Saturday 11 November 2017

Language Podcasts that I'm loving

I find podcasts to be great resources - for use in the classroom, or just for interesting listening on the way to work or while I do the dishes...

Here is a list of podcasts that I'm currently using for classroom resources and also for my own entertainment. What are you listening to?

French language fix

  • Podcast Français Authentique - Johan Tekfak
One of the best structured podcasts that I've come across. Johan conducts the entire podcast all in French for second language learners, usually concentrating on discourse and colloquialisms. I particularly enjoy listening to the idiomatic expressions, one of the most difficult aspects to learn for non-natives! 
  • RFI - Journal en français facile
Great way to keep up-to-date with French current affairs, and easy to share with senior year students. The episodes are also nice and snappy. 

  • SBS en français


I just like to support the SBS, but also, there are episodes on Australian current affairs in French, film reviews, and French events that are happening across the country.


Listening task resources

  • Learn French with daily podcasts - Louis from Daily French Pod
  • Learn French by Podcast - Hugh Nagle

I have used these podcasts for years to create listening comprehension tasks. Louis' podcast is conducted all in French, and is usually a monologue where he provides great description and uses heaps of synonyms - particularly important vocab skills for the senior years.

Hugh Nagle's podcast is bilingual and always starts with a dialogue. Excellent practice for the VCAA listening comprehension task, and there are 100's of episodes focusing on the VCAA topics.

Teacher 'gas-bagging' time

  • Teachers Talking Teachers - CatFish Education (Pete and John)


These NSW teachers create such good banter around current topics in pedagogy and teaching. Each episode is based on two scholarly articles and there is plenty of opinion mixed with discussion based on the papers you should be keeping up to date with. 


French cultural curiosities

  • The New Paris Podcast - Lindsey Tramuta and Alice Cavanagh
What I enjoy most about this podcast is that the interviewees are generally expats living in Paris, which I think is most relevant in today's international Paris scene. So far this podcast is at its humble beginnings, but their topics on identity and gastronomy (two of my favourite topics!) have been well discussed.
  • Pardon My French - Garance Doré


I feel sassy listening to this podcast (so branchée), but Garance is just personable and lovely. She discusses the everyday issues, or vie quotidienne, of French culture - from dating, to fashion, to the environment. The podcast feels authentic from a Frenchy perspective, and also highly engaging with interviews conducted in an open and relaxed style. Episodes released every Thursday - definitely needs your attention!
  • The Earful Tower - Oliver Gee
This podcast is usually quite 'tongue in cheek', as is self evident from its entitled pun. I've mainly followed its Facebook posts over the years, but I've now just realised how good the podcast is! The episodes are about anything French - everything is allowed. 


Linguistic loving

  • Lingthusiasm - Gretchen McCulloch and Lauren Gawne
Lauren, originally from Melbourne, and Gretchen have excitingly geeky conversations about language. Coming from someone (myself) who loves to discuss the complexities of language - from crazy syntax to discourse variants - this podcast keeps me so engaged. As a French teacher, I find it a necessity to stay engaged with linguistics, as you need to keep perspective on the languages you teach. How does French fit into the linguistic world? What are its variants? How diverse is the speech community? etc. etc. I love the study of linguistics for all these reasons and more. 

Monday 6 November 2017

French Teacher Resource: Les Maisons Merveilleuses

I have constructed some super fun resources and activities for the topic on 'houses', focusing on culture, text-types and communication. I have tried these activities with four different classes now, in both year 7 and year 8.
With 3 x 50 minute classes per week, the following activities can take 2-3 weeks to complete in total. The whole unit is delivered over approximately 7 weeks.

Once students have learned basic vocabulary on the house and where you live ('la maison' et 'où on habite'), it's time for some fun inquiry-based and project-based work.



Here are the order of events, connected to Victorian Curriculum points:

1) Introduce students to the tasks, and show them the final product (with success criteria). Access task instructions here.

2) Students are presented with different and interesting French cultural homes (PPT). Depending on the class, I'll either get them to discuss what they like/don't like between slides or at the end of the PPT. Sometimes I'll get students to read out the information from the PPT too.

Communicating (Socialising)Interact with peers and teacher to exchange information and opinions, talk about self, family, friends and interests, and express feelings, likes and dislikes (VCFRC091)

3) Students choose a French cultural home to base their own home off. They start to produce a digital floorplan. (Individually or pairs is optimal, if they are in 3's someone always seems to do much less work). You can walk around the room and ask them to decision-make in French together, e.g. je veux un jardin, une grande chambre...

Communicating (Informing)Present information and ideas relating to social worlds and natural environments in spoken, written and digital forms (VCFRC095)Participate in collaborative activities such as performances and presentations that involve planning, making arrangements, transacting and negotiating (VCFRC092)

4) Students produce a labelled advertisement for their home, with pictures from the internet.
- If you haven't covered the bilingual component yet, you can ask them to produce a bilingual advertisement.

"They create their own texts, mainly using the present tense of regular and common irregular verbs, enriched by the use of adjectives and adverbs."

5) Students blu-tac their advertisement on the wall/board. Once all students are done, give them a survey sheet (le sondage) to survey every one's hard work. Collect the results and create charts for future use (Excel spreadsheet).

Communicating (Informing)Locate factual information from a range of texts and resources and use the information in new ways (VCFRC094)

6) Students participate in the housing auction (see 'Les règles aux enchères'). (Students don't actually win and take-home each other's work. It's just a fun idea!)
Some students try to 'play-off' each other, which is just amazing, because they are yelling French numbers at each other without even realising the effort!
You really have to calm down the room between each sale though, it can get quite loud in the auction room. I usually preface the auction by saying that auction rooms are 'quiet' rooms.
Access the paddles here. I glue them onto large paddlepop sticks.

Understanding (Systems of language)Recognise and use features of the French sound system, including pitch, rhythm, stress and intonation (VCFRU102)

7) I have also created a homework task to ensure students are reflecting on the tasks from a culture and identity perspective. Also great as a post-vocab task for consolidation and for re-inforcing numeracy skills.

Communicating (Reflecting)Notice own and others’ ways of expressing identity, and consider the relationship between language, culture and identity(VCFRC101)



Amusez-vous bien! Please write your comments below on any ideas or suggestions for improvements, or your experiences teaching this unit of work.
Feel free to adapt any of the attached resources, and feel free to send them back to me.

Access curriculum documents here

French Obsessions: Coffee-table books to start French conversations

As a neurotic librophile, I take great pride in showing off beautifully binded, exquisitly hard-covered books that I am passionate about - mainly on the topic of France (French language spruiking to the next level).

Placing some interesting French culture books on my coffee table can inspire some wonderful conversations with friends and family. I have sourced all the delicious hard-back copies of my books on rotation:




As Mireille Guiliano states, it's a book about helping women feel bien dans sa peau. In other words, a book about understanding the true pleasures of eating (that's my mantra!). It's almost a pre-successor of the mindfulness movement or 'slow eating'. I also find that talking about 'French diets' brings up the conversation on French wine - the famous French Paradox. 

The French Paradox concerns the fact that although the French seem to consume a high-fat diet, there is low incidence of heart disease... so maybe c'est grâce au vin rouge, n'est-ce pas? (And all French people crossed their fingers in hope.) Based on studies around this 'catch phrase', the minor study on the Mediterranean diet with "moderate consumption" of wine took hold as social truth for good heart health. To cut a long story short, look up scientist 'Serge Renaud' for a good food chat on this topic.







Just the teacher in me wants everyone to discuss the pure genius of Le Petit Prince. From simple childhood souvenirs to a discussion on how the Little Prince shows us how we have lost our childhood imaginations and our abilities to look beyond our adult restrictions. I no-one at the table has yet read the Little Prince, ask them to draw you a sheep!

It's also a great read for any friends who come over with children. A great chance to read them a passage and share a few beautiful quotes from Saint-Exupery:
"On ne voit bien qu'avec le cœur, l'essentiel est invisible pour les yeux."
"All grown-ups were once children... but only few of them remember it."
“It is the time you have wasted for your rose that makes your rose so important.” 




I came across this book in a second-hand bookstore years ago, and it has been the start of so many great conversations about idiomatic expressions and colloquialisms. 

Some of my favourite topics on French language expressions are the amount of vocabulary around 'cows' - ah la vache, vachement bien, parler comme une vache espagnol...  
How about the French vegetabl-isms. Tu es choux, faire le poireau, être en rang d'oignon...
And finish up by being stood up by un lapin.



Most of us foreigners have a romantic notice of Paris as it has been through history - the gothic architecture, Haussmanian buildings, Hemingway's Paris,  the French Revolution... but what about the revolutionary movements of today?

Especially as a Melbournian, a topic that always come up is the quality of coffee in Paris. The New Paris has a wonderful podcast which interviews local Parisians about new and upcoming issues. Have a listen to the coffee conversation about the new movement in Paris for improving the daily 'grind'.



Everyone loves to discuss stereotypical French dress. From the mariniere, to the beret with boots and a cigarette. It's a beautiful book which talks about the stereotypical modern day Parisian woman from a Parisian woman's perspective, scattered with gorgeous photos, articles and poems. 

However, a conversation on French stereotypes opens a larger conversation on which stereotypes really exist in France. You have the turtleneck and man bag kind of man, to the sports clothes and runners kind of man. The simple-dressed, plain coloured woman, to the high-heeled, fine labelled woman. 



Books from your own French travels


There is nothing quite like your own travel collection to spark a good conversation. On my coffee table at the moment, I have maps of Lyon where my partner and I lived for a year. We have so many fond memories of our time in Lyon, and we just love the city and its beautiful streets. 

Not only do I love the impressionist paintings in the Orsay, but the book comes with a hilarious personal travel story... 

What is on your coffee table?