httpv://youtu.be/z5UcV3BvbHQ
With a nod to Mr Steven Fawkes, language genius and the man who got HSM in Italian stuck in my head for weeks :oS
httpv://youtu.be/z5UcV3BvbHQ
With a nod to Mr Steven Fawkes, language genius and the man who got HSM in Italian stuck in my head for weeks :oS
Ages ago I bought a book of little plays and poems by Gloria Fuertes, and have to admit that I haven’t looked at it much since I bought it. However, I was reminded of it on Thursday at the ALL NorthEast Spanish day in Gosforth when Joaquín Moreno was talking about using poetry in teaching Spanish.
He mentioned using a particular poem by Gloria Fuertes to read aloud and act out in order to practice getting English mouths around Spanish sounds – in this case, ‘rr’ is particularly practiced.
The suggestion was to chorally repeat the odd numbered, repeated line “Doña Pito Piturra” and for volunteers to read the even, varied line, with feeling and an action to accompany it.
A very simple idea that I shall be using in my classroom soon!
Below is the poem, and also a video of the poem being recited plus two versions, as a song!
Doña Pito Piturra
Tiene unos guantes,
Doña Pito Piturra
Muy elegantes.
Doña Pito Piturra
Tiene un sombrero,
Doña Pito Piturra
Con un plumero.
Doña Pito Piturra
Tiene un zapato,
Doña Pito Piturra
Le viene ancho.
Doña Pito Piturra
Tiene toquillas,
Doña Pito Piturra
Con tres polillas.
Doña Pito Piturra
Tiene unos guantes,
Doña Pito Piturra
Le están muy grandes.
Doña Pito Piturra
Tiene unos guantes,
Doña Pito Piturra
¡lo he dicho antes!
Another little gem I found on the Consejería site last night was a resource aimed at language awareness.
Entitled Languages all around you, it was developed by
This is a collection of activities showing how modern languages are part of everyday life. The idea is to make pupils more aware of the importance of languages, the role they play in many aspects of young people’s experience and how languages can be learned while having fun and playing.
This booklet is aimed at children of Primary six and seven (that’s our Year 5 and 6 I think) although I reckon it would be good as a transition project between Primary and Secondary to get know pupils and find out about their experiences.
In the six units pupils explore the following topics:
1. Family & Home
2. Friends & School
3. Languages in Public Places
4. Languages & Travel
5. Languages & Food
6. Languages & Sports
And the best bit? It’s freely downloadable from the publications tab under material didáctica.
I particularly like section 2 where it asks pupils to talk about languages spoken by their family as well as their peers. And I discovered something about Haribo too!
I recommend you explore the site if you haven’t already – there are other resources (some paid) that are well worth considering including PDFs of resources that are now out of print.
Thanks to Liz Fotheringham last week for telling me about this wonderful site!
As it explains here,
Newsmap is an application that visually reflects the constantly changing landscape of the Google News news aggregator.
Google News automatically groups news tories with similar content and places them based on algorithmic results into clusters. In Newsmap, the size of each cell is determined by the amount of related articles that exist inside each news cluster that the Google News Aggregator presents. In that way users can quickly identify which news stories have been given the most coverage, viewing the map by region, topic or time. Through that process it still accentuates the importance of a given article.
What’s really great is that you can choose the country from which you’d like the headlines – the list includes Spain and Mexico as well as Germany and Austria which allow a comparison of headlines in the smae language. Canada is included as well as France but the headlines are in English!
And there’s a tool bar at the bottom as well where you can choose the type of news that you’d like included.
Here I’ve just selected Sport in this screen shot :-
Another thing I like about this site is that if you hover on a headline, you get the beginning of the article plus a photograph. Just enough to give you more information about the headline, and just enough to be a ‘short text’. The ‘hover’ also tells you how many articles have been written on the same topic, and from which paper that headline came.
Liz mentioned it in the context of KS3 and 4 and using authentic materials for reading. I wholeheartedly agree – and would venture that it might be good to use with KS2 for
Having posted my presentation on the QCA unit El Carnaval de los animales earlier today, it seemed rather appropriate that I should find a free resource that goes with the unit this evening!
I knew that the Consejería de Educacción had a wonderful poster to illustrate this unit, but until now didn’t know that they had a downloadable animation that features the same wonderful illustrations. With files that are compatible with Mac or PC, the animation presents the vocabulary if you press the musical notes, then asks you to drag the correct word to the correct picture. If you make a mistake, there’s a lovely chorus of children saying ‘no’. Only does one thing but fun nonetheless.
There’s also an animation for Christmas featuring a Christmas decorated with baubles from the Spanish speaking world and the villancico Campana sobre Campana which is lovely, and an animated alphabet which is only downloadable on a PC :O(
Lots of other great stuff on the site for the primary classroom too. More at a future date!
Cynthia Martin – Past president
Karl Pfeiffer – President
Bernadette Holmes – President elect – absent so we had a ‘supply president’ in the form of Steven Fawkes
Whilst KS2 entitlement still stands, it’s uncertain and as yet there are no clear messages from the coalition about whether they will or won’t be statutory. We’re also in the middle of a huge curriculum review of both secondary and primary education. But change can provide us with opportunities to reassess and reflect.
Change often happens simultaneously, sometimes across sectors too.
Many issues that arose with Nuffield are seen replicated now – developing languages vertically down from KS3 but also horizontally across ability range at time when languages were elitist. At the same time, comprehensive education began.
National curriculum – Languages for all September 1992 with all children 11-16 studying languages led to questions about approaches to teaching all abilities. This had an impact on dual linguists as FL2 got squashed out (although people studying language and …business / development etc increased)
National Language Strategy brought some coherence to languages in England – many success stories especially in primary phase, widening of choice post-14 etc.
KS2 Framework has been a key document in bringing coherence to primary provision. In 2009 92% primaries offering language in KS2 and 70%+ offered throughout the school.
MFL KS3 Framework arrived with an emphasis on understanding pattern, structure and grammar, but lessened target language in the classroom.
A policy for the future
“Languages are vital for the personal professional and economic growth of all UK citizens”
“Language learning and teaching must take their rightful place in Britain as educational and social priorities”
“All British pupils must have full open and equal access to language learning to ensure a level playing with their peers abroad”
“The professional status of language teachers must be of equal standing compared to teachers of other subjects.”
We believe that language learning and teaching are an essential part of rounded education for all UK citizens.
“languages are not about labels, they’re about people” ECML Graz
We believe that all learners should have the opportunity to learn their first language and at least one other language, including English, if this is not their first language.
Our education system should provide:
We believe that languages teachers should have access to high quality initial teacher training and continuing professional development.
Policy makers should ensure that
We advocate statutory status for languages from 7-16.
Opportunities through the Curriculum Review
(At this point my RSA Typing1 couldn’t keep up with the note taking so I took pictures instead)
Why do we need language skills?
Languages employability and entrepreneurship
Tolerance and challenge
Changing hearts and minds
Languages MiniOlympics packs – Bringing together the two threads of KS2 teaching and languages and the International Dimension – presented by Michaela Howard and Jo Darley
Jo and Michaela – having marvellously overcome technical issues- presented their ideas for how to use the Olympics as the inspiration for language learning activities that are clearly linked to the KS2 Framework and specifically for the class teacher to deliver.
Take 6 athletes from around the world –
*excellent activity with a partner school*
*engaging learning – collaborating*
http://www.mapsoftheworld.com/olympic-trivia/olympic-mascot.html
Design a mascot with 2 places to look for inspiration – info on Beijing mascots and how they were conceived, what they represent etc and from London Olympic mascots – very visual labelled diagrams. (Didn’t manage to note the URL but found the picture!)
A mascot for YOUR area – black cabs are specific to London perhaps – what would eg Lincoln have?
(there’s a mascot maker on the 2012 site!)
How might you use the job of promoting the Olympic games as a task?
In Y3 with the objective “to copy words” you might
In y4 with the objective “to write some simple words and phrases using model and some from memory” you might make
In y5 with the objective “to write words, phrases and short sentences using references” you might design a cartoon strip
In y6 with the objective ” to write sentences on a range of topics” you might
Going back to the 6 athletes and using these two sites, find out the distance the athletes have to travel to London (assuming they live in the capital city of their country!) How long will it take to travel? what time is it in their city when it’s x o’clock in London?
http://www.silkysteps.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1118
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/distance.html
There are 216 countries competing. Each one has a national anthem. What a lot of music to exploit!
Reframing languages – presented by Dr Shirley Lawes , subject leader PGCE languages at Institute of Education; Mark Reid, Head of Education, British Film Institute and Muriel Huet, Lampton School
This talk reported on project funded by Esmee Fairburn Foundation carried out with 4 schools in conjunction with Institute of Education and the British Film Foundation
Why use short films?
Why do the project?
Aims
Learners experienced 3 sequences of 5 lessons over 3 terms.
The project marks a development of work done by the BFI on using film in literacy, moulding it to the needs MFL teachers in mind – Cine-minis a DVD of short French films is the result.
One of the techniques used was “Tell me” grids with boxes for story / mood / character / setting – en français, qu’est-ce qui se passe? / ambience / qui? / où? ou quand? The soundtrack of the start of the film is played and learners fill it in with their ideas.
This encourages learners to build up pictures from sounds in their head, drawing on their knowledge of the world and of film / narrative / text.
Once the first part of the film is shown, another grid considers surprises – is it as you expected? And what’s going to happen next?
I’m not going to spoil it, but we watched Les crayons and it was very unexpected!
Muriel was one of the four teachers involved and she shared the outcomes for her and her pupils.
It motivated her pupils greatly, leaving them more willing to take risks without necessarily realising it. It took them out of their comfort zone whilst easily linking to curriculum, using the lack of prescribed content to an advantage.
For teachers, Muriel reported that the project gave an opportunity to
Muriel reported that you need to have confidence to take risks professionally, to try out new ideas, be original and develop yourself professionally -and that this was an opportunity that she was given and took.
Cine-minis is available from http://filmstore.bfi.org.uk
And here are some free downloadable PDFs of information about film and languages.
Can’t wait for them to do some short Spanish films (hint hint!)
The third of a trio of presentations that I should have posted earlier (and I’ve still got a day of Language World to finish blogging too!)
My presentation at Language World this year took it’s theme from the fact that Primary language learning is an entitlement rather than statutory as we had expected a year ago. In it I explored what an entitlement meant and shared some ideas of how it might look and what it should include. Thanks to the people who attended on a hot Friday afternoon in the 6th session of a long and exciting day. I’ll put the audio with the Slideshare once I have time to edit it!
Sorpresas y sonrisas – tips and ideas on how to keep everyone enthused and engaged in the Primary Languages classroom was th title of my contribution to the ALL NE Spanish day at Gosforth High School in Newcastle.
I had the daunting task of starting the day, and if that wasn’t enough, I was sharing the bill with Rachel Hawkes, Neil Jones, Joaquín Moreno and John Connor. No pressure then ;o)
Having got everyone moving with Uno de enero from Take ten en español as it was the last day of San Fermín, I launched into my presentation (see below) punctuated by a quick game of puntos de contacto and el Baile Olímpico (hope the Youtube link works in Slideshare!)
Hope it was useful to everyone, even if they weren’t primary teachers. I certainly enjoyed presenting and the rest of the day was awesome – more of that later!
And thanks to ALL NE for the wonderful book. I am SO excited about it!
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