by luddite lady on 01 Jun 2009 04:22
Thanks for asking, everyone. Things have been going well in drapeau vert land. It's my real life out of school that has been way too busy lately.
My grade eight students have been subjected to Le Drapeau vert for a whole week now. We've only read part one when I introduce The Police and the concept of the flag. It seems to be going slow, but we've accomplished a lot. I've used those two and a bit pages to review the passé composé with avoir and teach the passé composé with être. Now, if only Stewart had named his song Mrs. Vandertramp instead of Miss Gradenko! (Sorry for the very inside French language learner joke.)
Enough of the grammar geekiness...My students have said a few amusing things over the last week. When I began the unit I promised the kids who already learned it last year that there would be a few surprises to keep it interesting and that we'd still play the board game at the end. Immediately, two kids started arguing good humouredly about how the other had cheated last year. Talk about holding a grudge. The game might get pretty ugly this year.
When I began by asking general questions about The Police, I was surprised that many of the "new", uncorrupted students were answering correctly. I asked how they knew so much and five or six of them told me they had watched the Spectacle episode. Then a "new" kid said, "That drummer guy must have been on drugs that day or something. He was so hyper. Like, relax, dude!" Another then said, "Yeah, it looked like Sting wanted to kill him." I assured them that Sting always looks that way and I admitted that Stewart can be a bit excitable. A third kid piped in, "Andy looked bored and kind of like he wished he didn't know the other two." If we have time at the end, I might let the class watch the show on DVD.
The students' copies of the story include black and white photos this year. On their own initiative, most of the kids have already diligently coloured over the pictures of the flag using green marker. That just cracked me up.
The music during seat work has been a pretty big hit too. We've been working our way through Reggata.
In Dallas, the only game that really mattered was in the word gamelan.