Worksheets and a few Powerpoint presentations for Modern Languages.
Mainly Spanish at the moment and mainly Key Stages 3-4, but one or two Key Stage 5 too.
I hope my resources are useful to you. I spend quite a lot of time making them and would like to save other busy teachers time preparing resources - so you can get on with teaching.
Worksheets and a few Powerpoint presentations for Modern Languages.
Mainly Spanish at the moment and mainly Key Stages 3-4, but one or two Key Stage 5 too.
I hope my resources are useful to you. I spend quite a lot of time making them and would like to save other busy teachers time preparing resources - so you can get on with teaching.
A Powerpoint practising key verbs to do with technology & mobile phones, with tasks to get pupils to put them into the Present Tense.
Also a ‘mosaic translation’ worksheet activity where pupils translate sentences about the pros and cons of technology using the words provided in the grid (Google Translate-proof!)
Introducing the Present Subjunctive in an environment context for GCSE students, once pupils have already learnt some environment vocabulary.
Doesn’t include the endings in the Presentation (you’ll need to write them on the board or add a slide) but focusses on how to USE the subjunctive after certain phrases, mainly: “es necesario que”, “es importante que”, “es esencial que” (so it’s not a comprehensive guide to the use of the subjunctive - just a way in.)
Lots of examples given (from Global Issues/Environment context) contrasting the subjunctive with the indicative.
Includes irregulars haber, ser and ir.
Example sentences where students put the verb into the subjunctive on their mini-whiteboards.
Plus some sentences for them to translate.
Useful for practising the Conditional Tense in the context of the Racism topic. Gets students practising relevant vocabulary while practising their grammar at the same time.
(If you use the new Oxford 'AQA Spanish' text book you'll find that p.35 in Section 2.2A (Las medidas contra el racismo) covers the Conditional Tense in just this context.)
Contains:
1) Worksheet with 20 sentences about combatting racism for students to translate into Spanish. Each requires a verb in the Conditional Tense, including some of the main verbs with irregular stems (and a couple of derivatives, e.g. intervenir).
2) Simple Powerpoint presentation where the sentences appear one by one, followed by the answer.
You could do a few on mini-whiteboards/iPads as a class and then pupils fill in the rest on their sheet.
Crossword to practise the Present Tense (AR, ER and IR verbs).
Pupils enjoy this self-correcting activity which helps them learn the verb endings.
The crossword appears twice on the page to save on your photocopying!
Presentation and worksheet to introduce and practise demonstrative adjectives and pronouns (lequel, celui-ci, etc). Uses clothes vocabulary/shopping context generally (a bit of food vocab too, to remind students that grammar is applicable in multiple contexts)
Probably best after some work/revision on clothes has been done first.
Also suitable for revision of this grammar point at A-Level.
(All images are public domain from https://openclipart.org/ )
Four resources to aid pupils' study of L'étranger by Albert Camus. Focussing on characters, themes and key quotations. Hopefully this will save you some time.
See individual resources in the bundle for more information about each.
Double-sided worksheet preparing pupils to use the present tense to talk about what they do on holiday normally.
Side 1: They fill in the AR/ER/IR verb endings into the table. Plus the present of ser/tener/estar. And the first person singular only of various verbs with irregular first persons,like hacer, dar, poner, etc.
Side 2: They translate 10 sentences into Spanish.
Then they read a model text about what someone does on holiday, changing the infinitives in the text into the appropriate form of the present tense.
A couple of sentence builders to help pupils give opinions on their homes.
A trapdoor activity for talking about where you live.
Pupils found these useful for writing and speaking on this topic.
Two pages of quotations grouped under the following headings:
La mort et la futilité de la vie
La justice dans un monde irrationnel
Le désir de l’homme de trouver un sens à la vie
Être « étranger »
L’importance d’accepter la vie et d’en profiter
You can cut up (or digitally re-arrange) the quotations for students to sort under the headings themselves, perhaps after you have first asked them to find some relevant quotations related to those themes themselves.
This resource is also available as part of a 'bundle' of L'étranger resources
Fumar, beber, tomar drogas
Lesson Powerpoint and double worksheet about drinking, taking drugs and drinking alcohol. Talking about your good and bad health habits.
Worksheet containing an account of somebody's holiday in France (perfect tense). The text contains a number of connectives. Pupils have to find them and write them next to the English at the bottom of the sheet. The text also contains a number of time phrases like 'Après', ' le lendemain', which pupils can highlight.
The text could also be used for reading comprehension.
Good for developing writing skills, practising understanding of the perfect tense and for reinforcing the Holidays topic.
(There are two copies of the exercise per A4 page; the sheet must be cut in half. Good for saving on photocopying, and makes it easy for students to stick into exercise books.)
This 6-page document assembles key quotations from Part I of L'étranger (Camus), most introduced by a brief English comment for easy reference.
This resource is also available as part of a 'bundle' of L'étranger resources
A 41 slide Powerpoint with clear and concise explanations about how the Perfect Tense works and practice activities.
Not complete lessons (these slides are extracted from various lesson Powerpoints) but the Powerpoint does cover er, ir and re verbs taking avoir (plus how to make them negative) as well as être verbs and the irregular past participles.
There are explanations with examples, and a few match-up / gap-fill / translation / speaking tasks (oxo and dice game).
Could save you some time!
Double-sided worksheet providing vocabulary to help students describe different part time jobs.
Pupils simply write the number of the corresponding English sentence (from side 2 of the sheet) next to the sentences on side 1.
Could do this against the clock to add challenge/fun?
( All images are public domain from https://openclipart.org )
Ma ville et ma maison - French GCSE
A Knowledge Organiser (KO) in the form of a parallel text about someone’s city and home.
Designed to expose students’ to many of the key vocabulary items from the AQA GCSE Specification (Home, Town, Neighbourhood and Region section - e.g. verbs like déménager) and to provide useful recyclable structures and phrases.
Google ‘Michaela French Knowledge Organisers’ for some ideas about what to do with this kind of parallel text.
Had a productive couple of lessons with my GCSE class exploiting this text, all with minimum teacher preparation (apart from writing the text!)
e.g. You can use it for pronunciation practice/awareness:
I got pupils focussing on the recurring [ɛ] and [ɑ̃] in the first few paragraphs. They had to listen and highlight the text, then I re-read the text with pupils putting hands up when they heard the sound. Then they had a go in pairs.
Then we did some work on the vocabulary. Listening activities too where I changed parts of the text and pupils had to identify what had changed. Then they had a go at adapting parts of the text and combining words and phrases from it to make their own paragraphs.
Includes editable PPT version and a PDF version.
Lesson on saying what you’ve done recently to be healthy.
I did this toward the end of the Healthy Living topic, once key vocab on exercise and healthy eating had been covered, and once we had re-capped the Perfect Tense (with avoir)
Starter : match the French time phrases to the English
**Gap-fill activity: ** for mini-whiteboards and/or books: fill in the correct verb form or past participle
Trapdoor game: Students love this. Pupils take turns to read through the passage with a partner, choosing options each time from the list. Their partner must read it back from memory; if they go wrong they have to go back to the start. Then swap roles. I model this first so pupils have to listen then I choose one to read back what I said.
Then, to make it harder, there is a version with some words and letters taken away, so pupils are not just reading from the screen but have to remember the phrases.
Double-sided worksheet
Parallel texts on “Me, my family and friends” (personal descriptions, relationships, marriage, etc)
English text facing the Spanish. Some words in bold in both texts to aid students’ following of the texts
I’ve tried to include a number of the trickier words from the AQA specification vocab list on this topic.
Pupils use the translation to fill in gaps in both the English and the Spanish.
On page 2 there are sentences to translate based on vocab from the texts, plus Spanish comprehension questions & some extension tasks.
This is an audiovisual activity for the Immigration sub-topic (AQA A-Level Spanish).
It contains a series of questions or gap-fill sentences related to a 2017 Youtube video about immigration from Mexico to the U.S.
(I slowed the video down to 0.75 speed for the first listen, then played it at normal speed. This seemed to work well.)
Please check the accompanying video (not produced by me) is still available before downloading the worksheet: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TiNHOEm_kHg