Why is oral language such an important skill for the future?
Oral language is one of the most valuable skills we can develop in our students. As automation continues to reshape the workplace, the ability to communicate with clarity, nuance, and persuasion will become even more important. Strong oral language supports thinking, builds vocabulary, and strengthens learning across every subject. It also develops the social and emotional skills children need to collaborate, negotiate, and lead in an increasingly human-centred workplace.
Some people believe oral language develops naturally if children are simply given time to talk. Why do effective teachers still plan precise oral language learning objectives?
While children do develop conversational language naturally, the rich academic and communicative vocabulary they need for school and life doesn't emerge through unstructured talk alone. Carefully planned oral language objectives ensure that every child, regardless of their home language environment, has equitable access to the vocabulary, sentence structures, and active listening skills that underpin success across the curriculum and beyond. Just as we wouldn't leave the development of mathematical thinking to chance, we shouldn't leave the development of high-quality oral language to chance either.
How does a high-quality oral language task benefit children learning English?
They create purposeful, low-pressure situations where language learners can stretch their abilities in real time, building confidence alongside competence. When tasks are built around engaging, concrete content – a picture book, a hands-on science experiment, or a structured partner discussion – they give young language learners the repeated exposure to vocabulary and sentence patterns that accelerates acquisition far more effectively than passive listening or worksheet-based activities. Rather than limiting students to what they can already produce independently, a high-quality oral language task positions them at the edge of their current ability, and then gives them the scaffolding, the encouragement, and the audience to reach beyond it.