Early Start French Pack 3
9. Le passé et le présent Past and Present
Films to see
In this section children learn to compare a a present-day town (such as their own community) with how it was in a particular year in the past. They already know the names of ‘places in town’, and they have previously talked about the past in Ch.3.1 when they talked about what they had eaten or drunk. They will learn to say the year in French, revising their knowledge of numbers; and to say in what year an event happened - such as when someone was born or died. The class could develop their work into a tourist guide for their town, with a focus on its history for French visitors.
Part A: Saying the year A1. A French school’s centenary A2. Modern and 1907 classrooms Part B: My Town then and now B1. Sars-Poteries - then and now B2. Béthune - then and now Part C: Changes in everyday life C1. Coal-mining in the 1950s C2. Fashions in 1907
Find transcripts on the disc
Part A: Saying the year
Planning your lessons
In this section, before children learn to say the year in French, we suggest ways to revise numbers previously learned. Two films show the centenary of the village school in Sars-Poteries. That is the starting point for saying dates like ‘1907’ in French. Children can then say the dateswhen things happened, e.g. when famous people were born or died, or when the class were born.
Activities
Film 9: Sars-Poteries school - “en 1907, c’était une nouvelle école”.
Ask children to talk in English about what they think is happening. Explain about Madame Geyler-Bouduin and her role in helping the village get a new school (see “Talking Point 1”). n Talk about “La Marseillaise”, the French national anthem played at the end of the school’s opening ceremony (see “Talking Point 2”).
Warm up
Before watching film A1, talk about your school. Is it old or new? When was it built? Show pictures of the school in the past. What do children notice? If your school is very new, why was it built? Look at pictures of older schools in your town. Introduce the idea of things changing and developing as our needs and attitudes change (especially to girls and boys).
Start of work on ‘Dates’ Introduce numbers 100-2,000
Watch film A1: School centenary
❑ Watch film A1 to see Sars-Poteries village school re-enact the opening of their school as part of their centenary celebration.
Children can already count and do sums with numbers up to 200. If they can extend this pattern up to 2,000, they’ll be able say years in French.
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