| The Educational plan for Teaching the Arabic Language for non-Arabic speakers for small groups
Beginners Level:
Studying hours: 20 hour per week.
Week days: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.
 (From 9.00 am – 12.55 pm) or from (02.00 pm - 17.55 pm)
Passing grade: 60%
Average Level:
Studying hours: 20 hours per week.
Week days: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.
(From 9.00 am – 12.55 pm) or from  (02.00 pm - 17.55 pm)
Passing grade: 65%
The advanced Level:
Studying hours: 22 hours per week + office hour (Thursday from 2:00- 2:00 pm).
Week days: Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday (from 9:00am-12:55 pm) or from  (02.00 pm - 17.55 pm)
                     Monday, Wednesday (from 9:00am-13.55pm)
Passing grade: 70%
 	
Oral examination (interview):
The oral exam stands on several standards, such as:
Pronunciation 
•	Fully understood with a slight foreign accent.
•	Understood with an obvious foreign accent.
•	Difficult to understand due to the pronunciation problems, asked to repeat his/herself frequently.
•	Have pronunciation problems that require careful listening. It leads to misunderstanding. 
•	Has pronunciation problem that makes his/her conversation difficult to understand.
Grammar 
•	Makes a few grammatical mistakes that do not affect the content.
•	Make grammatical mistakes that do not cause ambiguity in the content.
• 	Makes grammatical mistakes that cause ambiguity in the content.
•	Difficult to understand due to the grammatical mistakes.
•	Many grammatical mistakes, which makes the conversation hard to understand.
Linguistic vocabularies
•	Uses the vocabularies that are preferable by the native speaker.
•	Uses inexpressible vocabularies but the content is understandable.
•	Chooses some false vocabularies sometimes, which causes a blare meaning in his/her
        conversation.
•	His/her vocabularies are limited, and uses vocabularies in the wrong concept.
•	His/her narrow vocabularies makes it hard to understand.
Understanding
•	Understands what is being told without an obvious difficulty.
•	Understands what is being told with asking about the question’s meaning from while to while.
•	Understands almost what is being told after the repeating the question several times.
•	Finds severe difficulty following the examiner.
•	Does not understand the examiner’s question at all.
Fluency
 
•	Fluent as the native speaker is.
•	With a little hesitation and repeating can express exactly what he/she wants.
•	Hesitate and stator and extreme slow with expressing what he/she wants. It might be difficult to
        understand some parts of his/her conversation.
•	Hesitates and keeps quiet for long periods which make it difficult to understand.
•	Hesitates and keeps quiet for long periods which make his/her conversation not understandable.
Goals of teaching the linguistic skills
Lower-beginners Level:
      Listening skill:
•	Listening to a spoken short script and setting the requested vocabularies.
•	Setting the number of participants and their gender in a spoken script.
•	 Understanding the heard language and carrying out orders, (point, stand, set, go, put,,…. Etc).
•	Understanding the personal data orders (name, age, address).
• 	Understanding the special orders by identifying people and things.
•	Identifying the alphabetical letters and numbers till 50.
•	Listening and setting the words that shows time.
       Reading skill:
•	Reading all basic vocabularies when mentioned in a silent reading script.
• 	Reading the class-room colleague’s names.
•	Reading numbers from 1-60 written in letters.
• 	Reading words list related to a specific concept.
•	Identifying the writing- codes for sounds (connecting the sound with the letter).
•	Reading a description of familiar things (one sentence).
      
     Speaking skill and oral interaction:
 
•	Naming public things.
•	Presenting personal data (name, age, address). 
• 	Finding and chanting a group on of chanting
•	Participating in a short dialogue.
•	Describing public things in a short form.
•	Buying goods and others.
•	Ability to express one’s self and others.
      Writing skill:
•	Writing the alphabetical letters in its different shapes.
•	Writing numbers from 1-60.
•	Writing his/her name, colleagues, and colleague’s last names.
• 	Writing the basic vocabularies by conveying it from a written form.
•	Coping short messages and words lists in clear hand writing.
•	Completing a short description for a person or something related to a certain concept.
Intermediate- beginner’s level
 
      Listening skill:
•	Identifying the basic vocabularies when it is mentioned in a spoken script.
•	Carrying out 2-3 orders.
•	Understanding the special orders concerning family and friends.
•	Listening to a simplified description of events and scenes and explaining it without the use of the
        language.
•	The ability to describe something depending on a concept or a picture.
•	Setting the sequence numbers.
•	Listening and identifying week days, months, and dates.
        Reading skill: 
•	 Reading the basic vocabularies silently, whether it appeared in the concept or not.
•	Reading a short script (2-3 sentences) about familiar topics, answering with yes/no or ight/wrong.
•	Reading numbers from 1-100 written in letters.
•	Reading prices and quantities.
•	Reading sentences that have been orally controlled.
     Speaking skill and oral interaction:
•	Describing family and friends (ages, relationships, weight, color...)
• 	Chanting solo and in groups.
• 	Composing sentences about one’s need and the others.
• 	Spelling the basic vocabularies that will be given in lists, with a right pronunciation.
•	 Answering questions and describing something after hearing a certain script.
•	Asking for details about family and friends using specific words.
• 	Calculating quantities and money in the Arabic language.
•	 Expressing time by using certain words.
     Writing skill:
•	Writing the numbers from 1-100.
•	Writing the correct shape of the letter according to its position.
• 	Writing the given words in basic vocabularies list with clear hand writing.
•	Writing short familiar sentences when dictated.
 
The upper-beginners level:
      Listening skill:
•	Identifying the basic vocabularies when mentioned in a spoken script.
•	Carrying out 4-5 orders.
•	Earning the skill of distinguishing by listening to a paragraph and identifying the right and wrong
        expressions according to the paragraph.
•	Carrying out special orders related to facts.
•	Listening to a short spoken script then conveying the mentioned data in a different style (table,
        descriptive form...)
      Reading skill:
•	Reading paragraphs (2-3 sentences), then answering yes/no questions and other related 
        questions.
•	 Reading short paragraphs (2-3 sentences) then setting right concluded expressions.
•	 Reading and explaining data in a table or a descriptive form.
•	 Dictating and reading a story. 
      Speaking skill and oral interaction:
•	Answering some questions and presenting some data after listening to a script.
•	 Composing 2-3 sentences about familiar topics. 
•	 Composing a number of connected sentences about a picture, map, or descriptive drawing, 
        following a specific pattern.
• 	Ability to express time and its fragment.
•	 Describing a short chain of previous events depending on some words, those are provided for
        help.
• 	Composing full sentences depending on related words to a specific concept.
•	Using greeting and excusing expressions.
      Writing skill:
•	Writing a short description for a person or a thing related to certain concept.
•	Writing short familiar sentences when dictated. 
•	Writing words and expressions in clear hand writing.
•	Re-arranging sentences to compose a connected paragraph.
The Lower-average Level:
      Listening skill:
•	Identifying the basic vocabularies when mentioned in a spoken script.
•	Earning concluding skills by listening to a paragraph and identifying the right and wrong concluded expressions.
•	Understanding special orders related to facts and personal data related to a certain topic.
•	Listening to a short script then conveying the data in a different style.
•	Understanding and carrying out a number of connected orders.
•	Understanding the general concept of a short story.
•	Identifying the emotional status of the speaker through his/her voice and the tone.
Reading skill:
•	Reading a story (2-3 paragraph) about a familiar topic, then choosing the expression that contains the main idea from several expressions (multiple choice).
•	Re-arranging a number of sentences or paragraphs in the right order.
•	Earning the skill of using dictionaries.
•	Carrying out a number of written connected directions.
•	Reading some parts of a script the expecting the following events (multiple choice).
•	Reading a script (3-5 paragraphs) searching for certain words.
•	Setting the pronouns and the relative pronouns.
Speaking skill and oral interaction:
•	Answering several questions and presenting a detailed description for something after listening to a script.
•	Describing a picture related to some aspects of a certain topic.
•	Narrating a number of connected sentences showed in pictures in the past tense.
•	Participating in a group in order to solve problem, which requires concluding some information.
•	Expressing his/her opinion around certain causes and topics.
•	Using the speech strategies, such as changing the conversation topic, presenting new information, and inviting others to participate in the conversation. 
•	Presenting a sequence number of directions.
•	Presenting and carrying out orders.
Writing skill:
•	Writing short personal notes about a familiar topic and presenting it to a friend (post card).
•	Writing one sentence answers about several questions to show the question’s meaning.
•	Dictating a one paragraph around a familiar script.
•	Composing a number of sentences by using the conjunction tools.
The intermediate- average level:
Listening skill:
•	Identifying the basic vocabularies when mentioned in a spoken script.
•	Earning the concluding skill by listening to a paragraph and identifying the right and the wrong concluding expressions in a script.
•	Understanding the special orders related to facts and personal data.
•	Understanding the main ideas and distinguishing it from the secondary ones.
•	Differentiating between facts and opinions through a regular conversation.
Reading skill:
•	Reading a script (3-5 paragraphs) and identifying the main idea.
•	Reading a script (5-10 paragraphs), then searching for specific words.
•	Identifying the logical relationships that are expressed in a script (3-5 paragraphs) about a familiar topic.
•	Distinguishing between the main and secondary ideas in a script.
•	Identifying the meaning of new words from the concept.
•	Accurate speech and pronunciation with consideration of grammar.
•	Searching in extended scripts (telephone guide or dictionary) for specific information.
•	Reading a short story about a familiar topic, then summarizing it orally.
Speaking skill and oral interaction:
•	Presenting a short summary, that contains the main points in a spoken script.
•	Presenting a detailed description of a picture, that expresses a familiar scene.
•	Describing simplified activates.
•	Describing a number of sequence events. 
•	Participating in a group in order to solve a problem, which requires connecting information between spoken and written scripts.
•	Expressing opinions around certain causes and topics.
•	Using the speech strategies that are specialized in orienting speech, objecting, and auditing what has been said in a conversation. 
•	Choosing the appropriate expressions for different situations.
Writing skill:
•	Writing a short description for an object or a familiar scene.
•	Writing a summary for a novel in one paragraph.
•	One paragraph dictating from unfamiliar script.
•	Clear hand-writing and drawing the letters correctly.
•	Taking in consideration the silent letters in some words.
•	Taking in consideration the basic dictation rules in writing.
•	Earning the fluency in free-writing.
The upper-average level:
Listening skill:
•	Identifying the basic vocabularies when mentioned in a spoken script.
•	Earning the concluding skills by listening to a paragraph and expecting a suitable ending.
•	Understanding the special orders about facts and personal data around a specific topic.
•	Listening to a short script then conveying the mentioned information by presenting it in a different style.
•	Finding the main ideas and distinguishing it from the secondary ones.
•	Differentiating between facts and opinions in a conversation.
•	Understanding a short story when it’s event not in order.
Reading skill:
•	Reading a script (5-10 paragraphs) then setting the main ideas.
•	Reading a script (5-10 paragraphs) and searching for specific words, then presenting the basic information in other form (table, descriptive drawing).
•	Setting the logical relationships that are expressed by the conjunction tools in a script (5-10 paragraphs) about unfamiliar topic.
•	Identifying new vocabularies from the concept.
•	Following a tale or a description when the events are not in order.
•	Differentiating between facts and opinions.
The speaking skill and oral interaction:
•	Presenting a detailed summary about the main points and the mentioned information as spoken evidence. 
•	Presenting an oral presentation about a familiar topic.
•	Presenting a short oral presentation about given information in some shapes, drawings, maps, pictures, and any other information not scripted.
•	Describing some sequence events in different tenses.
•	Participating in a group in order to solve a problem, which requires connecting between written and spoken scripts.
•	Auditing opinions using helping verbs.
•	Using the right un-linguistic behavior.
Writing skill:
•	Writing a summary using bullets for a short written or spoken script.
•	Writing a script using the provided information in unscripted concept.
•	Writing one paragraph summary of a controversial script about a certain topic.   
•	Writing a dictation (3-5 paragraphs) from a familiar script.
The first Advanced level:
 Listening skill:  
•	Finding the detailed information in a script.
•	Understanding the basic points and the general concept for an extended script.
•	Following a group of extended directions.
•	Differentiating between facts and opinions.
•	Identifying the musical sounds differences.
•	Identifying the characteristics and the style of a script.
•	Identifying the relations that connect the speakers in a conversation.
•	Identifying the emotional status of the speaker.
•	Understanding the details in short conversations about certain unfamiliar topics.
Reading skill:
•	Reading a script (3-5 paragraphs) and setting the main idea.
•	Reading a script (5-10 paragraphs) then searching for specific words.
•	Setting the logical relationships that are expressed by the conjunction tools in a script (3-5 paragraphs) about unfamiliar topics.
•	Following a tale or a description, in which the events are not in order.
•	Setting the exiting topics from the main line in a written script                            .
•	Understanding the hidden and functional goals of the script.
•	Differentiating between the main and marginal information related to a script.
Speaking skill and oral interaction:
•	Presenting the oral presentation about a familiar topic.
•	Using a number of formal and informal speech styles.
•	Participating in a group in order to solve a number of problems, which require some assumptions.
•	Questioning about abstract topics and answering the questions.
•	Using a number of speech strategies.
Writing skill:
•	Using punctuation marks.
•	Writing a short essay, divided into paragraphs, to present the main information.
•	Quick writing, erasing, and correcting by considering them a part of writing drafts and composing.
•	Using the preparation writing strategies.
•	Using the revision writing strategies.
The teacher expectations from the students:
•	Regular attendance. Teachers are not allowed to be absent without a previous notification.
•	Attending on time, and the mental preparation for the class-room activities.
•	Preparing, writing, and handing in homework on time.
•	The serious participation in the classroom. Working with the classroom colleagues nicely and cooperatively.
•	Speaking in Arabic only in the classroom, and with the colleagues and administration staff in the center.
•	Focusing on using the new vocabularies and expressions in the homework and during the class activities.
•	Dealing with notes seriously.
•	Using Arabic-Arabic dictionaries.
•	Non-Arabic dictionaries are not allowed in the classroom, and it is better if you do not use it at home.
•	Respecting everyone in the classroom and giving others the opportunity to participate.
•	Do not evaluate the colleague’s work.
•	Committing to the classroom philosophy and curriculum, in which it is based on a studied plan for the second- advanced level.
•	Dealing with the program flexibly and fully committing to the classroom rules. |