C Curriculum Explorer
English·Grammar & Punctuation·procedural

Brackets and dashes for parenthesis

Use brackets, dashes, and commas to indicate parenthesis — additional information inserted into a sentence that could be removed without changing the sentence's core meaning

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

  • Insert a parenthetical phrase using paired brackets, e.g. 'The oldest building (built in 1642) stands in the town square'
  • Use paired dashes to add an aside or extra detail within a sentence, e.g. 'My brother — who is older than me — lives in London'
  • Choose between brackets, dashes, and commas for parenthesis based on how much emphasis the aside should receive, recognising that dashes give most prominence and brackets give least

Assessment prompt

When Brackets and dashes for parenthesis adds a little extra detail inside a sentence — like "The teacher, who is very strict, gave us homework" — do they correctly use brackets, dashes, or commas around that added bit?

Standards alignment

Eng.App2.Y5.Punc.1GB · uk-nc-2013

Parenthesis

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

Eng.UKS2.Write.VGP.2cGB · uk-nc-2013

Indicate parenthesis

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