I am an MFL teacher with fifteen years of classroom experience, from primary to sixth form. I specialize in French teaching resources, bespoke language curriculum design and language CPD to support individual teachers and schools.
I am an MFL teacher with fifteen years of classroom experience, from primary to sixth form. I specialize in French teaching resources, bespoke language curriculum design and language CPD to support individual teachers and schools.
A lesson Power Point with embedded sound files for pupils to learn and master classroom instructions in French. They visit three key sounds in French, learn to recognize and respond to classroom instructions in French,play Simon Says, match the written instruction to the image and then link sound-spelling with a simple writing activity.
A key stage two, or three, beginner lesson unit in which pupils are introduced to different ways of greeting others in French. They learn to ask and answer a simple question using a range of phrases for feelings. Sound files are embedded into the Power Point.Activities included allow pupils to practice pronunciation, listen and identify key language, write key language in French. They take part in a simple conversation and a song to reinforce the language learned.The lesson includes the Power Point, a noughts and crosses board,a core language mat.
This lesson focuses on these key sounds in French: an/ou/eu/oi.Pupils learn how to pronounce the sounds for these, then learn how to say the colour adjectives.A song reinforces the key sounds.Speaking activities include recalling the words for the colour images, a memory game, listening and showing the colours heard. Pupils begin to write the colour adjectives, making sound-spelling links. There is an art activity(The Snail by Matisse), and a poem which are opportunities to use a bilingual dictionary: to find more colours for the art activity,and new nouns to adapt a poem.Sound files are embedded in the Power Point and there is a core language mat to support meaning and spelling.Can be used for independent learning or in class.
Lesson pack comprising a Power Point with embedded sound files and a core language mat to support spelling and meaning.
The lesson focus is to use the correct form of the possessive adjective MY in French with masculine,feminine and plural nouns for clothes.
Pupils learn to say the nouns correctly in a phrase using je mets+ mon/ma/mes+noun. Memory tasks including a quiz and choosing the correct form of the possessive adjective reinforce this.Pupils understand when to use mon,ma or mes and begin writing the phrase with the correct form of mon/ma/mes.
There is an extra task based on the story book Je m’habille et je te croque by
Bénédicte Guettier .It is a short story of a wolf getting dressed, using the same structure as practised in the lesson : je mets+mon/ma/mes+noun.
Pupils can adapt this to create their own storyboard, look up new clothing nouns in a bilingual dictionary and write the phrase for each image they create, in French.They can then tell their version of the story in French or make a video clip of their story.
A lesson pack comprising a Power Point with embedded sound files to develop accurate pronunciation and a core language mat to support spelling/meaning.
Pupils revise numbers 1 to twelve through learning how to ask and answer a question about age in French. Activities include guess my sentence in which pupils need to read, write, speak and listen, appreciating a rap song in French about age, and translating.They come across j’ai used here in translation as I am because relating to age. They revisit key sounds and learn how to write key phrases accurately in French.
A lesson unit comprising Power Point, core language mat and body bingo cards. The Power Point has sound files embedded for independent learning, teacher as co-learner.Answers appear on slides upon clicking to check progress. Pupils learn how to pronoun the words for parts of the body in French. Activities to reinforce include a quiz, what’s missing , Simon says,bingo,and how to write the nouns accurately in French with the correct article. The core language mat supports meaning and spelling.Pupils learn the forms of the definite article in French (the) and how it changes depending on whether the noun is masculine,feminine, starts with a vowel or is in the plural form.
A lesson unit, comprising a Power Point with embedded sound files and a core language mat, to learn how to apply word order correctly in French using nouns for parts of the body and color adjectives.Pupils revise colors and nouns for parts of the body in French through song. They learn where to place the color adjective in a phrase, with plenty of speaking activities to apply this: guess my sentence, roll the dice.Pupils use the core language mat to help with translations between the two languages, draw and color a monster from reading descriptive phrases in French, then adapt phrases to create their own monster description. Opportunity to extend by using a bilingual dictionary.
The core language mat indicates how the ending of some color adjectives change in the feminine and plural forms.
If you can buy a copy of the book Va t’en grand monstre vert by Ed Kimberley, or Toutes les couleurs by Alex Sanders, this would support this work on word order wonderfully.
A lesson pack comprising Power Point with embedded sound files and instructions on slides, core language mat to check spelling and meaning, and quiz quiz trade card set for speaking.
At the start of the lesson pupils recap days, colours, clothing nouns learned previously.There is a grammar recap for word order, then pupils translate descriptive sentences into English using the core language mat.They practice replacing words in French in the correct order to reinforce word order, and complete several speaking activities including roll the dice and quiz quiz trade.*The quiz quiz trade cards need to be cut up: each has a word /phrase or sentence in French, the phonetic pronunciation of this in brackets underneath, followed by the meaning in English.
Pupils move on to completing descriptive sentences in writing, then onto extending these using the conjunction et.They then move to creating extended sentences using days, nouns for clothes and colour adjectives independently using their core language mat and a bilingual dictionary.
This lesson is focused on pupils mastering the key phonemes EU/CH/IN/OU/ER through language specific to the theme of Easter.The lesson contains a Power Point with embedded sound files, instructions on each slide and answers that appear upon clicking.There is also a core language mat with the phonetic pronunciation. Pupils identify and practise the key sounds, are able to match words containing these to images for meaning then build spoken sentences through language retrieval, repetition and extension.They move on to writing the core language correctly by making sound-spelling links that enable them to insert the correct phonemes into each of the core words.Pupils watch a cartoon clip in French that contains some familiar language and use their detective skills to identify further words containing the phoneme OU.At the same time they learn about the Easter tradition in France and give a spoken summary of what they have understood.They practise writing the core vocabulary in Easter shapes to fix the sound-spelling links.
There is also a link to an extra intercultural understanding activity on Euroclub schools
A lesson comprising reading comprehension exercises based upon a short text giving background information of the origin of International Women’s Day, women in the Covid world, Covid and increasing violence against women.
Students then watch and listen to a video clip in French about the evolution of women’s rights in France over the last century ( transcript provided) and complete exercises including true/false, translation into French, Translation into English. Answers provided.
This lesson is an introduction the future tense in French using the first person singular only. I have used a range cognates and near cognates for the nouns to facilitate understanding and increase confidence in pupils when creating their own sentences. Sound files are embedded in the Power Point.The lesson comprises a Power Point,teacher lesson notes, a core language mat with the written language and a phonetic pronunciation guide.Pupils use the four skill areas.They use a bilingual dictionary to find core language, then link images to future tense phrases by listening and reading, before beginning to create their own sentences in the future tense. Pupils use scaffolded support for speaking, then move to translating and creating written future tense sentences independently.
This lesson unit, based around the Twelfth Night cake tradition in France, can be used as a single or two separate lessons depending upon curriculum time.
In the first section the focus is on inter cultural understanding, learning vocabulary for key nouns and recounting the tradition. The second part/potentially second lesson focuses upon appreciating a story in French, using a bilingual dictionary and using the indefinite article with nouns when writing in French.
The lesson unit comprises lesson Power Point with embedded sound files, lesson notes for the teacher, core language mat, and two pupil task sheets.
The answers to all activities are included in the lesson Power Point.
A bundle of five French core language mats on the topics of greetings, numbers one to twelve,dates, colors,and parts of the body. These all contain explanations for key sounds and grammar points. Some have adaptable conversation models. Using the parts of the body word mat, pupils apply word order, adjectival agreement using numbers, nouns and color adjectives.They learn how some color adjectives change for feminine and plural forms of nouns.
Four lesson packs which can be used in the following order to learn enough French to exchange greetings and feelings, learn numbers 1-11 and say age, learn the days and months, how to ask for and give information about birthdays. All have core language mats. All contain embedded sound files for independent learning, teacher as co-learner and answers appear on slides upon clicking to check progress.
A series of three lessons each with a Power Point, embedded sound files and core language mats to support meaning and spelling of new language.
Lesson 1 -nouns for parts of the body in French. Pupils develop accurate pronunciation, make sound-spelling links and understand the masculine,feminine, plural forms pf the definite article in French.They play various memory games such as Jacques a dit/Simon says and what is missing.
Lesson 2-Color adjectives. This lesson focuses on key graphemes in color adjectives and that color adjectives follow the noun in French.A range of activities for pupils to apply this.
Lesson 3-Apply correct word order. Begin to familiarize with adjectival agreement.Pupils revise nouns for parts of the body and color adjectives in French then begin to apply correct word order by combining these in speaking and writing activities. This culminates in them adapting descriptive phrases to create their own in order to create a description of a monster.
*If you can purchase the following story books, these complement the above lesson unit:
Va t’en grand monstre vert by Ed Kimberley and Toutes les couleurs by Alex Sanders.
A bundle comprising four lesson packs that would work over 4 to 6 lessons.Each pack has Power Point with embedded sound files and lesson instructions on the slides, a core language mat and pupil worksheets where relevant.There are also links to relevant songs and stories.
Begin with the days of the week lesson, then colour adjectives. Continue with clothes possessive adjectives,and finish with descriptive sentences using nouns for clothes and colour adjectives.After learning the days,pupils understand and apply simple word order with colour after noun in French, and use charts showing how the colour adjectives change depending on the gender of the noun, and whether it is in a plural form, to create descriptive sentences in speaking and writing.They begin to extend these using the conjunction et/and.