Infonews n°338 from 07/09/2008

A la Une this week, Kigose, a new search engine for schools by Google that I tested with the word "bike". In the news, find information about the hurricanes in the US, the guards' bearskin hats in the UK and the programme of the Deauville Film Festival. In the Calendar, discover the events for the Month of September, including European Mobility Week. I also put together some addresses about the US presidential elections, including several ready to use activities. The resources for primary school this week are about learning the alphabet and words, and with the next addresses, secondary school students will discover the US states, recipes, how to describe a picture and how to choose a scooter. Teachers will find useful audio files to download and the solution to their problems with phonetics. And finally, the Teaching Practice section features a site with an example of progression and sites with level A1 and A2 evaluations.

I wish you a nice week!

Christine Reymond

Sommaire

A la Une : Kigose, A new search engine

In the News

Hurricanes
Bearskin hats
Deauville Film Festival

In the Calendar

Calendar of events for September
European Mobility Week : September 16th to 22nd

US Presidential Election

How it works
Special reports
Activities
Audio Comprehension
Written comprehension
Discover Sarah Palin

Resources for Primary School

Learning the alphabet and words

Resources for Secondary School

US Geography and States
Recipes
How to describe a picture
How to choose a scooter

Resources for Audio Comprehension

Cycling in Kansas City
Audio-Lingua

Internet Tools

Free Resources for Tech Integration
To write phonetics
To learn phonetics

Teaching Practice

Progression
Evaluations


A la Une : Kigose, A new search engine

Discover Google's new search engine designed especially for schools. It works like Google, with the choice to search the web, or look not only for images or videos, but also for sounds, maps, stories or lesson plans. You can use it in class with better and safer results than the global Google, because it researches only educational websites like Fact Monster, Enchanted Learning, National Geographic, Encarta, Teacher Tube, School Tube, how stuff works, etc.
It is only starting, so I didn't find many resources in the "sound" and "teacher's resources" sections, and the links in the story section where mainly to books that you have to buy. But I think it can be useful to keep this site in mind and see how it develops.
http://www.kigose.com

To test it, I tried using the word "bike" (a topic which can be useful for Mobility Week, see below.) and I got the following interesting results :
- Parts of a bike
http://www.infovisual.info/05/033_en.html
- a video by a child explaining how to ride a bike
http://www.teachertube.com/view_video.php?viewkey=c6425a7a810921be3eac&page=1&viewtype=&category=
- How bicycles work
http://www.howstuffworks.com/bicycle.htm#
with a video of the Cannondale Bicycles assembly line on page 1 (level B1, for technicians) and a video about the electric bike on page 2.
- The Wikipedia's page about motorized bicycles
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorized_bicycle
- an invention : the rocket bike, with a picture and how it works (from Popular Sciences magazine)
http://www.popsci.com/diy/article/2005-12/real-rocket-bike
- a very technical worksheet with calculation, for students studying technology in English or as part of a TPE engineering sciences/English.
http://www-tc.pbs.org/teachers/mathline/concepts/designandmath/Act1Student.pdf

In the News

Hurricanes

Gustav is gone, Hanna is almost finished, Ike is approaching Florida. get all the information on these sites recommended by the Librarian's Internet Index newsletter from September 4th:
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/1601
http://www.hhs.gov/disasters/emergency/naturaldisasters/hurricanes/hanna/index.html
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/disasters/hurricanes/
and the best site I found about hurricanes is "how stuff works" with five pages of information,
http://www.howstuffworks.com/hurricane.htm#
including an excellent pedagogical video explanation of the phenomenon presented by Marshall Brain, the founder and owner of How Stuff Works (level A2)
and you will find lots of resources and activities for all level on Michelle Henry's page about natural disasters and especially hurricanes
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/geocata.htm#hur

Bearskin hats

PETA protested against bear being slaughtered to provide the hats of the Queen's guards outside Buckingham Palace. here is an article from September 2nd saying that the Ministry of Defense is "actively looking for alternatives", and an older article showing a naked demonstration that took place in May 2006, with a picture that can be used to invite students to discover the topic... ;)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7590705.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/5002082.stm
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41669000/jpg/_41669390_bearskin_protest203.jpg

Deauville Film Festival

Here is the program:
http://festival-deauville.congres-deauville.com/GB/accueil_GB.html

In the Calendar

Calendar of events for September

Michelle Henry has prepared a detailed calendar of the event in September:
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/default.htm
with US Patriot Day (11/09), Roald Dahl Day (13/09), International Day of Peace (21/09), World Car Free Day (22/09) and the European Day for Languages (26/09).

European Mobility Week : September 16th to 22nd

The official site contains information about the topics such as: air pollution, overconsumption, quality of life, etc.
http://www.mobilityweek.eu/-Citizen-
and in the download section, you can see a flash video about Frankfurt mobility week (level A2) and download posters and leaflets.
http://www.mobilityweek.eu/squelettes/swf/frankfurt.swf
I also liked the documents (and a game!) that I found on the European Commission's Climate Action site, with lots of documents and a video (too much Italian for me...)
http://ec.europa.eu/climateaction/index_en.htm
and a color brochure to download with lots of charts and figures and information about all the renewable energies, including biofuel and biomass, solar and goethermal energies, etc. Better than a text book and up to date! ;)
http://ec.europa.eu/climateaction/index_en.htm

US Presidential Election

How it works

Here are some sites explaining the system.
- Laure Peskine recommends an animation called "Electing a US President in Plain English" (level B1)
http://www.commoncraft.com/store-item/election
- a written version on Ben's Guide
http://bensguide.gpo.gov/9-12/election/primary.html
- a shorter one
http://www.xomba.com/how_does_the_presidential_election_work
- an original written version with pictures on the BBc website, comparing the elections with base ball
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/americas/04/us_election/election_process/html/default.stm
- Brain Pop also offers useful Flash animations, but it doesn't always work and you may have to pay to access some videos or the subtitles.
http://www.brainpop.com/search/index.weml?keyword=election

Special reports

Michelle Henry's page is packed with useful sites and ideas for the US elections:
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/civiuselections.htm
You can also compare with the 2004 elections (Bush/Kerry) with these sites:
http://lycees.ac-rouen.fr/pascal/infonews/themes/uselections.html
Most newspaper offer full coverage and special reports for the elections.
For me the best and easiest for students is the different sections in the Election 2008 page of Time For Kids
http://www.timeforkids.com/TFK/election08/
from the US bureau of International Information
http://uspolitics.america.gov/uspolitics/elections/index.html?gclid=CNbF2fLByZUCFQS-ugodHQ8JjQ
from CNN
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/
from the New York Times (with a good guide on the issues)
http://elections.nytimes.com/2008/index.html
from the BBC
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/americas/2008/vote_usa_2008/default.stm

Activities

*** Election 2008 webquest, from the académie de Paris
http://lve.scola.ac-paris.fr/anglais/uselectionsTH.php
*** Electing a President from Pocantico Hills School, with a very short and visual presentation, a quiz and easy activities. (level A2)
http://www.pocanticohills.org/election/election.htm
*** Based on the Time For Kids pages, I designed a worksheet for my students to work from, level A2. There is a questionnaire and two texts. The students work in pairs, both have an empty information sheet with lines to fill in (some items are missing, they have to decide what they are, either in pairs or as a class), then one has Obama's profile, and the other Mc Cain's. They have to ask each other questions in order to find out the information about the other candidate and complete the questionnaire. I already did this worksheet about the 2004 US Presidential Election and the students loved it. If you want this worksheet, just ask me!

Audio Comprehension

BBC learning English offers a short text level A2, about Obama's speech of acceptation (plus the audio file and a teacher's guide to download).
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/newsenglish/witn/2008/08/080829_obama.shtml
the full text and the video are there:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7587321.stm
You can also find other speeches on You Tube, and the transcripts either in the special reports or on the website of the candidates:
http://www.barackobama.com/index.php
http://www.johnmccain.com/

Written comprehension

Bac paper about Obama's book
On e-teach, Sandrine Babayan recommends bac from March 2007 in Nouvelle Calédonie based on an extract from "dream from my father". You can download the text, the questions and the corrections from the e-teach shared document page.
http://teachers.domainepublic.net/shared/Preparations%20de%20cours/Lycee/

Discover Sarah Palin

In the last edition of Time magazine, you can find an article about Sarah Palin and photos. Since she is a new character in the run and a woman, it might be interesting to introduce her to start a teaching unit about the elections.
http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1838553,00.html
And you'll find lots of reports, videos and information on this page from the Anchorage Daily News
http://www.adn.com/sarah-palin/
See also this video of an interview by Charlie Rose (PBS), where she answers precise questions and says things like : "the best advice my father gave me was : "Never try to please everybody" "and "my main concern is to keep American safe". (level B2)
http://www.charlierose.com/guests/sarah-palin

Resources for Primary School

Learning the alphabet and words

Alphabet poem (each letter with about 5 easy words starting with the letter, no illustrations)
http://www.sunniebunniezz.com/educational/abctextpoem.htm
interactive page with the sound of the letter and a picture of an example
http://www.learningplanet.com/act/fl/aact/index.asp
Sing Along Songs : a song for each letter, with the text and illustration for the words used as examples
http://www.mrsjonesroom.com/songs/alphlist.html#alph
Those three sites come from Mrs.Alphabet website recommended by Pascale Aucoin on e-teach. You can find many other useful links on this page:
http://mrsalphabet.com/links.html

Resources for Secondary School

US Geography and States

On e-teach, Laure Peskine informs us that she wants to share with you the first teaching unit about the geography of the USA that she designed for her European class (level A1+). It is on Open English Web (click on "géographie"), where you can find also lots of other resources, and you can also share yours!
http://www.openenglishweb.org/
Pascale Aucoin recommends this site listing the states, their capital, their bird, flower and the date it became a state. When you click on the name of each state you can see a map of the state. This document level A1 is also available in .pdf, ready to print.
http://www.abcteach.com/States/StateTOC.htm
It was made from the famous "50 states" site, which is much more comprehensive:
http://50states.com/
And you can use these pages and quizzes with students level A1 or A2 to help them locate and learn each of the 50 states.
http://lycees.ac-rouen.fr/pascal/infonews/themes/50states.htm

Recipes

Students always enjoy studying a recipe or even doing it at at school. Here is the video recipe of the apple crumble, for an audio comprehension level A2 recommended by Stéphane Busuttil. the ingredients and utensils are written on the video, and when you click on "text version" you get the script. There are also information in the video that are not in the script, which allow students level B1 in the same group to work on what is not in the script, or spot the differences.
http://www.videojug.com/film/how-to-make-apple-crumble
This video is one of the many addresses recommended by Michelle Henry on her very comprehensive site, which includes other videos, picture recipes, worksheets and a precious table to convert cups into grams.
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/food1b.htm#recipes

How to describe a picture

You will find a page about that in most of the text-books, but here are also lots of links on Michelle Henry's site
http://www.ac-nancy-metz.fr/enseign/anglais/Henry/des3.htm#thing
and some hot-pot exercises level A2 from our colleague Yvan Baptiste
http://www.franglish.fr/icono/index.htm

How to choose a scooter

A page from NPR with pictures and lots of advice. A page to encourage students level B1 to read globally and extract information.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=93434949
This page was recommended by the Librarian's Internet Index from September 4th
http://lii.org/cs/lii/view/item/26783

Resources for Audio Comprehension

Cycling in Kansas City

Our colleague Jean Antelme, from Nancy-Metz wrote to recommend this resource level B1 from the BBC called : "Cycling in Kansas City". Here is his comment : " Faced with increasing fuel costs America's cities are being challenged by the growing numbers of citizens taking to the roads on bikes. You can podcast the 26 minutes of this week's ONE PLANET from the BBC World Service. Quite amusing and interesting I think. It's a quick download, the MP3 file is only 12 megabytes."
http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/oneplanet/oneplanet_20080903-2230a.mp3
[ It is too long for a use in class, but can be downloaded by the students to listen to it at home (balladodiffusion) or edited by the teacher to study extracts in class. Discover also "One Planet" a site from the BBC which "covers environmental, development and agriculture stories, dealing with the impact of humankind on the natural world.", level B1 and above.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/podcasts/oneplanet/

Audio-Lingua

On e-teach in June, Hélène Cayuela recommended this bank of authentic audio recordings produced by the académie de Versailles. You can find there short interviews of natives ordered by level (A1 to B2), gender, age and the lenght of the recording : from 30 to 120 seconds. There is no script, and the content is not as dense as what you can find in a school book, but it is English in casual conversation, with gap fillers, unfinished sentences and parts that are difficult to understand precisely, exactly as in real life.
The documents are in .mp3 and are very easy to download : just click on the button with the arrow and there you are.
http://www.audio-lingua.eu/spip.php?article57&lang=en

Internet Tools

Free Resources for Tech Integration

In the last Techlearning newsletter, I found an interesting article from Educators' eZine called : "Free Resources for Tech Integration" By Terry Freedman; There are no link in the article, but in recommends some resources worth trying, like Kigose and TeacherTube.
http://techlearning.com/story/showArticle.php?articleID=196605392

To write phonetics

Many teachers want to insert phonetic signs inside their documents or pages. here are some advice from our colleagues on e-teach:
- Alain Krizic recommends Script Typewriter 1.3 which allows you to use it with any word processor, especially Open office, without downloading anything. here is what you can read on the site : "You can use this tool to type phonemic symbols to be inserted in a word processor."
http://www.e-lang.co.uk/mackichan/call/pron/type.html
- Thomas Werth recommends Phonetik, a program for Mac and Windows, to add phonetics to your Word files. You can download it here :
http://pointecole.free.fr/phonetik.html
And he reminds you that you also have to download the phonetics font from the same page, and put them in the WINDOWS/FONT directory.

To learn phonetics

This site presents the different sounds ordered by type. For each sound you can hear the sound and words, see an animation showing how it is produced and watch a video showing how the mouth of a speaker moves when he says it. I would recommended this site to adults and students level B1+ for an intensive use, but teachers can use it as a reference or to show how to produce a particular sound to the class. Note that it presents American English. This site was recommended by Laure Peskine on the [EntreProfsdeLangues] list.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~acadtech/phonetics/#

Teaching Practice

Progression

If you are looking for an example of annual progression for lower secondary school, have a look at this very comprehensive site recommended by Christian Robert on e-teach.
http://membres.lycos.fr/englishforkids/pages/acces/progression.html

Evaluations

level A1 (en 6ème)
Several "académies" provide a full evaluation downloadable online. Here are some examples, but remember to check first with your local English website.
From académie de Limoges recommended by Florinda Fernandes
http://www.ac-limoges.fr/anglais/spip.php?article150
From académie de Poitiers recommended by Francis Mayet
http://ww2.ac-poitiers.fr/anglais/spip.php?rubrique28
Level A2 (en seconde)
les anciens cahiers d'évaluation mis en ligne par Yvan Baptiste, avec les fichiers sons à télécharger.
http://pedagogie.ac-montpellier.fr/disciplines/anglais/ressources/evaseconde/


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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