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Active and passive voice

PROCEDURAL
EnglishGrammar & Punctuation|Ages 10—11|ID: mt_gbTyzvnWzr

Use the passive voice to shift focus from the agent to the action or recipient, understanding how passive constructions affect the presentation of information in formal and objective writing

Mastery Evidence

  • Convert active sentences to passive voice and explain the change in emphasis
  • Identify passive constructions in news reports and scientific writing
  • Choose between active and passive voice based on purpose and audience

Assessment Prompt

“When [child] wants to write about something without saying who did it — like in a science report — can they switch the sentence round to say "The experiment was carried out" instead of "We carried out the experiment"?”

Curriculum Standards2 alignments

Eng.App2.Y6.Sent.1The national curriculum in England
Passive voice

Use of the passive to affect the presentation of information in a sentence [for example, I broke the window in the greenhouse versus The window in the greenhouse was broken (by me)].

English · Key Stage 2
Eng.UKS2.Write.VGP.1bThe national curriculum in England
Use passive verbs

Develop their understanding of the concepts set out in English Appendix 2 by using passive verbs to affect the presentation of information in a sentence.

English · Key Stage 2

Prerequisites2

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Unlocks2