Tuesday, 3 February 2009

mardi trois février

We started with traditional song lundi matin

Olivia did the register. Helen can you do next week? Merci à vous

We played Claire and David 's ingenious board game!

I prepared a handout on activities for MLPS and we worked our way through that. This is a work in progress and you can add to the lists roughly divided into Listening and Talking, Reading and Writing. In practice most activities cover at least 2 of the skills.

I also suggested the site journal des enfants and looked at the article on the Obama children
Here is their article on the recent plane crash into the Hudson river
All of these web pages are real, interesting, relevant and not contrived or condescending. They are of course challenging and pupils are not expected to understand everything but gain satisfaction from what they can decipher. I think of it as a puzzle and like detective work.

A site to help you read foreign language pages is lingro. First you copy the url of the web page and then launch lingro, paste it in and select French- English.
Click on any word you don't know and a dictionary pops up with suggestions. Brilliant! Here is what the lion page from africanimo looks like in lingro

Another site I like but we couldn't get into is mon jt quotidien meaning my daily newsreel (jt- journal télévisé). This is a bit like newsround with several short video clips changed every weekday. This is a listening only exercise so is harder - good for you though! There are often quirky stories under the tab insolite
Here are a couple of interesting ones
the parrot
the car that crashed into a church roof

Vokis: If you have emailed me a voki it as not arrived ( I suspect it has been automatically deleted as spam). Can you try resending to my home email kmcmeekin@me.com?

I have uploaded the walking dictation and the chain questions to My Teaching Files in a folder called Shared Work. Some other stuff too in appleworks (mac) only at the moment till I get around to converting it.

Wordle at the last moment we had a quick look at wordle.net (Your browser needs to have Java enabled) You can easily create attractive word displays by simply typing words or pasting in a large amount of text. The most frequently used words appear larger - a bit like a tag cloud. You can play about with the layout and colour scheme. It is free, you don't need to log in. You can save your work to the public gallery. Give it a memorable and unusual title so you can search for it again or you can print it (don't have a black background!) or save as pdf
Here are some examples

another way to say good
to illustrate the "ent" sound

I gave out a sheet on organising team games at the very end. There is a sound file in My teaching files Modules> Audio>jeuxdequipe.mp3 to accompany this if you would like to hear the pronunciation by Laure.
Homework - practise these commands and be prepared to use them next week.
Have a play about in wordle if you want and think of ways you and your pupils could use this. Print your best effort!

A la semaine prochaine!

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