choice Questions | True or False Statements with justification | Matching tasks

Note: This component is designed to assess only listening comprehension skills. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure will not be taken into account while grading this component.


B. Speaking Skills (6–8 minutes total; 10 minutes preparation for Tasks 2 and 3)

Task 1 — Interaction (1 minute) The examiner asks questions in German about the candidate's daily life. Topics include: your family, your interests, your work, or your activities. Example questions: What is your name? / What is your nationality? / What are your hobbies? / Tell me about your family / your studies / your holidays.

Task 2 — Monologue (2 minutes) The candidate is assessed through a prepared individual oral presentation on a given theme, which can be from any of the topics under the Annexe. The examiner will listen to the candidate and may ask two or three follow-up questions.

Task 3 — Role Play (3–4 minutes) The candidate must engage in a conversation with the examiner to solve a real-life situation.


Annexe Topics — German Group I (integrated into all 4 skills)


Topic A: Identity and Culture

Personal identity and relationships:

  • Present oneself

  • Personal life (preferences and choices, job, family, educational background, neighbourhood)

  • Generation gap, friendship and pets

  • Routine activities/daily life

  • Describing family

  • People, physical description, personality, and sentiments (happiness, sadness, disappointment, worries, fear, regret, surprise, curiosity, indifference)

Important Events:

  • Festivals: religious, national, international, and family

  • Celebrations, special occasions, etc.

Free Time/Leisure:

  • Leisure: sports, outings, hobbies and interests, intellectual and artistic pursuits

  • Discuss hobbies and daily activities

  • Books: short stories, novels, magazines, weekly, monthly, comics, fables

Culture and Traditions:

  • Festivals, culture, customs and traditions in Germany and one's own country

  • Events

  • Basic etiquette (e.g., polite forms of address)

  • Germany (geography), German cuisine, music, regions, historical sites, art, etc.

Note: The source document contains "France (geography)" in this line — this is a copy-paste error in the CISCE document itself. The correct reading is Germany (geography) for the German Annexe.


Topic B: Holidays, Tourism and Travel

Travel and Transport:

  • Vacations, modes of transport, duration, itinerary

  • Travel plans — past, present, future, experiences and memories, etc.

Tourism and Activities:

  • Eco-tourism, important tourist sites/places, and weather forecast

  • Visits, excursions, accidents, etc.

  • Countries, cities, countryside, regions, natural reserves, etc.

  • Holiday activities

Accommodation and Directions:

  • Types of accommodation (the house, interior, exterior)

  • The stay, holiday homes, hotels, rent/hire a place, and reservations

  • Traffic rules, road safety, giving directions, following and understanding maps

Shopping:

  • Fashion and lifestyle

  • Money and payments (modes of payment, budget, expenses)

  • Enquire about goods in a shop and buy what one needs (quantity, measures, weight)

  • Brands, clothes and accessories, consumption

  • Sale, shopping malls, grocery shopping, local markets, supermarkets, etc.

Cuisine:

  • Food habits, different cuisine, preferences and choices

  • Ordering food, menu, recipes, etc.

  • Place an order for a meal / eating out in a restaurant / at the cafe (with or without the menu)


Topic C: Health, Education and Technology

Home Life:

  • Domestic animals, guests and outings, family life, etc.

  • Household chores and pocket money

Fitness and Well-being:

  • Food choices and lifestyle

  • Stress, pressure, anxiety, etc.

  • The human body, health and illness, advice and precautions, visit to a doctor, pharmacist, etc.

  • Present one's medical problem to a doctor, social activities, fitness and body care

  • Medical emergency and assistance

Media and Technologies:

  • Current affairs, stories, social trends, TV programmes, press, Internet, print and visual media, journals, radio and TV

  • Read notices, posters, catalogues, timetables, brochures, menus, advertisements, signs, etc.

  • Technology in everyday life, social media, mobile and current technology trends, etc.

Studies and Future Plans:

  • Institutions, the school system, the classroom subjects, the academic year, and school activities; school experiences

  • Education system and training, learning tools and subjects

  • Life at school/college

  • Higher education and career choices

  • Future plans and ambition

  • Language learning


Topic D: The World Around

Home and Locality:

  • City/village life

  • Description of one's home and the surroundings, shops and places in the vicinity

The Environment:

  • The natural world, seasons, climate and the weather

  • Social issues: charity/voluntary work

  • Global issues: poverty/homelessness, deforestation, natural environmental problems/disasters, causes and solutions, World Environment Day, Earth Day, etc.

Entertainment:

  • Cinema, concerts, theatre, park, entertainment, social media/network, television, newspapers, etc.

Services:

  • Basic services at public places: hotel, airport, shops, train station, restaurant, library, post office, a bank, etc.

  • Buy tickets (film, train, play, etc.)


Writing Marking Criteria — German Group I (Class X)

Composition (15 marks)

Grade

Content (4M)

Coherence and Cohesion (4M)

Vocabulary (3M)

Grammar (4M)

I — Expectations fully met (12–15M)

The candidate can: write a text in line with the question; narrate an event, past activities, or a personal experience; provide details with examples and can describe feelings and reactions; write a well-defined text with explanations and reasoning that fully meet the requirements; provide additional details to enhance their writing.

The candidate can link statements using commonly used connectors and expressions to produce a logical and coherent text.

The candidate can use a varied and relevant vocabulary appropriate to the question. The candidate is also able to express themselves without difficulty on familiar and common topics. Spelling is usually correct.

The candidate can accurately use syntactic structures and grammatical forms, while also using some common, more complex structures. The candidate is able to frame grammatically well-structured phrases.

II — Expectations partially met (8–11M)

The candidate can write a series of simple sentences to briefly describe an event or recount a personal or professional experience. The candidate can express their impressions in simple terms but lacks clarity.

The candidate can produce simple sentences and link them with basic connectors, but there are frequent breaks in meaning, making the text sometimes difficult to follow. The overall coherence is limited.

The candidate can correctly use basic words and expressions to address the task. Spelling is generally correct for basic words, but some errors exist, and certain words are occasionally written phonetically.

The candidate can use simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms but may make occasional errors.

III — Expectations not met (2–7M)

The candidate writes short, isolated sentences that are insufficient to effectively complete the task.

The candidate writes isolated sentences with no connectors. The text is often unclear or incomplete, making it difficult to follow. The text lacks coherence.

The candidate uses a very limited set of basic words, but these are often insufficient to complete the task effectively. Spelling is correct for only a few basic words, with most words written phonetically.

The candidate makes errors even while using basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms.

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted, or the content is off-topic or too minimal to assess.

Email Writing (15 marks)

Grade

Content (6M)

Coherence and Cohesion

Sociolinguistic Competence (3M)

Vocabulary

Grammar

I — Expectations fully met (12–15M)

The candidate can write a short text in line with the task. Can narrate an event, past activities, or a personal experience; can provide details with examples; can describe feelings and reactions. Can write a short text that fully meets the requirements of the task. The candidate can provide additional details to enhance their writing.

The candidate can link statements using the most commonly used connectors to produce a short, coherent text in clear paragraphs.

The candidate can express themselves using the most commonly used terms of politeness and in a tone (formal/informal) that is suitable to the situation.

The candidate can use a varied vocabulary to express themselves without difficulty on familiar and common topics. Spelling is usually correct.

The candidate can accurately use basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms, while also using some common, more complex structures.

II — Expectations partially met (8–11M)

The candidate can write a series of simple sentences to briefly describe an event or recount a personal or professional experience. Can express their impressions in simple terms but lacks clarity.

The candidate can produce simple sentences and link them with basic connectors, but there are frequent breaks in meaning, making the text sometimes difficult to follow. The overall coherence is limited.

The candidate can use basic terms of politeness. However, some confusion in tone (formal/informal) occurs.

The candidate can correctly use basic words and expressions to address the task. Spelling is generally correct for basic words, but some errors exist, and certain words are occasionally written phonetically.

The candidate can use simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms but may make occasional errors.

III — Expectations not met (2–7M)

The candidate writes short, isolated sentences that are insufficient to effectively complete the task.

The candidate writes isolated sentences with no connectors. The text is often unclear or incomplete, making it difficult to follow. The text lacks coherence.

The candidate makes errors even in using the basic terms of politeness and struggles to choose the correct tone (formal/informal).

The candidate uses a very limited set of basic words, but these are often insufficient to complete the task effectively. Spelling is correct for only a few basic words, with most words written phonetically.

The candidate makes errors even while using basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms.

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted, or the content is off-topic or too minimal to assess.

Listening Marking Criteria — German Group I (Class X)

Note: This component assesses only listening comprehension skills. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure are not evaluated. The goal is to assess how well students can extract key information, understand tone and speaker intent, and interpret meaning in real-world communicative situations.

Question formats assessed: Multiple Choice Questions | True or False with justification | Matching tasks

No separate grade rubric is provided in the CISCE document for this component beyond the formats above and the note that writing accuracy is not penalised.

Speaking Marking Criteria — German Group I (Class X)

Grade

Task 1: Interaction

Task 2: Monologue

Task 3: Role Play

Grammar and Vocabulary

Phonetics

Marks

I — Expectations fully met (8–10M)

The candidate can introduce themselves and describe aspects of their daily environment, as well as talk about past projects or activities, providing brief justifications or explanations. The candidate can respond to the examiner's questions and engage in exchanges without apparent difficulty on familiar topics.

The candidate can give a brief presentation on the given topic, explain why they like or dislike something, and state their preferences. The speech is coherent and is capable of using commonly used connectors.

The candidate can successfully complete the task by using appropriate speech acts and interact in predictable everyday situations effortlessly, even taking the initiative. The candidate can express themselves in a generally appropriate tone (formal/informal), using terms of politeness correctly.

The candidate can use a varied vocabulary to express themselves effortlessly on familiar and everyday topics. The candidate can correctly use most simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms, as well as some common complex structures.

The candidate has generally correct pronunciation. Occasional difficulties may still arise, especially with more complex words.

8–10

II — Expectations partially met (5–7M)

The candidate is capable of using simple short sentences to introduce themselves and talk about their immediate surroundings. The candidate can answer the examiner's questions, but responses are brief and limited. The candidate may struggle to elaborate or expand on their answers.

The candidate can express themselves on the given topic using simple, short sentences and briefly explain why they like or dislike something. The speech is generally coherent but may require occasional prompting from the examiner.

The candidate is capable of completing the task but often requires guidance or a prompt from the examiner. They can establish basic social contact using simple terms of politeness, but the candidate is inconsistent in their usage of tone (formal/informal).

The candidate can use basic words and expressions, along with simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms, though these tend to be repetitive. Some basic errors occur, but they do not significantly hinder communication.

The candidate can correctly pronounce simple expressions and familiar words. The examiner may need to ask for certain words to be repeated, but the overall communication remains understandable throughout.

5–7

III — Expectations not met (2–4M)

The candidate provides minimal information about their identity and surroundings. They require prompts from the examiner. The candidate provides very basic, disjointed and incomplete sentences. Frequent breaks in meaning make it difficult to understand, and the candidate struggles to respond even with prompting from the examiner.

The candidate provides very basic, disjointed and incomplete sentences about their surroundings and daily activities. Frequent breaks in meaning make it difficult to understand, and the candidate struggles to respond even with prompting.

The candidate struggles to complete the task and often needs significant help from the examiner. Has difficulty establishing social contact and may use very limited or incorrect terms of politeness.

The candidate has a limited grasp of even simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms. Has a limited repertoire of basic words and expressions, which often prevents them from fully completing the task. Errors are frequent.

The candidate struggles with pronunciation, often mispronouncing basic words and expressions. Frequent clarification or repetition from the examiner is needed, and communication may be unclear at times.

2–4

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

Vocabulary is extremely limited or inappropriate. Frequent and major grammatical errors prevent communication.

Pronunciation and intonation are unclear. The examiner struggles to understand, even with repetition or prompting.

0–1

Preparation Tips — German Group I

Composition:

  • Practise all three types: Erzahlungstext, Beschreibungstext, Meinungstext

  • Aim for 100–120 words — do not over-write

  • Use German connectors: deshalb, obwohl, weil, dann, danach, jedoch, ausserdem

  • Remember the verb-second rule (V2) — the verb must always be the second element in a main clause

Email Writing:

  • Formal opening: Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren / Sehr geehrte Frau X / Sehr geehrter Herr X

  • Informal opening: Liebe / Lieber…

  • Formal closing: Mit freundlichen Grussen

  • Informal closing: Viele Grusse, Liebe Grusse, Tschuss

Grammar — High Priority Topics:

  • Cases: Nominativ, Akkusativ, Dativ — and how they change articles and pronouns

  • Wechselprapositionen — Akkusativ for movement, Dativ for location

  • Separable verbs — the prefix splits to the end of the main clause

  • Partizip II formation — regular and irregular forms

  • Konnektoren that send the verb to the end: weil, obwohl, dass, wenn

Speaking:

  • Practise numbers, dates, and times accurately

  • Prepare monologue topics from all 4 Annexe categories

  • Role-play scenarios: hotel check-in, doctor's appointment, asking for directions, restaurant ordering

Listening:

  • Focus on keywords: numbers, names, times, places

  • Spelling and grammar do not affect your listening score


FAQs — German Group I

Q1. Is the German syllabus different for Group I and Group II? No. The syllabus explicitly states it is the same for both groups. The only difference is the subject code — Group I is 28, Group II is 80.

Q2. How long should the composition be? Minimum/around 100–120 words.

Q3. What are Wechselprapositionen? Two-way prepositions — an, auf, hinter, in, neben, uber, unter, vor, zwischen — that take Akkusativ for movement and Dativ for location. Frequently tested in grammar.

Q4. Do I need to know all 4 German cases? The syllabus specifies Nominativ, Akkusativ, and Dativ. Genitiv is not explicitly listed.

Q5. What is the difference between nicht and kein? Kein negates nouns that would take an indefinite article; nicht negates verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and specific nouns with a definite article.

Q6. How many assessments are in Class X internal? Four — the first three by the Subject Teacher, the fourth (final board assessment) by an External Examiner from another school or institution.


SECTION D: SPANISH (36) — Group I


Note: The Spanish language syllabus remains the same for both Group I and Group II. Subject code under Group I is 36. CEFR Level: A2.

Note: Candidates opting for a Modern Foreign Language as a Second Language in Group I cannot opt for a Modern Foreign Language in Group II.


Aims

  1. To equip learners with basic competencies in the four language skills: reading, writing, listening and speaking.

  2. To use the language effectively and appropriately on topics of everyday life situations.

  3. To develop an intercultural awareness and appreciation of the global diversity of languages.

  4. To understand the basic structural patterns of the language, vocabulary and constructions.


Overview of Language Competencies at A2 Level

Skill

Competencies

Reading Comprehension

Understands texts on familiar topics such as news articles, personal letters, and brochures. Extracts key ideas and information by analysing magazine articles and blog posts. Demonstrates comprehension of stories/simple articles/blogs.

Written Expression

Writes personal and semi-formal emails, short messages with a focus on structure, tone, and clarity. Writes short essays elaborating on events, experiences, dreams, hopes, ambitions, ideas and personal opinions. Drafts travel itineraries, picture descriptions, etc.

Listening Skills

Understands and responds appropriately to a range of everyday situations in simple spoken language. Recognises the main ideas, keywords and details from spoken texts, including some nuances like tone and attitude. Understands informal speech and expressions used in everyday language by native speakers at a defined pace.

Oral / Speaking Skills

Shares/narrates personal interests, experiences and plans using past, present, and future tense as per requirement. Explains/justifies opinions on a range of familiar topics. Participates in conversations on subjects like travel, health, education, lifestyle. Engages in focused, structured conversations.

Theory Syllabus — 80 Marks (3 hours)


1. Composition — 15 Marks Candidates will be required to write, in Spanish, one composition of around 100–120 words. Possible types of compositions include a narrative text recounting a past event, a descriptive text such as a picture description, or a simple opinion text such as Article, Blog, etc. There will be a choice of subjects, which will be varied and may be suggested by language or other stimuli such as pictures or objects.


2. Email Writing — 15 Marks Candidates will be required to write an email (80–100 words) from a choice of either an informal or a semi-formal communication. Examples: ask for information, email of appreciation, an invitation, a presentation of oneself and the family, describe the daily routine, share about recently spent vacations or planning for next vacations, writing about early school days memories, etc. Cues may be given.

The layout of the email will form part of the assessment and shall consist of:

  • Asunto — Subject

  • Para — To

  • De — From

  • Fecha — Date

  • Saludo formal/informal — Formal/Informal greeting

  • Presentacion — Introduction

  • Desarrollo — Body or Main content

  • Conclusion/finalizacion — Conclusion or Closing remarks

  • Despedida formal/informal — Formal/Informal closing or Sign-off


3. Comprehension — 30 Marks Candidates will be required to complete 3–4 reading tasks based on short texts related to daily life. The texts can be short and simple, drawn from everyday life. Suitable document types include postcards, announcements (e.g., store opening hours), job advertisements, menus, and classified ads, etc.


4. Grammar — 20 Marks Candidates will complete short, focused tasks to assess grammatical accuracy and range. These may include conjugation exercises (for testing verbs), fill-in-the-blank questions (for testing articles, pronouns, and prepositions), correcting errors (for testing adjectives, negation, comparative, etc.), making questions and negative sentences, correcting jumbled sentences, multiple-choice questions, sentence transformations, etc. Tasks can be situation-based, requiring the application of grammar in everyday contexts. The question will not require detailed knowledge of grammatical definitions, as the focus will be more on the functional use of grammar.


Grammar Topics — Full CISCE List


1. Nouns and Articles

  • Genero (masculino/femenino)

  • Numero (singular/plural)

  • Uso de los articulos definidos (el, la, los, las)

  • Uso de los articulos indefinidos (un, una, unos, unas)

  • Ausencia de articulo (casos tipicos: profesiones, nacionalidades, comidas, etc.)

2. Adjectives

  • Concordancia de genero y numero con el sustantivo

  • Posicion del adjetivo (antes o despues del sustantivo y cambio de significado)

  • Adjetivos calificativos y relacionales

  • Grados del adjetivo: positivo, comparativo (mas…que, menos…que, tan…como) y superlativo (el mas…de, isimo)

3. Pronouns

  • Personales de sujeto (yo, tu, el…)

  • De objeto directo (me, te, lo/la, nos, os, los/las)

  • De objeto indirecto (me, te, le, nos, os, les)

  • Pronombres reflexivos (me, te, se, nos, os, se)

  • Posesivos (mi, tu, su, nuestro…)

  • Demostrativos (este, ese, aquel…)

  • Interrogativos (que, quien, cual, cuanto…)

  • Indefinidos basicos (alguien, algo, nada, todo, ninguno, alguno…)

4. Determiners

  • Posesivos (mi coche, nuestra casa)

  • Demostrativos: de cercania (este, esta, estos, estas), de distancia media (ese, esa, esos, esas), de lejania (aquel, aquella, aquellos, aquellas)

  • Numerales (cardinales — uno, dos, etc.; ordinales — primero, segundo, tercero, etc.)

  • Indefinidos (algun, ningun, todo, nada, cada, mucho, poco)

5. Verbs

(a) Indicative Tenses for the three conjugations AR, ER, IR:

  • Presente (hablo, comes, vive)

  • Preterito perfecto (he hablado, he comido, he vivido)

  • Preterito indefinido (hable, comi, vivi)

  • Preterito imperfecto (hablaba, comia, vivia)

  • Contraste de pasados (imperfecto vs indefinido)

  • Futuro inmediato o perifrastico (ir a + infinitivo)

  • Modelos para verbos regulares e irregulares mas frecuentes de cada tiempo verbal

(b) Imperative (affirmative/negative):

  • Formas afirmativas: habla, come, vive, haz, pon, di, etc.

  • Formas negativas: no hables, no comas, no vivas, no hagas, no pongas, no digas, etc.

(c) Non-personal forms:

  • Infinitivo (hablar, comer, vivir)

  • Gerundio (hablando, comiendo, viviendo)

  • Participio (hablado, comido, vivido)

(d) Pronominal verbs:

  • levantarse, llamarse, sentirse, acostarse, quedarse…

(e) Verbs like Gustar:

  • Gustar, encantar, doler, interesar, parecer, importar…

6. Verbal Periphrases

  • ir a + infinitivo (futuro inmediato)

  • tener que / deber + infinitivo (obligacion)

  • Hay (haber) que + infinitivo (obligacion impersonal y general)

  • estar + gerundio (accion en desarrollo)

  • acabar de + infinitivo (accion recien terminada)

7. Sentences

  • Orden basico SVO (Sujeto + Verbo + Objeto)

  • Oraciones afirmativas, negativas e interrogativas

  • Uso y colocacion de "no" y de palabras negativas (nada, nunca, nadie)

  • Conjunciones basicas (y, o, pero, porque, aunque, cuando, si…)

  • Conectores (adicion, contraste, causa, consecuencia, condicion, finalidad, tiempo, orden o secuencia, ejemplificacion, resumen o conclusion)

8. Prepositions

  • Uso de las preposiciones mas frecuentes: a, de, en, con, por, para, sobre, entre, desde, hasta…

  • Preposiciones de lugar: sobre, encima de, entre, debajo de, al lado de…

  • Expresiones de tiempo (hace tres anos, por la manana, en 2025, desde, hasta, antes de, despues de…)

9. Adverbs

  • De lugar (aqui, alli, cerca, lejos…)

  • De tiempo (hoy, ayer, manana, siempre, nunca…)

  • De cantidad (muy, poco, bastante, demasiado…)

  • De modo (bien, mal, rapido…)

  • De afirmacion y negacion (si, no, tambien, tampoco…)

  • De interrogacion (que, cuando, donde, adonde, como, por que, cuanto)

10. Basic Constructions

  • Hay / estar / ser (diferencias y usos)

  • Ser vs estar con adjetivos

  • Expresiones con tener (tener hambre, tener frio…)

11. Communicative Functions

  • Formulas de cortesia (por favor, gracias, de nada, disculpe…)

  • Peticiones y ofrecimientos simples

  • Expresiones de opinion (creo que, pienso que…)

  • Expresiones de acuerdo y desacuerdo (de acuerdo, no lo creo…)


Suggested Books

  • Nuevo Espanol Sin Fronteras 1 and 2, Student's Book + Workbook, Goyal, SGEL

  • Nuevo ELE Inicial 1 and 2, Student's Book + Workbook, SM

  • ELE Actual A1 and A2, Student's Book + Workbook, SM

  • Nuevo Ven 1 and 2, Student's Book + Workbook, Goyal, Edelsa

  • Nuevo Suena 1 and 2, Student's Book + Workbook, Goyal, Anaya

  • Metodo de Espanol A1 + A2, Student's Book + Workbook, Goyal, Anaya

  • Nuevo Prisma A1 + A2, Student's Book + Workbook, Goyal, Edinumen


Note: The Class X ICSE examination paper will be set on the entire syllabus prescribed for the subject. CISCE has not prescribed bifurcation of the syllabus for this subject.

Internal Assessment — 20 Marks

Internal Assessment for Class X includes an assessment of Listening and Speaking Skills only.


Class X: Four assessments (of both listening and speaking skills) in the course of the year, with the fourth one to be assessed by an External Examiner at the end of the year.

Assessment

Examiner

Assessment 1

Subject Teacher

Assessment 2

Subject Teacher

Assessment 3

Subject Teacher

Assessment 4 — Final ICSE Board Examinations

External Examiner

Note: The External Examiner may be a teacher from another school or institution, appointed and approved by the CISCE.


Award of Marks

Skill

Marks

Listening Skills

10 marks

Speaking Skills

10 marks

Total

20 marks

Pattern of Assessment


A. Listening Skills

  • 2–3 short audio clips of 1–2 minutes duration may be used

  • Each audio clip is to be played twice at a moderately slow pace

  • Students may make brief notes during the playing of the audio clip

  • Students then answer objective-type questions on the paper provided

  • Nature of audio clips: announcements (train station, supermarket, airport), voicemail message, short dialogue, radio message, etc.

  • The listening files or audio clips are to be played on a school-provided device or gadget and should NOT be read out

Question formats: Multiple Choice Questions | True or False Statements with justification | Matching tasks

Note: This component is designed to assess only listening comprehension skills. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure will not be taken into account while grading this component.


B. Speaking Skills (6–8 minutes total; 10 minutes preparation for Tasks 2 and 3)

Task 1 — Interaction (1 minute) The examiner asks questions in Spanish about the candidate's daily life. Topics include: your family, your interests, your work, or your activities. Example questions: What is your name? / What is your nationality? / What are your hobbies? / Tell me about your family / your studies / your holidays.

Task 2 — Monologue (2 minutes) The candidate is assessed through a prepared individual oral presentation on a given theme, which can be from any of the topics under the Annexe. The examiner will listen to the candidate and may ask two or three follow-up questions.

Task 3 — Role Play (3–4 minutes) The candidate must engage in a conversation with the examiner to solve a real-life situation.


Annexe Topics — Spanish Group I (integrated into all 4 skills)


Topic A: Identity and Culture

Personal Identity and Relationships:

  • Present oneself

  • Personal life (preferences and choices, job, family, educational background, neighbourhood)

  • Generation gap, friendship and pets

  • Routine activities/daily life

  • Describing family

  • People, physical description, personality, and sentiments (happiness, sadness, disappointment, worries, fear, regret, surprise, curiosity, indifference)

Important Events:

  • Festivals: religious, national, international, and family

  • Celebrations, special occasions, etc.

Free Time/Leisure:

  • Leisure: sports, outings, hobbies and interests, intellectual and artistic pursuits

  • Discuss hobbies and daily activities

  • Books: short stories, novels, magazines, weekly, monthly, comics, fables

Culture and Traditions:

  • Festivals, culture, customs and traditions in the Spanish-speaking countries and one's own country

  • Events

  • Basic etiquette (e.g., polite forms of address)

  • The political map with the Spanish-speaking countries, Spanish cuisine, music, regions, historical sites, art, etc.

Topic B: Holidays, Tourism and Travel

Travel and Transport:

  • Vacations, modes of transport, duration, itinerary

  • Travel plans — past, present, future, experiences and memories, etc.

Tourism and Activities:

  • Eco-tourism, important tourist sites/places, and weather forecast

  • Visits, excursions, accidents, etc.

  • Countries, cities, countryside, regions, natural reserves, etc.

  • Holiday activities

Accommodation and Directions:

  • Types of accommodation (the house, interior, exterior)

  • The stay, holiday homes, hotels, rent/hire a place, reservations

  • Traffic rules, road safety, giving directions, following and understanding maps

Shopping:

  • Fashion and lifestyle

  • Money and payments (modes of payment, budget, expenses)

  • Enquire about goods in a shop and buy what one needs (quantity, measures, weight)

  • Brands, clothes and accessories, consumption

  • Sale, shopping malls, grocery shopping, local markets, supermarkets, etc.

Cuisine:

  • Food habits, different cuisine, preferences and choices

  • Ordering food, menu, recipes, etc.

  • Place an order for a meal / eating out in a restaurant / at the cafe (with or without the menu)

Topic C: Health, Education and Technology

Home Life:

  • Domestic animals, guests and outings, family life, etc.

  • Household chores and pocket money

Fitness and Well-being:

  • Food choices and lifestyle

  • Stress, pressure, anxiety, etc.

  • The human body, health and illness, advice and precautions, visit to a doctor, pharmacist, etc.

  • Present one's medical problem to a doctor, social activities, fitness and body care

  • Medical emergency and assistance

Media and Technologies:

  • Current affairs, stories, social trends, TV programmes, press, Internet, print and visual media, journals, radio and TV

  • Read notices, posters, catalogues, timetables, brochures, menus, advertisements, signs, etc.

  • Technology in everyday life, social media, mobile and current technology trends, etc.

Studies and Future Plans:

  • Institutions, the school system, the classroom subjects, the academic year, and school activities; school experiences

  • Education system and training, learning tools and subjects

  • Life at school/college

  • Higher education and career choices

  • Future plans and ambition

  • Language learning

Topic D: The World Around

Home and Locality:

  • City/village life

  • Description of one's home and the surroundings, shops and places in the vicinity

The Environment:

  • The natural world, seasons, climate and the weather

  • Social issues: charity/voluntary work

  • Global issues: poverty/homelessness, deforestation, natural environmental problems/disasters, causes and solutions, World Environment Day, Earth Day, etc.

Entertainment:

  • Cinema, concerts, theatre, park, entertainment, social media/network, television, newspapers, etc.

Services:

  • Basic services at public places: hotel, airport, shops, train station, restaurant, library, post office, a bank, etc.

  • Buy tickets (film, train, play, etc.)


Writing Marking Criteria — Spanish Group I (Class X)

Composition (15 marks)

Grade

Content (4M)

Coherence and Cohesion (4M)

Vocabulary (3M)

Grammar (4M)

I — Expectations fully met (12–15M)

The candidate can: write a text in line with the question; narrate an event, past activities, or a personal experience; provide details with examples and can describe feelings and reactions; write a well-defined text with explanations and reasoning that fully meet the requirements; provide additional details to enhance their writing.

The candidate can link statements using commonly used connectors and expressions to produce a logical and coherent text.

The candidate can use a varied and relevant vocabulary appropriate to the question. The candidate is also able to express themselves without difficulty on familiar and common topics. Spelling is usually correct.

The candidate can accurately use syntactic structures and grammatical forms, while also using some common, more complex structures. The candidate is able to frame grammatically well-structured phrases.

II — Expectations partially met (8–11M)

The candidate can write a series of simple sentences to briefly describe an event or recount a personal or professional experience. The candidate can express their impressions in simple terms but lacks clarity.

The candidate can produce simple sentences and link them with basic connectors, but there are frequent breaks in meaning, making the text sometimes difficult to follow. The overall coherence is limited.

The candidate can correctly use basic words and expressions to address the task. Spelling is generally correct for basic words, but some errors exist, and certain words are occasionally written phonetically.

The candidate can use simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms but may make occasional errors.

III — Expectations not met (2–7M)

The candidate writes short, isolated sentences that are insufficient to effectively complete the task.

The candidate writes isolated sentences with no connectors. The text is often unclear or incomplete, making it difficult to follow. The text lacks coherence.

The candidate uses a very limited set of basic words, but these are often insufficient to complete the task effectively. Spelling is correct for only a few basic words, with most words written phonetically.

The candidate makes errors even while using basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms.

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted, or the content is off-topic or too minimal to assess.

Email Writing (15 marks)

Grade

Content (6M)

Coherence and Cohesion

Sociolinguistic Competence (3M)

Vocabulary

Grammar

I — Expectations fully met (12–15M)

The candidate can: write a short text in line with the task; narrate an event, past activities, or a personal experience; can provide details with examples and can describe feelings and reactions; write a short text that fully meets the requirements of the task; provide additional details to enhance their writing.

The candidate can link statements using the most commonly used connectors to produce a short, coherent text in clear paragraphs.

The candidate can express themselves using the most commonly used terms of politeness and in a tone (formal/informal) that is suitable to the situation.

The candidate can use a varied vocabulary to express themselves without difficulty on familiar and common topics. Spelling is usually correct.

The candidate can accurately use basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms, while also using some common, more complex structures.

II — Expectations partially met (8–11M)

The candidate can write a series of simple sentences to briefly describe an event or recount a personal or professional experience. The candidate can express their impressions in simple terms but lacks clarity.

The candidate can produce simple sentences and link them with basic connectors, but there are frequent breaks in meaning, making the text sometimes difficult to follow. The overall coherence is limited.

The candidate can use basic terms of politeness. However, some confusion in tone (formal/informal) occurs.

The candidate can correctly use basic words and expressions to address the task. Spelling is generally correct for basic words, but some errors exist, and certain words are occasionally written phonetically.

The candidate can use simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms but may make occasional errors.

III — Expectations not met (2–7M)

The candidate writes short, isolated sentences that are insufficient to effectively complete the task.

The candidate writes isolated sentences with no connectors. The text is often unclear or incomplete, making it difficult to follow. The text lacks coherence.

The candidate makes errors even in using the basic terms of politeness and struggles to choose the correct tone (formal/informal).

The candidate uses a very limited set of basic words, but these are often insufficient to complete the task effectively. Spelling is correct for only a few basic words, with most words written phonetically.

The candidate makes errors even while using basic syntactic structures and grammatical forms.

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted, or the content is off-topic or too minimal to assess.

Listening Marking Criteria — Spanish Group I (Class X)

Note: This component assesses only listening comprehension skills. Spelling, grammar, and sentence structure are not evaluated. The goal is to assess how well students can extract key information, understand tone and speaker intent, and interpret meaning in real-world communicative situations.

Question formats assessed: Multiple Choice Questions | True or False with justification | Matching tasks

No separate grade rubric is provided in the CISCE document for this component beyond the formats above and the note that writing accuracy is not penalised.


Speaking Marking Criteria — Spanish Group I (Class X)

Grade

Task 1: Interaction

Task 2: Monologue

Task 3: Role Play

Grammar and Vocabulary

Phonetics

Marks

I — Expectations fully met (8–10M)

The candidate can introduce themselves and describe aspects of their daily environment, as well as talk about past projects or activities, providing brief justifications or explanations. The candidate can respond to the examiner's questions and engage in exchanges without apparent difficulty on familiar topics.

The candidate can give a brief presentation on the given topic, explain why they like or dislike something, and state their preferences. The speech is coherent and is capable of using commonly used connectors.

The candidate can successfully complete the task by using appropriate speech acts and interact in predictable everyday situations effortlessly, even taking the initiative. The candidate can express themselves in a generally appropriate tone (formal/informal), using terms of politeness correctly.

The candidate can use a varied vocabulary to express themselves effortlessly on familiar and everyday topics. The candidate can correctly use most simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms, as well as some common complex structures.

The candidate has generally correct pronunciation. Occasional difficulties may still arise, especially with more complex words.

8–10

II — Expectations partially met (5–7M)

The candidate is capable of using simple short sentences to introduce themselves and talk about their immediate surroundings. The candidate can answer the examiner's questions, but responses are brief and limited. The candidate may struggle to elaborate or expand on their answers.

The candidate can express themselves on the given topic using simple, short sentences and briefly explain why they like or dislike something. The speech is generally coherent but may require occasional prompting from the examiner.

The candidate is capable of completing the task but often requires guidance or a prompt from the examiner. They can establish basic social contact using simple terms of politeness, but the candidate is inconsistent in their usage of tone (formal/informal).

The candidate can use basic words and expressions, along with simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms, though these tend to be repetitive. Some basic errors occur, but they do not significantly hinder communication.

The candidate can correctly pronounce simple expressions and familiar words. The examiner may need to ask for certain words to be repeated, but the overall communication remains understandable throughout.

5–7

III — Expectations not met (2–4M)

The candidate provides minimal information about their identity and surroundings. They require prompts from the examiner. The candidate provides very basic, disjointed and incomplete sentences. Frequent breaks in meaning make it difficult to understand, and the candidate struggles to respond even with prompting from the examiner.

The candidate provides very basic, disjointed and incomplete sentences about their surroundings and daily activities. Frequent breaks in meaning make it difficult to understand, and the candidate struggles to respond even with prompting.

The candidate struggles to complete the task and often needs significant help from the examiner. Has difficulty establishing social contact and may use very limited or incorrect terms of politeness.

The candidate has a limited grasp of even simple syntactic structures and grammatical forms. Has a limited repertoire of basic words and expressions, which often prevents them from fully completing the task. Errors are frequent.

The candidate struggles with pronunciation, often mispronouncing basic words and expressions. Frequent clarification or repetition from the examiner is needed, and communication may be unclear at times.

2–4

IV — Not Attempted or Insufficient Response (0–1M)

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

The task is not attempted (candidate remains silent or gives unrelated responses), or the spoken production is too limited to be evaluated.

Vocabulary is extremely limited or inappropriate. Frequent and major grammatical errors prevent communication.

Pronunciation and intonation are unclear. The examiner struggles to understand, even with repetition or prompting.

0–1

Preparation Tips — Spanish Group I


Composition:

  • Aim for 100–120 words — shorter than French; do not over-write

  • Practise all three types: narrative, descriptive, opinion

  • Use connectors: primero, luego, despues, sin embargo, ademas, por eso, aunque, finalmente

Email Writing:

  • Memorise all 9 mandatory layout elements: Asunto, Para, De, Fecha, Saludo formal/informal, Presentacion, Desarrollo, Conclusion/finalizacion, Despedida formal/informal

  • Formal greeting: Estimado/a Sr./Sra. | Informal: Hola, Querido/a

  • Formal closing: Un cordial saludo / Atentamente | Informal: Un abrazo, Hasta pronto

Grammar — High Priority Topics:

  • Ser vs Estar — one of the most tested topics at A2 level

  • Preterito Indefinido vs Preterito Imperfecto — the contrast is explicitly listed in the syllabus

  • Gustar-type verbs — the verb agrees with the thing liked, not the person

  • Direct and indirect object pronouns and their order when combined

  • Reflexive verbs — essential for daily routine vocabulary

  • Por vs Para — common source of errors

Speaking:

  • Task 1 self-introduction: Me llamo…, Soy de…, Tengo…anos, Me gusta…, En mi familia hay…

  • Prepare 5–6 monologue topics from different Annexe categories

  • Role-play scenarios: ordering in a restaurant, booking a hotel, visiting a doctor, asking for directions

  • Use filler phrases: Bueno…, A ver…, Pues…, Es que…

Listening:

  • Focus on extracting keywords — spelling and grammar are not marked

  • Write keywords during first listening; complete answers during second listening


FAQs — Spanish Group I


Q1. Is the Spanish syllabus different for Group I and Group II? No. The syllabus explicitly states it is the same for both groups. The only difference is the subject code — Group I is 36, Group II is 85.

Q2. What is the most specific feature of the Spanish email format? Spanish is the only language in this document with a full mandatory 9-field layout — Asunto, Para, De, Fecha, Saludo formal/informal, Presentacion, Desarrollo, Conclusion/finalizacion, and Despedida formal/informal. This layout must be followed.

Q3. What is the difference between Ser and Estar? Ser is used for permanent characteristics (identity, nationality, profession, origin). Estar is used for temporary states, location, and ongoing actions. This distinction is explicitly tested.

Q4. What is the difference between Preterito Indefinido and Preterito Imperfecto? Indefinido describes completed actions at a specific past moment. Imperfecto describes habitual or ongoing past actions. The "contraste de pasados" is explicitly listed in the syllabus.

Q5. Do I need to know the Subjunctive in Spanish? It is not listed in the Spanish grammar section. Unlike French (where it appears as "very basic for awareness"), Spanish at this level does not include it.

Q6. What are verbs like Gustar? Gustar, encantar, doler, interesar, parecer, importar. The subject is the thing that pleases or hurts, not the person. Example: Me gustan los libros.

Q7. How many books are suggested for Spanish? Seven books are listed.

Q8. How many internal assessments are there in Class X? Four — the first three by the Subject Teacher, the fourth by an External Examiner from another school or institution appointed by CISCE.

All content above is based directly on the official CISCE ICSE Modern Foreign Languages Group I Syllabus, Examination Year 2028. Verify with the latest document at cisce.org.

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