Gist translate the quote from Zafon
Translate vocabulary from exercise 1
Create a mind-map of Almodóvar’s likes/dislikes/influences etc based on Volver
A mini-series of regional identity themed scripts for a cast of four students who will along the way meet an array of helpful locals. The scripts are written at CEFR level B1.
Casa Botín (Gastronomy)
El Día de Ganso (Basque country/curious festivals)
Semana Santa en Sevilla (Religious festivals)
Hopefully this PDF is editable. Each box has a text field input which should be printable. If it doesn’t work then get in touch.
The idea is that circle questions are easy, diamonds are moderatly challenging and star questions are challenging. I’ve made this with questions such as “what can you use to find new vocabulary”, very simple and reinforces some basic classroom routines.
Next time I do this I will change the star questions to diamonds and move everything else up a row so a circle row disappears off the top. I will then write new star questions at the bottom.
The quote at the top is from Kate Jones’s brilliant Retrieval Practice book.
A lesson on some of the controversies surrounding the World Cup in Qatar. Students will learn the vocabulary for some of the issues, compare them with a comparative grid and then write whether they are for or against.
An eight page resource focused on themes in Volver, the carefully constructed soundtrak by Alberto Iglesias and shot selection for key parts of the film.
Page 1: Identifying the main themes in the film
Page 2: Authentic reading resource
Page 3: Questions
Page 4: Analysing the soundtrack and music of the film
Page 5: Analysing camera shots for key sequences.
Page 6: Essay writing skills and what/how/why
Page 7: Student directed task hunting for additional shots/sound effects.
Page 8: Example essay question and answers + practice question
Thanks Josh S for proofreading!
This is a resource to check how well students have understood the plot and the characters in the book. I recommend that firstly students match up the infinitive structures which are already conjugated in the 3rd person, afterwards use different coloured highlighters to categorise the infinitive verbs by the character which they correspond with.
This is an ideal task as a follow up to the character analysis two-page sheet, if a student for example says that Raimunda is fuerte you may ask them ‘how do we know?’ and they have to write a sentence explaining why they think Raimunda is fuerte giving examples from the text, this infinitive structure and verb sheet could form the basis of one of those exemplary points.
Updated Volver quote cards x60
Now with more uncommon quotes which exemplify themes by secondary characters and also a picture of who said each quote on each card.
Varied tasks for lesson starters or homework to retrieve information about key scenes, quotes and essay writing point practice. Ideal for any candidates doing the WJEC exam who are in A2 and retaking the AS Unit 2.
Timer at the top is 4 minutes but you can allow as much time as you need.
Answers to the quotes section is in the notes of each slide.
A starter activity to check how well students have understood the plot. It does make make you realise as well how many small plot lines are running at the same time. Answers given as well in teacher copy.
Two pages per character. One page on development, relationships, goals and motivations and a second one containing 17 contrasting adjectives to develop descriptions of characters. I’ve included this free in the Volver bundle I have for sale.
Quotes from the film Volver on a flick PowerPoint. Students can win points if they can answer who said the quote, to whom, in what context and what theme or essay link it relates to.
Students can translate them, discuss who said them in which context and to whom.
The colour coded set are coded by character, the other set are all one colour so no clues are given away. Last page are misc and unsorted.
This is a resource to check how well students have understood the plot and the characters in the book. I recommend that firstly students match up the infinitive structures which are already conjugated in the 3rd person, afterwards use different coloured highlighters to categorise the infinitive verbs by the character which they correspond with.
This is an ideal task as a follow up to the character analysis two-page sheet, if a student for example says that Adela is rebelde you may ask them ‘how do we know?’ and they have to write a sentence explaining why they think Adela is rebelde giving examples from the text, this infinitive structure and verb sheet could form the basis of one of those exemplary points.