This poster briefly goes through adjectives in French! It explains adjective agreements and order. It also lists possessive adjectives, demonstrative adjectives, comparative adjectives, etc… At the bottom, the page numbers refer to the AQA A-Level French textbook.
Hope it helps :)
This is a short comic I made to help GCSE students remember the density required practical for physics.
-Both fun and educational!
-Lots of fun colours and cute characters.
-Would look really nice printed as an A5 booklet for students.
Hope it helps :)
Show your students the importance of learning French by showing them that it’s spoken all around the world! This is a set of resources for you to print out so you can create an eye-catching display about “le monde francophone”. I recommend getting a big map of the world to use with this.
This resource includes:
-The title “Le Monde Francophone” for you to cut out letter by letter
-31 flags with country names underneath
-A legend to show which countries have French as their only official language
-40 location markers to help you pin the flag to the country (lots of spares just in case!)
-A “Le Saviez-Vous” box
Good luck with your display!
For beginners to Japanese verb conjugation. All verb forms are explained in here, but you are only taught how to form the Present/Future Form, Negative Form, Imperative Form, Conditional Form and Volitional Form, just to keep things simple! :D
It goes through the three verb groups and has some practice questions (with answers!) near the end, as well as a slide of 20 common Japanese verbs that are useful to learn.
The presentation is very easy to read and has lots of nice pictures to keep students engaged :)
A presentation all about the only officially bilingual province of Canada: New Brunswick!
This would be perfect for an A-Level class as a bit of a relaxing and fun lesson to break away from the curriculum a bit, and would also help build on their knowledge of francophone regions other than France for the speaking cards! Similarly, it would be great for a French club, but the vocabulary is possibly a little advanced for younger years (the presentation is written in French).
The presentation includes the following
-Geography and history
-Culture and tourism
-Economy and education
-Languages spoken there
-Explanation of chiac (a dialect unique to New Brunswick, which is a mixture of French, old French and English)
If being used as a lesson, you could go into more detail about chiac and make some fun activities.
Hope this helps! :)
A wordsearch containing greetings and simple phrases in Mandarin. Words are in pinyin, so it is ideal for absolute beginners or taster sessions. There is also an answer sheet!
Hope it helps :)
I compiled a list of these for a Languages Club where we introduced a new language every week and learned something new about cultures around the world! The topics in the document include festivals, basic phrases, folklore, recipes, places of interest, etc…
Languages covered:
-Arabic
-British Sign Language (BSL)
-Chinese (Mandarin)
-Czech
-Esperanto
-French
-German
-Greek
-Icelandic
-Italian
-Japanese
-Romanian
-Russian
-Spanish
-Welsh
Hope it helps :)
Two Gantt charts that can be used as an example for teaching time management for the EPQ . One is an ideal plan (with slack time), and the other shows how the project actually went. These came from my own EPQ, which was the artefact option. I chose to make a computer game, but the charts can be applied to any project! They were made using Google Sheets and are clear and colour-coded.
Hopefully your students will find it useful to have a template to base their Gantt charts on!