Reading resource with varied opinion about immigration. Not included on page 2 but something I will be doing is rolling a 20-sided die and asking students to formulate a response/question to each person on MWBs. Each person has a number in the bottom corner.
Use in conjunction with my resource on showing agreement or disagreement: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-12578846
A text on el machismo with a pre-reading task. A follow-up task with agree/disagree statements about Pepe which students should respond succinctly to with evidence to justify their selections.
A booklet with texts in Spanish and English from a range of sources on:
1898
Gitanos
America
Sexuality
Barraca
Death
Icon
Franco
The booklet contains a timeline for students to fill as they read through and questions at the back with a vocabulary search as well.
Massive thanks to Blanca for creating the text on the ‘icon’ page and Samantha for helping with sourcing texts on some of the other pages.
This was designed to precede and tie in with the parallel text available for free here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/la-casa-de-bernarda-alba-parallel-text-12273514
Bundle available here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/la-casa-de-bernarda-alba-grammar-translation-quotes-theme-index-12048901
A retrieval style grid inspired by a WJEC CPD exemplar I saw posted in 2018. Call out a coordinate, give students 1/2 minutes to formulate a response on MWBs. Potentially a good AfL activity.
A resource with exam based true/false/correct questions and a translation. Focused on how things changed during the Madrid Scene after 1975. There is a focus on Pedro Almodóvar (obviously).
Icon credits:
freedom by Olena Panasovska from the Noun Project
Ballot Box by Tinashe Mugayi from the Noun Project
Roller Skate by Kristin Poncek Jones from the Noun Project
censorship by HeadsOfBirds from the Noun Project
Television by lastspark from the Noun Project
David Bowie by Vlad Likh from the Noun Project
moustache by Elisabeta from the Noun Project
Volver bundle here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/volver-bundle-12175732
Flick PowerPoint filled with quotes from the film on every different theme. Simply start the slide show and press left arrow key to stop in position. Students have to guess who said the quote. Exit slide show and remove the box to verify their guesses.
Premium version includes who they said the quote to, in what context and what theme the quote can represent/what essay link they can make with it. https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/volver-know-your-quote-premium-version-12170430
Pre-reading vocabulary builder and grid writing followed by a compiled interview in which I’ve tried to include a lot of relevant information about prevalent themes or sub-themes in the film.
This is an activity to do before watching the film and there is a reading comp and exam based true/false/correction exercise to follow.
Pre-reading and comprehension questions based on a text about the transition from dictatorship to democracy in Spain. Juan Carlos I is a key character as is Adolfo Suarez. Thank you Beatriz for proofing it for me :)
A menu of traditional platos típicos with phonetic translations (albeit these are my own). A model for saying what you would like to try at the bottom of page 1.
A lesson on some of the controversies surrounding the World Cup in Qatar. Students will learn the vocabulary for some of the issues, compare them with a comparative grid and then write whether they are for or against.
Hopefully this PDF is editable. Each box has a text field input which should be printable. If it doesn’t work then get in touch.
The idea is that circle questions are easy, diamonds are moderatly challenging and star questions are challenging. I’ve made this with questions such as “what can you use to find new vocabulary”, very simple and reinforces some basic classroom routines.
Next time I do this I will change the star questions to diamonds and move everything else up a row so a circle row disappears off the top. I will then write new star questions at the bottom.
The quote at the top is from Kate Jones’s brilliant Retrieval Practice book.