Infonews n°326 from 02/03/2008

A la Une this week, a website explaining how to travel through Europe in an "affordable and memorable" way, then articles about and an extract of a comic book about the Holocaust. "In the calendar", find the days and event to celebrate in March, plus sites about women and one for St Patrick's Day. "In the news" find an article about our president's intemperate speech and the link to CNN student news where you can download videos and read the script of the latest news explained to children. Then read about an art exhibition at Tate Modern, discover song to teach the rooms of the house and prepositions in primary school, phonetics posters and a guessing game for lower secondary school, and for upper secondary school : a game, a portrait, a theme :organ donation, expressions and their equivalent, music and Cyberfax : an online newspaper where students are invited write about cinema. Finally, find the conclusion of the poll lead but the APLV about the DNB and information about 2008 as the international year of languages for UNESCO.

Have a nice week....and enjoy your holidays for those of you who can rest for one more week ;)
Christine Reymond

Sommaire

A la Une : Eurocheapo

Budget travel resources for travellers in Europe
How can you use it in class?

Presenting the Holocaust through a comic book, The Search

NYT Article and lesson plan
One page of the comic book
Debating about the book

In the Calendar

Special days and events in March
Women's History
Women's scientists (from [LII New This Week] February 28)
Council of Women World Leaders (from [LII New This Week] February 28)
St Patrick's Day

In the News

Beware of riling France's President
For US News : videos and transcript

Exhibition

"The moment art changed for ever"

Resources for primary school

Songs to Learn

Resources for lower secondary school

Phonetics in Posters
Who are you thinking of?

Resources for Upper Secondary School

Sayansi : sustainable development game
Ralf Nader : An Unreasonable Man (from [LII New This Week] February 28)
Organ donation
Expressions and their equivalents
Music : UK Garage, Flowers
Cyberfax ! Devenez critiques de cinéma

Teaching Practice

APLV : enquête sur le DNB
2008, International Year of Languages (from [LII New This Week] February 28)


A la Une : Eurocheapo

Budget travel resources for travellers in Europe

[LII New This Week] from February 28 recommends this site is a "budget travel resource aiming to help make travelers' time in Europe affordable and memorable. [It offers] professionally written budget travel advice and recommendations written by [a] team of seasoned travel writers," and has an emphasis on reviews of budget hotels. Also includes information about European transportation, city guides for over a dozen cities, and a budget travel blog.
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/25492
http://www.eurocheapo.com/features/cityguides.php
Don't stop too soon, it isn't just a hotel finder : this site (and especially the city guides) offers budget tips (I don't know why New York is there...), and advices about how to get around and where to stay for a reasonable price.

How can you use it in class?

This sight can be the starting point for virtual trips. Invite your students to choose their destination, and then decide what they will see, where they will eat, how they will get around, and manage the budget you decide for all of them. Then they will present their planning to the class, and the class will give prices : the cheapest, the most culturally interesting, the most unusual, etc.
You can complement this site with other online city guides like this one
http://www.cityguide.travel-guides.com/city/

Presenting the Holocaust through a comic book, The Search

NYT Article and lesson plan

The NYT offers a lesson plan called: "Drawing on History : Analyzing the Use of Graphic Novels and Comic Books to Study History and Literature".
http://www.nytimes.com/learning/teachers/featured_articles/20080229friday.html
based on the article : "No Laughs, No Thrills, and Villains All Too Real" written by Mickael Kimmelman onFebruary 29, 2008, presenting a comic book in which an old lady tells the story of her life during the holocaust to her grand son.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/27/books/27holocaust.html?_r=1&oref=slogin (with illustrations)
http://www.nytimes.com/learning/teachers/lessons/20080229friday.html

One page of the comic book

You can download one page of the comic book in English ( with the policeman who gives Esther the choice of staying or joining her parents)
http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2008/02/26/arts/27holo_ca2ready.html

Debating about the book

More about the book, from the Boston news, the Telegraph and Deutsche Welle (in English). You could plan to give those articles to your students according to their level : students level A2 or lower can read the page from the comic, students level A2/B1 can read the first two articles, and the more advanced can read the article from Deutsche Welle which is longer and more complex, but an excellent basis to start a debate.
http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2008/02/01/germany_launches_comic_book_on_holocaust/
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/02/01/wholocaust101.xml
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3102723,00.html
Read also this article from Australian newspaper Sunday Mail "Cartoon Hitler to teach German Children forgotten history"
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,23147815-5013016,00.html

In the Calendar

Special days and events in March

Sue Lebeau is a teacher trainer for primary and lower secondary school in New Jersey, US. She has prepared this page about special days and events and several links for each. For March, follow the links for Women's history (the whole month), Dr Seuss Birthday (March 2nd) , Alexander Graham Bell's Birthday (March 3rd), international women's day (March 8th), Einstein's birthday (March 14th), and St Patrck's day (March 17th).
http://www.suelebeau.com/march.htm

Women's History

[LII New This Week] from February 28 suggests this site with lesson plans for the whole month : for example the role of the first ladies in the White House, or the battle for voting rights. (level B1 and above)
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/25518
http://edsitement.neh.gov/tab_lesson.asp?subjectArea=3&subcategory=27

Women's scientists (from [LII New This Week] February 28)

I Was Wondering ... A Curious Look at Women's Adventures in Science
This site, inspired by a biography series for middle-school-aged students, is "intended to showcase the accomplishments of contemporary women in science and to highlight for young people the varied and intriguing careers of some of today's most prominent scientists." Features background and suggested experiments related to 10 recent women scientists (such as a robot designer, gene hunter, and space geologist). Includes links to related sites. From the National Academies.
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/25472
http://iwaswondering.com/
[ attractive sight, with audio features and interesting information, like the presentation of the woman who invented the robot Kismet.]

Council of Women World Leaders (from [LII New This Week] February 28)

The goal of this "network of current and former women presidents and prime ministers" is "to promote good governance and enhance the experience of democracy globally by increasing the number, effectiveness, and visibility of women who lead at the highest levels in their countries." Includes a members list and descriptions of initiatives in the areas of health, environment, and education. (Some areas of site are under construction.)
http://www.womenworldleaders.org
[ you can also work from the list of the members and invite your students to present each of them and what they did.]
http://www.womenworldleaders.org/members

St Patrick's Day

On e-teach, Yoann Panier recommends this page from the BBc and the British Council about St Patrick.
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/try/plans/patrick/patrick.shtml

In the News

Beware of riling France's President

This article from this week's Time magazine comments the last words of Mr Sarkozy : his insult to a man who "rebuffed [him] during a round of glad-handing". In the article you can read that his blunt speech is now qualified as "intemperate, belligerent and undignified". Read also at the end his suggestion about how to teach the Holocaust.
This article can help us go through the vocabulary used to describe those events. In the title I discovered "rile" ( close to "roil") explained by the Webster as irritate, upset, disturb.
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1716957,00.html

For US News : videos and transcript

On e-teach, Yoann Panier reminds us of this special feature for teachers on CNN : the news, simplified and explained, plus quizzes, and also the full transcript online for seven days on the site.
http://edition.cnn.com/studentnews/
You can easily download the video with download helper, an add on to Firefox.
http://www.downloadhelper.net/

Exhibition

"The moment art changed for ever"

If you happen to go to London, may be you'll like the new exhibition at the Tate Modern presenting rather unsettling works of art by Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray and Francis Picabia who "were at the cutting edge of art in the first half of the twentieth century, and made a lasting impression on modern and contemporary art. Duchamp invented the concept of the ‘readymade’: presenting an everyday object as an artwork, Man Ray pioneered avant-garde photographic and film techniques and Picabia’s use of kitsch, popular or low-brow imagery in his paintings undermined artistic conventions.
Their shared outlook on life and art, with a taste for jokes, irony and the erotic, forged a friendship that provided support and inspiration. At the heart of the Dada movement and moving in the same artistic circles, they discussed ideas and collaborated, echoing and responding to each other’s works. Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia explores their affinities and parallels, uncovering a shared approach to questioning the nature of art." (from the site of the exhibition)
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/duchampmanraypicabia/explore.shtm
You can also read this review of the exhibition in Time Magazine: "Marcel Duchamp, anything goes"
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1717550,00.html
You could use those sites to prepare a unit about modern art for students level B1+ at least, interested in art or in debating. This unit could lead to a presentation of different artists to compare their styles, followed by a debate about what is art, how far can an artist go, and so on.
About other artists, here are some suggestions:
Basquiat http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1039743,00.html?iid=sphere-inline-bottom
Roy Lichtenstein (who also painted the Cathedral of Rouen)
http://www.sfmoma.org/exhibitions/exhib_detail.asp?id=172
http://www.lichtensteinfoundation.org/
pages for teachers and students from the Whitney Museum in New York
http://whitney.org/learning/
and pages from the MOMA in New York (with the online exhibition, games for primary school or high school students (RED), and resources for teachers (Modern teachers)
http://www.moma.org/education/multimedia.html
Wikipedia's page about modern art, with useful links :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_art

Resources for primary school

Songs to Learn

To a colleague asking for easy songs or activities to learn prepositions, Michelle Henry replied by pointing at her thematic pages and the page about "there is/are"
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/maison2b.htm#homesong
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/there.htm#song
Discover all the stunning resources she found, interactive, dynamic and motivating!

Resources for Lower Secondary School

Phonetics in Posters

On e-teach, our colleague Yoann Panier shares with us a page from the BBC and the British Council's excellent site "Teaching English" offering for free "A4 size classroom posters of phonemic symbols with examples" to download. A good idea to decorate the class and always have to signs at hand:
http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/download/phonemes.shtml

Who are you thinking of?

Christine Minetto reported on e-teach that she had just found this interactive game where students could practice understanding questions. She tried Sherlock holmes, and it worked. I was thinking of Eminem, but I answered yes by mistake to the question about whether his skin color was black, so I got 50 cents.
If you plan to organise a guessing game of this type in class with students level A2, this site could help students find questions, as long as they understand that they accept to go beyond the game itself.
http://www.akinator.com/aki_en/index.html

Resources for Upper Secondary School

Sayansi : sustainable development game

Thot recommends this game in French and English, resembling the strategy games our students know so well. The game here consists in organising life on an island after a disaster destroyed everything. For students level A2 and above.
http://thot.cursus.edu/rubrique.asp?no=27334

Ralf Nader : An Unreasonable Man (from [LII New This Week] February 28)

Companion website to a 2007 Independent Lens documentary about consumer activist and politician Ralph Nader. Website features cover Nader's life and career, legislation attributed to Nader's work (such as the Motor Vehicle Safety Act, Consumer Product Safety Act, and Whistleblower Protection Act), the state of democracy in the U.S., presidential candidacy, and related material. Includes a large collection of related links. From Independent Television Service (ITVS).
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/25545

Organ donation

Michelle Henry, our marvellous colleague from Nancy Metz, has prepared a page of links to documents, facts, pictures, animations, games and activities about this very touchy subject, upon which I think students should have reflected at least once in their life. There are also some useful material for a debate, level A2 and above.
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/organ.htm

Expressions and their equivalents

On eTeachNet, Isabelle Destat recommends this site that she found in "le Monde de l'éducation". This site was designed by the "Centre collégial de développement de matériel didactique" in Canada. [ You can use the index to browse the site by language (French, English and Spanish), category (nature, animal, anatomy, etc.) or enter a word and you get the expression, with an explanation written and read aloud, and you can also get its equivalent in another language.
http://www.ccdmd.qc.ca/ri/expressions/
Or you can use the activity section, which contains cartoons illustrating some expressions (on the theme of the circus, and some are more efficient than others), and several exercises like riddles, fill in the blank or matching. This could help students level A2 and above memorize those expressions, or discover some fun expressions.]

Music : UK Garage, Flowers

BBC Learning English features this article about a music style: Uk Garage, with a comprehension quiz, an interview, a reflection on the words.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/multimedia/musicdirectory/ukgarageindex.shtml
You can also listen to people giving their opinion on an extract from "Flowers" by "Sweet Female Attitude". Then you can hear the audio on their My Space profile:
http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=167899210
or see the video on You Tube (here a stick men film explaining the lyrics)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWKf6R0qjFc
and here are the lyrics for Flowers
http://www.anysonglyrics.com/lyrics/s/sweetfemale/flowers.htm

Cyberfax ! Devenez critiques de cinéma

"Le 4 avril, Cyberfax !, le magazine junior international sur le web lancé par le CLEMI, consacrera un numéro spécial au cinéma. Ecoliers, collégiens et lycéens de tous pays sont invités à venir dire leur amour du cinéma, à témoigner de leurs pratiques de cinéphiles et à proposer leurs critiques de films. De janvier à avril, regardez les films et le monde du cinéma comme un critique cinématographique.
Les articles devront être envoyés du 2 au 4 avril 2008. " (info présentée sur le site de l'APLV, du Clemi et du collège organisateur.)
http://www.aplv-languesmodernes.org/spip.php?article1502
http://www.clemi.org/fax/calcyberfax.html
http://www.clg-mignet.ac-aix-marseille.fr/cyber_cinema/
[ Participez à ce nouveau projet coordonné par Roland Camboulives qui a animé des Printemps de l'Europe et d'autres projets européens.]

Teaching Practice

APLV : enquête sur le DNB

"Suite à l'enquête organisée par l'APLV les documents suivants viennent d'être mis en ligne :
1) une synthèse des réponses ;
2) une analyse de cette synthèse ;
3) des "propositions" aux fins de concertation et d’action commune avec les autres associations et syndicats ;
http://www.aplv-languesmodernes.org/spip.php?article1555
Il est possible d'intervenir sur ce sujet grâce au forum attaché à cet article (cliquer sur "répondre à" en bas de l'article)"
(message de l'APLV : )

2008, International Year of Languages (from [LII New This Week] February 28)

Website for this 2008 United Nations program "to promote and protect all languages, particularly endangered languages, in all individual and collective contexts." The site provides a list of programs arranged by theme (such as the endangered languages of Hawrami Kurdish and Bakthiari from Iran and intercultural dialog) or by geographical outreach. Also includes articles from a UNESCO publication and related material. From the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/25513


Ceci est un message de la LISTE INFONEWS
réalisé par Christine Reymond
lycée Blaise Pascal, Rouen, France
E-Mail: Christine.Reymond@ac-rouen.fr
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