<p>Two reading assessments to test Y9 students’ knowledge of vocabulary and grammar in Celebrity Culture for German. All assessments reflect the new format of the new assessments and vocabulary is used in line with the new specification.</p>
<p>Reading - A reading comprehension with three answers to choose from, German to English translation and a comprehension task where students answer in English.</p>
<p>Writing - A gap-fill activity, English-German translations and a writing task with 3 bullet points</p>
This resource is an example of the General Conversation at GCSE for theme 1.<br />
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This book is ideal to show students what is expected of them in the General Conversation. Information and questions are colour-coded for foundation and higher level students.<br />
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Key questions (those using tenses) are starred so that students know which questions they must learn to maximise their marks.<br />
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The chilli icon is used to document challenge questions, for those students attempting to secure higher level grades such as grade 9.<br />
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Some questions are multiple-choice, so that questions can be tailored to students' personalities, circumstances and abilities.<br />
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There are two answer booklets attached, showing students the type of vocabulary needed in each answer. One booklet is for lower prior attainers (Foundation) and is 9 pages long. The other booklet is for higher prior attainers (Higher) and is 11 pages long.<br />
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The resource also contains a revision activity to help with this. Students practice their speaking by playing expression bingo - students have two minutes and are peer-assessed, to see how many of the sentence starters on theme 1 they can use!
<ul>
<li>I made this worksheet to help my Y11 use the perfect tense with automaticity.</li>
<li>It breaks the tense down into its key components and uses the acroynm SHEP to help students retain the tricky word order.</li>
<li>There are 6 tasks that are ideal for a walkthrough lesson on the perfect tense.</li>
</ul>
<p>There are 16 photo cards modelled on the AQA GCSE German course. The topics covered:</p>
<ol>
<li>Family Relationships</li>
<li>Marriage and Children</li>
<li>Technology in Everyday Life</li>
<li>Music</li>
<li>Sport - cycling in particular</li>
<li>Food and Drink</li>
<li>Home</li>
<li>Where I live</li>
<li>The Environment</li>
<li>Poverty and Homelessness</li>
<li>Holidays and Travel</li>
<li>School</li>
<li>Jobs</li>
<li>Career, choices and ambitions.</li>
<li>Travel and Tourism</li>
<li>My Town</li>
<li>School - class tests and homework.</li>
</ol>
<p>Each card shows five key questions. Two questions are in italics as these would be the surprise questions. I have given the students the questions, for the additional practice. There are also model answers for each card.</p>
I have created these revision mats on AQA's key topics to aid my students with their revision, especially writing and speaking. Each mat is divided into the following sections: Definite delights, the past tense, the future tense, the conditional tense, attention-grabbing adjectives and showstoppers. Key languages is modelled for students to feedforward into their exams. There are also 4 mats included, showing subordinate clauses being used in themes 1, 2, and 3, as my students struggle with using these. A black copy of the subordinate mat is also included for you to adapt with your classes. As well as this, there is a revision mat on the future tense with examples of each pronoun in the future tense for each theme. <br />
The topics covered by the revision mats are :<br />
Theme 1<br />
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1) Customs and Festivals<br />
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2) Self and Relationships<br />
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3) Food and Drink<br />
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4)Technology and Social Media<br />
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Theme 2 <br />
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5) The Environment<br />
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6) Travel and Transport - a double-sided revision mat<br />
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7) My Town - a double-sided revision mat<br />
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8) Health and Fitness<br />
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9) Smoking<br />
10) Poverty and Homelessness<br />
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11) Where do you live<br />
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Holidays revision mat<br />
Theme 3<br />
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12) School <br />
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13) Comparison between German and English schools.<br />
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14) University or work?
<ol>
<li>Students categorise words on the topic of homelessness from a word cloud, covering key verbs, adjectives and nouns.</li>
<li>A photo card in the GCSE style, with suggested model answers.</li>
<li>A differentiated revision mat on the topic of homelessness.</li>
<li>Students match up 8 key sentences on homelessness to images.</li>
<li>Students read 5 real life accounts about being homeless and answer R, F or NT.</li>
<li>Students read 5 real life accounts about being homeless and answer questions in English with the correct person’s name.</li>
<li>A higher level text on homelessness with reading and speaking questions.</li>
<li>A rip n run translation task for collaborative learning.</li>
<li>Spontaneous speaking task - students practice their spontaneous speaking in German by responding to visual prompts and text on the topic of homelessness.</li>
<li>A writing assessment on homelessness (a cross between higher and foundation) with advisory grades.</li>
<li>A revision aid for students approaching a writing piece on this topic. The document is entitled ‘Signpost Yourself’ and advises students which grammatical constructions to use for grades 5-9.</li>
</ol>
I gave my students this resource to prepare for a higher writing examination (AQA) on theme 2 over half-term.<br />
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Questions 1 and 2 are in the same format as the AQA exam and students have a choice of which question they answer. Question 3 is the translation question. <br />
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The back of the booklet consists of hints and tips, so that students can prepare accordingly for theme two writing exam outside of the lesson. Students are also informed of any relevant success criteria and a pneumonic to drive forward their writing.
<p>Once a week in year 11, I use one of these quizzes to revisit previous content covered.</p>
<p>There are 8 quizzes attached.</p>
<ol>
<li>Health</li>
<li>The environment</li>
<li>Numbers and Quantities</li>
<li>Holidays</li>
<li>Social media</li>
<li>Celebrations</li>
<li>New Year’s Resolutions - The Future Tense.</li>
<li>School</li>
</ol>
<p>There is also a blank quiz for you to continue to create quizzes.</p>
<p>Each quiz has ten questions with four answers to choose from. Students have to consider vocabulary and grammatical points, when choosing the correct answer.</p>
A lesson for a higher ability GCSE class focusing on subordinating conjunctions using 'wenn' and 'als.' I was recently observed by Ofsted with this and was told I would have received an outstanding grade, as all students made rapid progress and the lesson was heavily differentiated.<br />
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1) I have attached a higher level text about sport - students play the ignorance game in differentiated groups and pick out words they they think others won't know. If others can't use the context to work out the meaning of these words, the initial team scores points. Students learn these words for their homework. (Personalised homework). In the next lesson, the words will appear in sentences for students to translate.<br />
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2) I have attached my powerpoint, which contains 3 key questions re: wenn and als for learners in the lesson, to enable all learners to progress.<br />
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3) A 'rip and run' activity - students work in differentiated groups ripping a sentence off and translating it. If it's correct, they are challenged by getting another translation sentence. If not, teacher uses targeted questioning to enable to the group to make progress.<br />
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4) I have attached a game of sentence auctions, used to individually challenge students' misconceptions. (Moving from group level to individual level). Students look at word order with 'wenn' and 'als' and bid on correct sentences and lose money if they bid on incorrect sentences. I use fake Euros! More challenging sentences are worth more money! Students can also translate into English etc.
<p>This resource consists of a series of higher level writing practice questions based on the AQA writing exam. There is a model answer for each question. (Higher Tier). There are questions and model answers on the following topics.</p>
<p>Theme 1<br />
Question 1 style - Celebrating Christmas and Birthdays.<br />
Question 2 style -Single parents and children<br />
Question 1 style - Music</p>
<p>Theme 2<br />
Question 2 style -Drugs, Unhealthy Food and Giving Advice.<br />
Q1 - Town</p>
<p>Theme 3<br />
Question 1 style - Jobs and Unemployment<br />
Question 2 style - Part Time Jobs<br />
Question 1 - School and School Uniform<br />
Question 2 - School Stress</p>
<p>This resource is an example of the General Conversation (Theme 2) for GCSE German.</p>
<p>This book is ideal to show students what is expected of them in the General Conversation. Information and questions are colour-coded for foundation and higher level students.</p>
<p>Key questions (those using tenses) are starred so that students know which questions they must learn to maximise their marks.</p>
<p>The chilli icon is used to document challenge and super challenge questions, for those students attempting to secure higher level grades such as grade 9.</p>
<p>Some questions are multiple-choice, so that questions can be tailored to students’ personalities, circumstances and abilities.</p>
<p>There is an answer booklet attached, showing students the type of vocabulary needed for each answer.</p>
<ul>
<li>I made this handout to stick in the front of students’ exercise books, so that they know what I am saying to them in German.</li>
<li>I also included common classroom requests that students might use.</li>
<li>Translations are given in English and German with a bitemoji illustration to further support.</li>
</ul>
<ol>
<li>A resource designed for KS4 students struggling with the future tense. Use the acronym SWEI to help you master the word order. A series of tasks to practice.</li>
<li>Students rewrite horoscopes that have been written in the present tense, using the future tense. (Tips provided to assist) This engages students and familiarises them with word order in the future tense.</li>
<li>Students translate their own starsign prediction, which is written in the future tense. This sheet serves as a good stimulus for students to write horoscopes for their friends in the future tense, which they love doing!</li>
<li>Students read through New Years’ Resolutions in the future tense. They insert the correct word from a list into the gap. The activity is in 3 sections and is differentiated.</li>
<li>An attractive handout explaining to students how to form the Future Tense in German.</li>
<li>A resource to revise the Future Tense at GCSE, based on themes 1, 2 and 3 with AQA. Students must translate the key sentences based on core exam vocabulary from German to English. (Answers are provided to allow self-assessment).</li>
</ol>
This double-sided worksheet is perfect to use to explain birthdays in German in a simple manner. The golden box shows students the endings to add to ordinal numbers. Additionally, the language for ages and birthday is modelled for learners to simply adapt.<br />
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Task 1 - asks students to answer questions in German, such as their age and birthday.<br />
Task 2 - asks students to formulate sentences in German, describing the ages and birthdays of different people.<br />
Task 3 - a thinking skills and numeracy activity, asking students to rank birthdays from 1-9, with number 1 being the earliest and 9 being the latest in the year.<br />
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The second worksheet consists of three differentiated tasks again, one chilli is easy and three difficult.<br />
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Task 1 - easy - Students circle the correct answer for each birthday. (Multiple Choice) <br />
Task 2 - medium - Students add in the missing letters from sentences about Birthdays. <br />
Task 3 - hard - Students choose which answer is correct, explaining why they have chosen their answer.
<p>This bundle includes:</p>
<ol>
<li>
<p>A reading passage suitable for higher ability students about Christmas in Germany. Some help with vocabulary is provided, as well as images. Students complete a true, false or not in the text reading activity based on their understanding of the passage.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>A worksheet on Christmas in Germany suitable for lower attainers upon entry. Students practice using a dictionary and research the vocabulary in Germany for the key phrases. Students have some help, as there are clues re: the length and number of words needed.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>A translation task on New Year’s resolutions for lower ability students. Students are provided with some key vocabulary to support them. The worksheet is differentiated as tasks are split into easy, medium and challenging.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>A translation task on New Year’s resolutions for higher ability students. The worksheet is differentiated as tasks are split into easy, medium and challenging.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>An activity for more able students in Y7 about Easter in Germany. Students match up sentences about Easter in Germany to corresponding images.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>An activity for lower ability students about Easter in Germany. Students practice using a dictionary and research the vocabulary in Germany for the key phrases. Students have some help, as there are clues re: the length and number of words needed.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>An activity for higher ability students about Oktoberfest. Students find the corresponding German phrases to key facts written in English about Oktoberfest. They then answer 10 statements about Oktoberfest, writing True, False or Not in the text.</p>
</li>
</ol>
<p>I have created the following to provide my students with more opportunities to accelerate their progress in writing.</p>
<p>This resource includes:</p>
<ol>
<li>An AQA higher level style writing exam with teacher tips. (I have researched other papers from other exam boards to put together a plausable paper).</li>
</ol>
<p>2)Another AQA higher style writing paper based on the content of the GCSE French paper assessment resource.</p>
<p>I have collated key texts across themes 1, 2 and 3 that AQA have used in their higher reading and listening papers. I have created questions in German to go alongside each text, so that students can get to grips with adapting language to answer questions in German.</p>
30 sentences written by a native speaker of German. Students must decide in pairs if these sentences are real school rules or the rules of a dream school. (For example, Man darf Playstation oder xBox spielen. Das finde ich irre.) Each sentence contains a modal verb and a different opinion in German. This is ideal for higher level students studying the topic of school.
Blow this A4 sheet up to A3, to help students successfully write about the topic of health and/or fitness. The mat is divided into:<br />
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Definite Delights - basic key phrases.<br />
Showstoppers- phrases to impress examiners.<br />
Attention-grabbing adjectives<br />
Examples of sentences in the future, past and conditional tenses.
This worksheet should be blown up to A3 and is for a higher ability GCSE class on the topic of environment. Students have 15 questions on the topic of environment and they must choose the correct answer. Answers are displayed around the sheet.<br />
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This sheets consists of work in the present, past, future and conditional tenses and is ideal preparation for a speaking exam on the topic of environment.
This is to aid and challenge learners of German on their numbers 1-100. The worksheet is categorised into three sections. Bronze: Students need to fill in the missing numbers 1-20. Silver: Numeracy - Students need to add the missing numbers in number sequences, responding with the appropriate number. Gold: Students need to describe a rule for calling 'Pampelmuse.' (The numbers are prime numbers). I have used this with year 7 through to year 10.