C Curriculum Explorer
English·Grammar & Punctuation·procedural

Linking paragraphs with adverbials

Link ideas across paragraphs using adverbials of time (later, meanwhile, after a while), place (nearby, far away, beyond the wall), and number (secondly, finally, in addition) to guide the reader through a multi-paragraph text

Suggested ages 9–11

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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

  • Begin a new paragraph with an adverbial of time to signal a shift in time or sequence, e.g. 'Meanwhile, back at the castle...' or 'Several hours later, the storm finally passed'
  • Use adverbials of place to move the reader to a new location between paragraphs, e.g. 'Beyond the forest, the land was flat and dry'
  • Use numbering or addition adverbials to structure non-fiction across paragraphs, e.g. 'The first reason... The second reason... In addition...'

Assessment prompt

When Linking paragraphs with adverbials writes a multi-paragraph story or report, do they use linking phrases — like "Meanwhile, far away…" or "By the following morning…" — to guide the reader smoothly from one section to the next?

Standards alignment

Eng.App2.Y5.Text.2GB · uk-nc-2013

Linking ideas across paragraphs

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

Eng.UKS2.Write.Comp.2dGB · uk-nc-2013

Build cohesion

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