C Curriculum Explorer
English·Grammar & Punctuation·conceptual

Modal Verbs and Possibility

Understand and use modal verbs (can, may, must, might, shall, will, could, should, would) and modal adverbs (perhaps, surely, certainly) to indicate degrees of possibility, necessity, and permission

Suggested ages 9–10

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Learning journey

Your child is mastering advanced grammar and punctuation — using complex sentence structures with relative clauses, understanding how to change word meanings with prefixes and suffixes, and creating cohesive, well-connected writing.

Evidence of understanding

  • Select a modal verb to express certainty, probability, or possibility in a sentence, e.g. 'It will rain' vs 'It might rain' vs 'It could rain'
  • Replace a modal verb with a modal adverb to achieve a similar effect, e.g. 'He might come' → 'Perhaps he will come'
  • Distinguish between modals expressing permission (may, can), obligation (must, should), and possibility (might, could) in context

Assessment prompt

When Modal Verbs and Possibility writes, do they choose between words like "must", "might", "could", and "should" to show whether something is certain, possible, or just an idea — rather than treating every action as definite?

Standards alignment

L.4.1cUS · ccss-ela

L.4.1c

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects · 4

Eng.App2.Y5.Sent.2GB · uk-nc-2013

Indicating degrees of possibility

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · Key Stage 2

Eng.UKS2.Write.VGP.1eGB · uk-nc-2013

Use modal verbs or adverbs

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · Key Stage 2