These slides introduce the 1st and 2nd conjugation imperfect tense in Latin, with colour pictures illustrating the verbs ambulo and rideo as examples, and the two verb tables showing the imperfect tense forms.
There are a few exercises that students can attempt individually or together, matching Latin to English and translating English into Latin.
Made for one of my KS3 classes. :)
This is a set of slides that I used for my Year 9 class when introducing the topic of things you find in a German town: it includes repetition of the structure “in XXX gibt es …”.also “obwohl es kein Kino gibt” / aber es gibt kein… / doch gibt es kein …" etc. and also "ich gehe oft zum Kino / zur Messe etc. (See below for the full list of language introduced.)
I used Hamburg as an example city, (because it’s my favourite!) and we started off by looking at Google Earth as a whole class activity on the whiteboard, finding all the places using GE, practising the language orally, and then using the slides to go over this new vocabulary, including seeing the written form at this point.
This is presented first as a gap-fill, e.g. a picture of the park in Hamburg from Google Earth that we already looked at, and “In Hamburg g… e… einen P…” on the slide; full sentence is then presented on next slide).
A simple sentence builder is included, and a few more gap-fills where pupils in teams or pairs had to provide the missing word/phrase, prompted by pictures.
This took at least one lesson with an able Year 9 class; they also wrote about what there was in their town at the end of the lesson.
Please consider leaving a review :) Vielen Dank!
Language introduced (on sentence builder and via pictures)
In Hamburg gibt es
In Manchester gibt es
In meiner Stadt gibt es
einen Bahnhof
einen Busbahnhof
einen Strand (beach)
einen Park
eine Messe (trade fair)
ein Stadion
ein Sportzentrum
ein Kino
viele Geschenkeläden
aber es gibt…
doch gibt es…
(but there is/are…)
keinen Bahnhof
keinen Busbahnhof
keinen Strand
keinen Park
keine Messe
kein Stadion
kein Sportzentrum
kein Kino
keine Geschenkeläden
obwohl es keinen Bahnhof gibt.
(although there’s no train station)
n Hamburg gehe ich oft
In Hamburg geht meine Schwester oft
In Hamburg geht mein Bruder oft
In Hamburg gehen meine Freunde normalerweisezum Bahnhof
zum Busbahnhof
zum Strand
zum Park
zur Messe
zum Stadion
zum Sportzentrum
zum Kino
zu den Geschenkeläden
zu + dem = zum
zu + der = zur
A very simple worksheet that goes with the song “Meine letzte Zigarette” by Ruth Händel, from 1975; the appropriately crackly audio is freely available on Youtube, although sadly no actual video.
I made this for a Y10 German class when tackling the topic of Health. They listened to the song, having already met some of the vocabulary in other contexts, and then we went through the lyrics in various ways, including the gap-fill on the sheet.
Below the song, I included 4 spaces for students to fill in key words for the Nachteile of smoking, following our class discussion.
The song is actually quite catchy, when you’ve heard it 25 times! Complete with genuine coughing, which went down well with the class. :)
A set of colour slides which I made to introduce the verb faire + du/de la etc to my Year 7 class. It’s in the form of a very simple illustrated story, with a character doing a different activity each day of the week.
The slides have animations which mean you can introduce the language orally before showing the written form.
Also included is a basic sentence builder frame, with all the vocabulary from the sldies, plus a few extra, and a blank Battleships game which we used as a whole class, in two teams, to consolidate the learning.
Vocabulary covered on the sentence builder is below (but not all these are illustrated).
Je fais (I do)
Tu fais (you do)
Il/elle/on fait (he/she/one does)
Mon ami fait (my friend does)
Nous faisons (we do)
Vous faites (you lot do)
Ils font (they do)
Elles font (they do)
du patin sur glace (ice skating)
du skate (skateboarding)
du roller (roller skating)
du judo (judo)
du vélo (cycling)
du sport (sport
de la gymnastique (gymnastics)
de la planche à voile (windsurfing)
de la voile (sailing)
de la natation (swimming)
de la danse (dancing
de l’athlétisme (athletics)
de l’escalade (climbing)
de l’escrime (fencing)
de l’équitation (horse-riding
une promenade (a walk)
une randonnée (a hike)
A set of colour slides which I made to introduce the verb faire + du/de la etc to my Year 7 class. It’s in the form of a very simple illustrated story, with a character doing a different activity each day of the week.
The slides have animations which mean you can introduce the language orally before showing the written form.
Also included is a basic sentence builder frame, with all the vocabulary from the sldies, plus a few extra, and a blank Battleships game which we used as a whole class, in two teams, to consolidate the learning.
The language on the sentence builder is as follows (not all illustrated though):-
Je fais (I do)
Tu fais (you do)
Il/elle/on fait (he/she/one does)
Mon ami fait (my friend does)
Nous faisons (we do)
Vous faites (you lot do)
Ils font (they do)
Elles font (they do)
du patin sur glace (ice skating)
du skate (skateboarding)
du roller (roller skating)
du judo (judo)
du vélo (cycling)
du sport (sport
de la gymnastique (gymnastics)
de la planche à voile (windsurfing)
de la voile (sailing)
de la natation (swimming)
de la danse (dancing
de l’athlétisme (athletics)
de l’escalade (climbing)
de l’escrime (fencing)
de l’équitation (horse-riding
une promenade (a walk)
une randonnée (a hike)
A gap-fill sheet to accompany my video about les pays francophones. The video displays all 29 countries within 2 minutes, with some excellent music :) It’s a good introduction to the topic.
Students can watch the video and see how many of the 29 countries they can remember, or use this sheet and try to fill in the gaps (initial and final letters are given). They could see how many they can guess before watching the video, if they’re feeling confident!
There is an answer sheet too.
I made the video in the first lockdown for my Year 6 class, but this could be used for all age groups.
A short simple worksheet, made for my Y3 pupils.
They have to read the simple sentences (j’ai trois ans) and write the correct age on the balloon, and they can then colour in the character too.
A set of colour slides made to use with my Y7 French class, where I was introducing the strucutre je veux + infinitive. The students decided on the names of the characters in the “story”.
The slides feature phrases such as:
Tu veux aller au cinéma?
Tu veux aller au McDonalds?
Tu veux aller au parc d’attractions?
Tu veux aller à la patinoire?
and responses such as:
Non! C’est nul!
Non, je déteste ça!
Bonne idée! J’adore ça! Génial!
Please let me know if you spot any errors!
At the end there are a couple more slides, including a dice-rolling activity to create a conversation (we did this in pairs), and a very simple sentence frame containing all the vocabulary covered.
This is a colour PDF of 12 Roman gods and goddesses, featuring short descriptions of each with a space for students to insert the Greek equivalent name.
These could be used in many ways, for example, they could form the basis of a top trumps-type card made by students, as a hand-out for exercise books following some introductory work, or cut up and used in a poster.
Each character is described in terms of their “job description”, “relatives” and “facts”, with their symbol displayed next to them on the card.
These 3 colour slides with green background were used with my Y7 French class, when studying what times they learn different subjects at school. One slide is for playing Battleships, and others for noughts and crosses as a class, or could be printed out etc. Icons for the school subjects and digital times are used throughout (because how many Y7s know how to read analogue these days?!).
NB The French language is not presented on the slides, as this was introduced separately. These slides were used for playing the games to consolidate learning.
Here are some basic illustrated colour slides showing the story of Perseus, from his birth to the accidental killing of his grandfather, with a short piece of text, including some missing words for students to complete the names of key characters in the story.
I went through the story orally with my pupils (KS2/3), then asked them to write in the missing words from memory (or as we went along).