LO:
1. To revise the months of the year, days of the weeks and numbers up to 31.
2. To be able to ask and say the date
*A key-moment of this lesson: children can be encouraged to notice that, unlike English, French doesn't use capital letters for the days of the week/month of the year (unless if it&'s beginning of a sentence, of course) .
This is an adaptation of the famous story ''Le petit prince'' to introduce the ordinal numbers and the verb ''habiter''. Also, it can be used to revise the nouns and the genders. My pupils loved all the tasks and the song ''J'ai dans le coeur'' had a huge success.
Hope you like this lesson and you find it useful.
This is an old PPT I have downloaded from TES website, but I have transformed it in a video. The purpose for doing that is to offer my pupils an opportunity to practise at home this story, as we are preparing a French show for the International week, in KS2.
This is a song aimed for a French singing assembly. The slides move while the music plays in the background, allowing the children to see the lyrics on the board.
It can be also used in a normal lesson when introducing the greetings.
This is an old song I use to sing with my young students years ago- found it somewhere, in an old school. I have made an attractive PPT for it, so it can be easily translated into English. The song plays in the background and the slides move automatically . At the end there is a backing with lyrics, so the pupils can join in when confident enough.
The activity sheet includes some simple and funny exercises, like creating a passport.
This is a lesson easy to use in Sport and Fitness week at school. It offers the opportunity to talk to the pupils about healthy eating and also about exercising to keep fit.