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Cric Crac! Teaching and Learning French Through Story-Telling [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 136 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 225x170x13 mm, weight: 219 g
  • Serija: Modern Language in Practice
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Sep-1997
  • Leidėjas: Multilingual Matters
  • ISBN-10: 1853593893
  • ISBN-13: 9781853593895
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 136 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 225x170x13 mm, weight: 219 g
  • Serija: Modern Language in Practice
  • Išleidimo metai: 09-Sep-1997
  • Leidėjas: Multilingual Matters
  • ISBN-10: 1853593893
  • ISBN-13: 9781853593895
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Cric Crac! is a book for teachers who would like to tell stories in French to their students and teach them to tell stories themselves. It argues that narrative is an important but neglected mode in language teaching and learning and helps teachers foster the abilities needed to bring stories into the modern language classroom.

Cric Crac! is a book for teachers who would like to tell stories in French to their students and teach them to tell stories themselves. The book argues that narrative is an important but neglected mode in language teaching and learning. In the everyday use of our native language we give high value to listening to and telling stories, anecdotes, personal experiences, potted histories, incidents and accidents. Cric Crac! aims to help teachers foster the abilities needed to bring stories into the modern language classroom. A prominent feature of Cric Crac! is the detailed help it offers to teachers. It contains stories for the teacher to tell and for re-telling, reading and writing by the students. Cric Crac! suggests a variety of ways in which teachers might prepare their students for storytelling, and proposes a wide variety of activities for teaching the language of the stories and the processes of storytelling. The author insists throughout that the foundation stone of good language learning and language use rests on the integration of listening and speaking, reading and writing, and suggests ways of combining them appropriately. The three levels consist of five texts each for learners with 2/3, 4/5 and 6/7 years experience, respectively. A picture version accompanies the stories of Level 1. Levels 1 and 2 offer a large format unpunctuated version of the stories for language sequencing purposes. There is a variety of activities for teaching the language and the processes of storytelling for each level.
Introduction vii
What Cric Crac! Contains 1(1)
How to Use Cric Crac! 2(2)
It etait une fois 4(6)
Getting Started 10(3)
Changing and Making Stories 13(5)
Level 1 (Elementary)
18(48)
Teaching the Language
18(10)
Teaching and Telling the Story
28(11)
Stories, Picture Stories, Large Format Texts for Level 1
39(27)
Level 2 (Intermediate)
66(34)
Teaching the Language
66(7)
Teaching and Telling the Story
73(9)
Stories, Picture Stories, Large Format Texts for Level 2
82(18)
Level 3 (Advanced)
100(22)
Suggested Strategies
100(4)
Stories and Texts for Level 3
104(18)
Where Can Storytelling Take Us? 122(3)
Sources and Further Reading 125(2)
Appendix 127
Roy Dunning taught French and German for 20 years in East London before teaching a PGCE course in modern languages at the School of Education, University of Leicester. He completed a PhD in Applied Linguistics in 1974. He is joint author (with Alain Sudre) of La prise de la parole (Heinemann, 1972), editor of French for Communication (University of Leicester, 1983) and author of French for Communication 1979-1990 (Multilingual Matters, 1994).