Sunday, 27 May 2018

Teaching grammar.

It's fairly impossible to learn a language without learning grammar.

I'm learning Danish.

Danish grammar is quite difficult in some respects:

en hund = a dog
hunden = the dog
hunde = dogs
hundene = the dogs

et problem = a problem
problemet = the problem
problemer = problems
problemerne = the problems

...and quite easy in others:

jeg er = I am
du er = you are
han er = he is
hun er = she is
vi er = we are
de er = they are

A couple of weeks ago I was asked to teach a grammar lesson (present tense of regular verbs) to a group of year 7 students.

To get some context I asked what topic they were studying.
The answer was: no topic, we just want you to teach the verbs.

For someone who is quite proud of the intricacy of weaving grammar into Schemes of Work (see here) this seemed a little weird. Especially as they will probably only ever encounter a handful of IR verbs and, as their eventual targets, were very low, they really didn't need to be able to conjugate the whole verb....did they?

Apparently they did.

So, I made these...


(Engaging students with disgusting vocabulary is my forté...)

The students were given one of these jigsaw puzzles to solve and then had to create a set of rules for their partner (who had to do the same with their jigsaw) so that their partner could solve their partner's puzzle using the rules. They then had to complete a set of grammar activities based on the rules they had just learned (taught themselves).

It all went well but I can't help feeling that I could have done it better had it been a part of a topic in which they could have manipulated the verbs for a purpose, rather than a mechanical grammar exercise.





Sunday, 13 May 2018

Royal Wedding links in French, German, and Spanish.

Just in case you missed it, there's a wedding this week.

Here are some links to articles/videos you might like to use in your classroom:

(I like that different countries and types of publication take very different angles on the story.)

Useful for GCSE, too!

French

German

  • Gala (Gossip about their celebrity guests)
  • Stern (everything you need to know about the day)
  • Bild (Queen gives them permission to marry)
  • NDR (wedding with no politicians)
  • TZ (Meghan breaks protocol) 
  • Bunte (the breaking of wedding traditions)
  • Bayern3 (competition to win a trip to the wedding, well, OK, London, not the wedding)



Spanish

  • mujerhoy (the curious details)
  • harpersbazaar (all the official details) 
  • hola (which of Meghan's family didn't get an invite)
  • vanitatis (the frock!)
  • vogue (everything you need to know)
  • abc (a victim of the Manchester attack is invited)

Thursday, 10 May 2018

French Literature Top Trumps

Top Trumps is a card game.

The cards contain numerical information.

Players compare data on their cards and if they trump their opponent's number, they win.

The card sets are made by Winning Moves Games and you can make personalised sets on their website (for £15).

Three years ago I made these cards (using Word) for my students studying Maupassant's Boule de Suif:



I gave each character a score based on their kindness, wealth, hypocrisy, and courage.

The players (today, it was my year 12 students) play the game in the traditional Top Trumps way, but with a catch:

Obviously, they had to speak in the target language and they also had to explain why the character on their card had that particular score.

It's a great way to practise speaking and get students to understand and articulate some of the themes dealt with in the story.

And they enjoyed it, too.