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The Present Perfect Tense

CONCEPTUAL
EnglishGrammar & Punctuation|Ages 7—11|ID: mt_7D-vlii8F-

Use the present perfect form of verbs in contrast to the simple past tense, understanding how the present perfect indicates an action completed at an unspecified time or with ongoing relevance (e.g., 'He has gone out' vs 'He went out')

Mastery Evidence

  • Form the present perfect using 'has/have' + past participle (e.g., 'She has eaten', 'They have finished')
  • Choose between simple past and present perfect to match the intended meaning (e.g., 'I ate lunch' vs 'I have eaten lunch')
  • Identify the present perfect form in a text and explain why the author used it instead of simple past

Assessment Prompt

“Can [child] explain the difference between "I ate breakfast" (simple past) and "I have eaten breakfast" (present perfect) — knowing one means a finished action and the other links the past to right now?”

Curriculum Standards4 alignments

L.5.1bCommon Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects
L.5.1b

Form and use the perfect (e.g., I had walked; I have walked; I will have walked) verb tenses.

English Language Arts
Eng.App2.Y3.Text.3The national curriculum in England
Present perfect form of verbs

Use of the present perfect form of verbs instead of the simple past [for example, He has gone out to play contrasted with He went out to play]

English · Key Stage 2
Eng.UKS2.Write.VGP.1cThe national curriculum in England
Use perfect form of verbs

Develop their understanding of the concepts set out in English Appendix 2 by using the perfect form of verbs to mark relationships of time and cause.

English · Key Stage 2
Eng_LKS2_Write_VGP_2The national curriculum in England
Use present perfect form

Develop their understanding of the concepts set out in English Appendix 2 by using the present perfect form of verbs in contrast to the past tense

English · Key Stage 2

Prerequisites3

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