Thursday, 2 October 2014

National Poetry Day

A colleague sent everyone an email saying that last Thursday was national poetry day so I wanted to incorporate writing poems in French and German into my lessons. Here are some ideas that I've picked up over the years:
1. Shape poems. Think of a shape and fill it with your poem or single words. Here is one I created on wordfoto app.
2. Comparisons poems. Using personality adjectives and comme/wie: Gefährlich wie ein Tiger. Using comparatives: Tu es plus jolie qu'une fleur.

3. Using the model of Rudyard Kipling's famous poem 'If'. For this, you need to use the imperfect and the conditional tenses: si j'étais riche, j'achèterais une voiture.

4. Hello and goodbye poems: 
Guten Tag die Sonne, Auf Wiedersehen der Regen.  

Saturday, 6 September 2014

Listening Ideas

With the GCSE course having a heavy focus on speaking and writing, I sometimes feel listening practice gets pushed to one side apart from students listening to me or their peers. This year I aim to not neglect this particular skill so I've been digging around for ideas on how to involve listening tasks more in my lessons. Here are a few ideas: 
1. Gap fill. Sentences could be in the foreign language or English so students have to translate the answer first. 
2. Bingo. Give out grids with words or phrases. This task could be differentiated easily. Higher ability could have more to listen out for or more difficult language/structures. 
3. Order the words. Students put key words or phrases in the order they hear them.
4. Bash the table. Students bang the table every time they hear a sport etc. For a quieter activity they could stand up and sit down instead. 
5. Tick or add. Ask students to brainstorm key words from a particular topic (sports/hobbies for example). During the listening they either tick the hobby as they hear it or add it to their list if they don't have it. 
6. Music videos. I used to include lots of music in my lessons and aim to do so again. Top 10 is good for finding out what's current, Disney songs on YouTube. 
7. Are my answers correct? Students are marking questions that are already answered. Or get them to predict their own answers before listening. 
8. Dictation. Good old fashioned dictation or letter by letter to practise the alphabet and students have to work out where to put the gaps. 
9. Draw answers. Instead of writing students can give answers with pictures. 
10. Spontaneous speaking in the target language in the classroom is listening (I know - that's listening to me and their peers but I wanted to add it to the list!)
11. Get them to answer in pencil or on mini whiteboards. It will feel less like a test. 
12. Use the reading time. Work through the question with them so they know what kind of answer they are listening for. 
13. Think, pair, share. 
14. Use the transcript to harvest new vocabulary and structures. 

Sunday, 27 April 2014

Read and toss

This was posted on Twitter which I thought would be a great starter. I'm going to use it this week by asking students to write their own sentences on strips of paper that they then screw up and throw. Maybe a word limit for each sentence so all teams have similar length sentences. The activity could then be a competition. 


Tuesday, 22 April 2014

Pound shop challenge!

A colleague of mine gave all staff at my school the challenge of going to a pound shop over the holidays to find a teaching and learning resource. Here is what I found and have come up with:



Soft Ball
1. Throw the ball to a student and they must answer a question. Then throw it back for me to throw to another. I ask the questions.
2. Same as above but students throw the ball to each other asking their own questions.
3. Divide the class into two teams. They ask the other team a question. If the team gets it right, one student is allowed to try to get the ball in the bin/ box. The team with the most goals wins.
4. Musical ball - students pass the ball around the class and when the music stops, the student holding it answers a question.
5. 2 lines facing each other about 2m apart. The ball is passed back and forth zigzagging down the two lines. Students have to say a keyword before they throw it to the next person. This could be timed.



Playing Cards
1. Students take a card as they enter. Hearts must do one starter, clubs another etc.
2. Random way of putting students into groups.
3. Students take a card as they enter. Code on the board gives them a letter and they have to think of 5 keywords beginning with that letter.
4. Writing activity with 4 categories (eg school subjects, opinions, snacks, past tense). Each team picks 4 cards which corresponds to each category. The cards they pick will determine how many of each category they will need to include in their writing. This could be done as a competition.
5. Students take a card as they enter. Each suit and each letter corresponds to a category. Students have one minute to think of as many keywords as possible for that category or they have one minute to talk about the category

Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Race whispers or silent spelling

Choose three sentences for the race. Get students into teams of 6-7 students. All students need to say the whole sentence. Teams have to race to be the first to finish. It works well when students are sitting across the room so you can see and hear everything. I asked the last person to stand when they had finished so I could clearly see who had won. It gets quite loud even though they were supposed to be whispering!

Instead of whispering, students at the back of each team are given a word which they spell out using their finger on the back of the person in front. The word is passed on through the team in this way and the front person writes it down on a piece of paper.

Thursday, 27 March 2014

Teachmeet - North Petherton 29th January

Here are some ideas that I picked up at tmsomerset.
1. Writing through blogging - set a word limit challenge or give students prompts (...it wasn’t my fault...), picture prompts or 5 words as prompts.
 2. For a different way of presenting, get an educational account for Prezi
 3. Build with crome - digital lego
 4. Video FX live - use for greenscreening
 5. Hamilton trust website for ideas with planning
 6. www.purplemash.co.uk 
 7. Heads up charades
 8. Hand books in for marking with a traffic light system to show how students think they have done in the topic
 9. wee mee - create avatars
 10. make waves - school blogs and secure social networking
 11. Barefoot World Atlas app


 12. Use soundcloud to record audio

Revision ideas for Year 11

Ideas from my colleagues of revision activities for GCSE classes:



-GCSE vocab cards: students make cards with German phrases, blank on the other side. In groups, they put a card down, person who says it fastest in English keeps the card (good for 8-10 phrases). After a while: write the English on reverse side and play other way round. Make sure pupils initial their cards in case you mix groups.

- Ask studens to draw a grid, each grid covering a topic (could be grammar e.g. tenses and/or modules e.g school/health etc). Read out phrases or words in TL; students group them in English under correct topic.Works great for tenses.

- Mini-whiteboards: Draw in 10 seconds what teacher said in TL.



I have been using the 12 game but in multiples of 10 at the end of lessons…students count up to 120, they can say one number at a time, or two, or three, but whoever says 120 is out. So one student might say 10, the next 20, 30, 40, the next 50, 60, 70, the next , 80, 90, the next 100, 110…then the student who would have to say 120 is out/loses a life. Works for whole class or small groups.