Love Learning Languages French and English Resources
Average Rating3.58
(based on 39 reviews)
I am a secondary and adult education French and ESL teacher and I love creating resources that help my students have fun with languages! You'll see many speaking games, grammar games, and task cards in my shop.
I am a secondary and adult education French and ESL teacher and I love creating resources that help my students have fun with languages! You'll see many speaking games, grammar games, and task cards in my shop.
Free French School Menu #6
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
Free French School Menu #1
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
Free French School Menu #2
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
Free French School Menu #3
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
Free French School Menu #4
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
Free French School Lunch Menu #8
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
French Christmas - Noël - Jeu de Dominos
Set of 16 dominoes with French and English words related to Christmas - Noël. This is an easy, very low prep activity that your students will enjoy playing during the month of December. Print out the game on card stock, laminate, and cut out for years of no prep practice and fun for your students. If you download this free resource please take a moment to leave feedback. Merci beaucoup!
French scrambled sentences exercise - ER VERBS - Passé Composé - Negation
This French freebie is a no prep printable that you can use to have your students putting words in the correct order to form grammatically sound sentences using regular ER verbs in the passé composé with simple negation. There are 9 sentences to unscramble, one per subject pronoun.
French scrambled sentences exercise - IR VERBS - Passé Composé - Negation
This French freebie is a no prep printable that you can use to have your students putting words in the correct order to form grammatically sound sentences using regular IR verbs in the passé composé with simple negation. There are 9 sentences to unscramble, one per subject pronoun.
French regular verbs ER - IR - RE scrambled sentences exercise - Passé Composé - Negation
This French freebie is a no prep printable that you can use to have your students putting words in the correct order to form grammatically sound sentences using regular ER, IR, and RE verbs in the passé composé with advanced negation including PLUS - JAMAIS - RIEN - PERSONNE. There are 9 sentences to unscramble, one per subject pronoun.
French scrambled sentences exercise - RE VERBS - Passé Composé - Negation
This French freebie is a no prep printable that you can use to have your students putting words in the correct order to form grammatically sound sentences using regular RE verbs in the passé composé with simple negation. There are 9 sentences to unscramble, one per subject pronoun.
French Freebie: Activity to get your students speaking
This resource is very similar to another one (also free) in which you’ll have students talking about the house, hotel, vacation, etc. of their worst nightmares. Students will talk all about the house, etc. of their dreams in this one. I like to use these resources one after the other while the content is still fresh, but the vocabulary will change dramatically when students shift from what they would love to what would give them nightmares!
This is a no prep, one page activity for intermediate to advanced level students, and the content is perfectly suitable both for primary (French immersion) and secondary curriculums. There are fifteen questions that will have them talking about, for example, the house of their dreams. This is meant to be a paired or small group activity, but it is NOT meant to just have students take turns describing what they would love. The idea is to imagine that everyone in the group is going to live in the house together. There will probably be some things that everyone agrees on, and there will certainly be things they will disagree on. When I have my students do this activity, it’s always fun to watch them debate what is and what is not important. In the end, they can agree to disagree! My students really have a good time with this activity, and I love seeing the imagination that they have!
**Here are the 15 conversation starters:
DÉCRIVONS…**
La maison de nos rêves…
L’hôtel de nos rêves…
Le jardin de nos rêves…
Le restaurant de nos rêves…
La ville de nos rêves…
L’avion de nos rêves…
Les vacances de nos rêves…
La voiture de nos rêves…
La garde-robe de nos rêves…
La chambre de nos rêves…
La cuisine de nos rêves…
La fête d’anniversaire de nos rêves…
La plage de nos rêves…
Le lac de nos rêves…
Le cinéma de nos rêves…
French Freebie: Activity to get your students speaking
This resource is very similar to another one (also free) in which you’ll have students talking about the house, hotel, vacation, etc. of their dreams. Students will talk all about the house, etc. of their worst nightmares in this one. I like to use these resources one after the other while the content is still fresh, but the vocabulary will change dramatically when students shift from what they would love to what would give them nightmares!
This is a no prep, one page activity for intermediate to advanced level students, and the content is perfectly suitable both for primary (French immersion) and secondary curriculums. There are fifteen questions that will have them talking about, for example, the house of their worst nightmares. This is meant to be a paired or small group activity, but it is NOT meant to just have students take turns describing what they would love. The idea is to imagine that everyone in the group is going to live in the house together. There will probably be some things that everyone agrees on, and there will certainly be things they will disagree on. When I have my students do this activity, it’s always fun to watch them debate what is and what is not important. In the end, they can agree to disagree! My students really have a good time with this activity, and I love seeing the imagination that they have!
Here are the 15 conversation starters:
DÉCRIVONS…
La maison de nos pires cauchemars…
L’hôtel de nos pires cauchemars…
Le jardin de nos pires cauchemars…
Le restaurant de nos pires cauchemars…
La ville de nos pires cauchemars…
L’avion de nos pires cauchemars…
Les vacances de nos pires cauchemars…
La voiture de nos pires cauchemars…
La garde-robe de nos pires cauchemars…
La chambre de nos pires cauchemars…
La cuisine de nos pires cauchemars…
La fête d’anniversaire de nos pires cauchemars…
La plage de nos pires cauchemars…
Le lac de nos pires cauchemars…
Le cinéma de nos pires cauchemars…
Free French School Menu #5
Have a look at what’s on the menu at my kids’ school in France. Cheese every day!! I’ll be adding more menus weekly as I receive them. There are so many things a French teacher could do with these in class.
It would be a fun cultural study to look up images of some of these menu items to show students what they look like and if they eat anything similar at their schools or homes. This could lead to a discussion on the length of time French students typically have to eat and rest as compared to students and teachers in your school.
LICENSING TERMS: This purchase includes a license for one teacher only for personal use in their classroom. Licenses are non-transferable, meaning they can not be passed from one teacher to another. No part of this resource is to be shared with colleagues or used by an entire grade level, school, or district without purchasing the proper number of licenses.
COPYRIGHT TERMS: This resource may not be uploaded to the internet in any form, including classroom/personal websites or network drives, unless the site is password protected and can only be accessed by students.
L’aéroport et la Gare - Airports and Train Stations - Bundled French Resources
Activities to use in the French classroom when talking about l’aéroport et la Gare - Airports and Train Stations. Save 20%.
LICENSING TERMS: This purchase includes a license for one teacher only for personal use in their classroom. Licenses are non-transferable, meaning they can not be passed from one teacher to another. No part of this resource is to be shared with colleagues or used by an entire grade level, school, or district without purchasing the proper number of licenses.
COPYRIGHT TERMS: This resource may not be uploaded to the internet in any form, including classroom/personal websites or network drives, unless the site is password protected and can only be accessed by students.
Forming French Questions BUNDLE
Activities to use and challenge your students in the French classroom when teaching how to form French questions using** est-ce que, inversion, and intonation**. 100 practice cards for speaking, one dice game, two worksheets, and a video tutorial with examples and exercises. Save 20%.
This is meant to be a set of exercises to be used after presenting the passé composé with être. For a change of pace (or in case of teacher absence), when introducing the passé composé with être, you could use this set of exercises to reinforce the 20 minute lesson I've recorded on YouTube (it's free: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6-HxU_nIoY). This could make for an excellent interactive homework assignment!
Students will identify which verbs need avoir, and which need être, they'll write the definition of an intransitive verb, they'll list the 17 verbs that use être in the P.C., they'll identify the verbs that sometimes use "être" and other times use "avoir", they'll have to know that reflexive verbs also use "être", and finally they will rewrite ten sentences in the passé composé using être as helping verb.
This lesson has it all: video lesson, lesson in written form with examples, exercises, and a really fun activity to try out with your students.
This lesson is all about how to add meaningful question words to simple questions in French so that you will get more than a "yes" or "no" answer. Your students will learn how to use the question words: qui, quoi, que, quel, quand, où, pourquoi, comment, and combien (de). This lesson includes a video, so it can easily be assigned as homework, and you can save precious class time for the fun stuff!
Students will learn the rules for knowing where to place the question word in the sentence depending on the type of question they've decided to ask. This lesson is to be used in conjunction with the video lesson found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BNGxGpqm7U&feature=youtu.be
Here you will find the basic rules needed for forming questions using intonation, est-ce que, and inversion. There are many useful examples to help understand the rules, and there's even an exercise (with answers included) to test knowledge. Don't forget to try out the activity at the bottom of the document, my students think it's so much fun, and it's a QUIET activity, even better!
French Past Conditional Lesson - Should have, Could have, Would have
This resource includes the following:
➯ A set of 25 numbered cards with sentences written in English that students will then translate to French. A numbered answer key is also included so that students can work on their own. It is expected that students also know some other past tenses and some simple pronouns that are normally taught way before the past conditional.
➯ A one page printable reference guide that folds into a booklet that students can use for easy reference. The booklet includes all of the essential information needed for saying should have, could have, and would have.
➯ A two page study guide on forming the present conditional that highlights how to say should have, could have, and would have. If you do double-sided printing you can still just pass out one sheet of paper. The study guide is jam packed with everything you need to know about the past conditional.
Here’s the link to my video tutorial on how to use should have, could have, and would have in the past conditional. The study guide included with this resource follows the information given in the video lesson.