Jeux de communication à lusage du formateur : 75 fiches (Livres outils) (French Edition)
What type of document is it? Focus on the background and check where the people are. Give their names and jobs. Pick out expressions the girl uses to talk about rock climbing. Find out why some people like this sport. Listen, find the right pronunciation, then repeat: What do these words have in common with would and could? Listen and repeat the tongue twisters.
Speaking white water rafting sky diving zip lining a. Listen to the recording and name the activities. Pick out the rules for each activity. Write the rules for a leaflet on one of the activities above. Explain the programme to your friend. First, the group is going to meet at… Jackson Zipline tours Zip into world class eco-adventure Come soar with us! Discover some sports moves. Classe 28 Project roject roject 2 twenty-eight Spirit in motion! Find the nature of the document and give details: What does Eileen describe?
Give as many details as you can. Find what is important for Victoria. Find out what her intentions are. Now read the Culture flash and explain the title. What are the people doing? The Paralympic symbol consists of three elements in red, blue and green, the colours most represented in national flags worldwide. Present and vote for your favourite sportsperson.
Look at the following words, then listen and repeat. Find the stressed syllable and deduce the rule. Read the headlines in your Workbook aloud, then listen and check. Write a caption describing each picture. Is a player passing a ball? No, but someone is jumping. Some of the decathlon results are in. See how the athletes perform. Can you count up to one hundred?
Practise reading the figures in the grid below. Look at the results table and compare the performances. Tweet your friends with the results. Compare the first Olympic Games with the modern Games. Find the famous athletes cited. In groups, search the Internet and find what their Olympic achievements are. Do you know other famous Olympians? What sacrifices do modern athletes make to achieve their dream? Dreams of personal glory are not their only motivation: Some nations, either too small or too poor, present athletes who have little to no chance of winning.
Well, they perfectly embody another Coubertin saying: The Olympic Games were celebrated for the first time in B. They always took place in the sacred stadium in Olympia, Greece and the prize was an olive leaf wreath. The first modern Games took place in and are held in a different city every four years. The Olympic motto was proposed by Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympics.
Cricket Cricket is a team sport for two teams of eleven players each. A formal game of cricket can last from an afternoon one day cricket to five days test cricket! In test cricket, players wear white clothes, use a wooden bat and throw a red ball. Wushu Wushu symbolises 5, years of Chinese history, culture and philosophy. The athletes use symbolic weapons: They start with 10 points and losemarksforeachmistakemade.
You are a member of the Teen Olympics Committee. You are in charge of selecting a new sport for the Olympics. Flying their flag for… Final project So now, what do you think? Want to learn more?
001 contre Enigma
Find out which sport was chosen here: Which sport are these athletes flying their flags for? Gather information about the different sports and say which is your favourite. Snooker Snooker is played using a cue and balls: Lacrosse Lacrosse is a sport played with twelve players on each team. You … forget to do your homework. You … be nice to your classmates. You … chew gum in class. You … study hard to get good marks. You … turn your phone on in class.
You … pay attention. You … fight with your classmates. Welcome to Xtreme Fun Park! Follow the following safety rules. You must be careful. Be going to est suivi de la base verbale. Tu vas prendre des cours de chant. Tes amis vont faire du karting samedi. Ton professeur de sport va appeler tes parents ce soir. Compare les performances des participants. Paul runs … Kevin. Cynthia is … Beatrix. Kim jumps … Christophe.
Exhibit number 77 1. This painting is by the American artist, Norman Rockwell. The scene takes place at school. There are files in the lower right-hand corner and notices on the board in the upper left-hand corner. Her hair is all messy and she has a black eye. She must have been fighting. She might even have fought with another girl in her class. In the background, we can see a man in an office. He must be the principal. Our attention is drawn to the middle of the picture. This is significant because girls at that time were expected to be gentle and well-behaved.
In this painting, Norman Rockwell intended to show that girls could be as quarrelsome as boys. Most people liked this painting because of its humorous social satire. What do you think about it? Do you think that girls have the same image nowadays? Lis le titre, regarde le tableau et devine le sens du mot shiner. Ton objectif comprendre une correspondance Es-tu capable de: Can you help him complete the columns? Help him write the verbs in the past forms. Yesterday is a very bad day.
I have a virus and I make a lot of mistakes. Master Dayo says I work too much. He contacts the robot job centre to find another robot to help me. Help Robbie sort out the past from the present and the future. Fill in the table for him. I … look out into space but there … be nothing to report. The day before yesterday I … discover a new star. Yesterday Master Dayo … name it Robbie I!
Perhaps tomorrow I … discover Robbie II! The robot job centre sent two profiles. Master Dayo asked Robbie to look at them and write a report. But Robbie got it wrong again! There are four mistakes in the report. Can you correct them? Listen and give the answer before Master Dayo! Now help Robbie complete his log book.
I think you should take F2. Firstly, M1 is not as new as F2. Secondly, F2 is faster than M1 and M1 is less intelligent than F2. Finally, M1 is not as precise as F2. Have you got someone? Is it a man? Is he an actor? Did he act in Harry Potter? Was he in Wolverine? Listen to the words and repeat. Peter Piper picked a peck1 of pickled peppers. Say the words line by line. In pairs, use the words to write a short dialogue. Practise, then read it out to the class. Use an online netspeak dictionary if necessary.
Think about what you want to say and write normal English sentences. Translate the words and expressions you can into netspeak. Check your netspeak on an online netspeak dictionary and give your message to your friend. Browse the online netspeak dictionary and the online netspeak translator: Did U C the news? U have 2 watch it B4 spoilers spread LOL. UR my true BFF! Prends des notes et des photos. Write a simple description in English. Practise reading it aloud.
C Avec ton professeur de technologie 1. Find out the names of the rival families and name the characters in the illustration. Say if the play is a comedy or a tragedy. List positive and negative reactions. Find out more about the meeting in the final screenshot where? Note what they talk about in the final screenshot. Note what we learn from Jessica. Look at the screenshots and say what you can. Guess who the people are and what they are doing. Then, practise reading the text. Why not record yourself! Check out their websites for kids.
Check out the competition between the two media groups! Listen, take notes and say if you were right. How long ago was that? Look at the poster and say what you can about this boxing match between two rivals. Here are some useful verbs: Was she an actress? Did she act in…? Comment box edit storiesfromhistory. Focus on the top of the page and say what we know about the two men. Say what the article is about. Read the first paragraph and pick out the names of the objects. Note the comparisons between the two men in this paragraph. Focus on the dates and time markers, then note the origins of The current war.
Note what Edison did during The current war. Who is more famous today? ThomasEdisonandNikolaTeslaweretwovery important inventors who changed history. Why were they famous? Edisoninventedthephonograph,theancestor of the record player, and he improved1 the light bulb and the telephone. Tesla, gave us the radio and neon lighting but with patents, he was not as prolific as Edison and was less successful financially.
He died in debt. In Edison opened a power station2 which produced direct current DC to light homes and offices in New York. Two years later, he asked Tesla to help but then refused to pay him. Are they both as famous today? Nikola Tesla is not quite as famous as Thomas Edison, but his contribution to technology is fully recognised today. Write down a definition for three different objects. Take it in turns to read your definitions out to the class who will have to guess the name of the object. Now compare the different objects using adjectives from the Word storm.
In pairs, share what you know about these people then report back to the class. I think Andy Warhol was a famous American artist who… b. Listen to the specialist, take notes and react. Compare the people above using these adjectives. X was not as… as Y. X was less… than Y. X was as… as Y. Write a short article for the school blog about two rivals.
A huge glass palace housed more than , exhibits from Britain and the British Empire, from the United States and from more than forty other countries in Europe, Africa and Asia. France was the guest of honour. He wanted to promote scientific and technological progress, educate the public and increase cooperation and understanding between nations. The Great Exhibition was an incredible success and became the first of a series of world fairs. Read the first paragraph and pick out the important facts.
Read the second paragraph and note the objectives of the exhibition and the name of the person behind it. Find out about the expositions universelles organised in Paris. Was it a good idea? Are there similar events today? Ask your teachers or look on the Internet and report back. Balloon debates Take part in a balloon debate. Look at the illustration, describe the situation and say what you know about the people in the balloon. Focus on the verbs in paragraphs 3 and 4 to discover what pupils do during a balloon debate.
Listen to an extract from a balloon debate. List potential personalities for a balloon debate. Balloon debates are popular in schools in Britain. They are a fun way to improve speaking skills. The usual scenario is that a group of important people from the past are in a hot air balloon which is falling and will soon crash into a mountain. It is impossible to save everyone. The pupils choose a personality to defend. They then give a short presentation to convince the class that their personality must stay in the balloon.
The class takes notes to help them choose the personalities that deserve to stay. Shakespeare be born in Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin be born on the same day in Charles Darwin publish his theory of evolution in Queen Victoria and Prince Albert speak German. Marilyn Monroe win a Golden Globe in Steve Jobs co-found Apple in Lady Diana die in Paris in Lady Diana do a lot of charity work. Muhammad Ali write poetry. Shakespeare wrote his memoirs. Abraham Lincoln died of old age. Nikola Tesla was born in America. Queen Victoria married again. She smiled a lot in public.
Thomas Edison invented the first light bulb. Amelia Earhart flew across Africa. Lady Diana went to university. Yuri Gagarin was the first man on the Moon. Neil Armstrong walked on the Moon in Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet in People first bought stamps … years ago. People first gave Christmas cards… b. People saw the first post boxes… c.
People first travelled on the Underground… d. People discovered the first telephone… e. Muhammad Ali won an Olympic medal. They built a generator which produced alternating current. Shakespeare was a great British playwright. He wrote classic plays like Hamlet and Macbeth. It was reconstructed near its original site. Queen Victoria married her cousin. The Beatles were an English rock band. They came from Liverpool. It went to number 17 in the charts. Queen Victoria was more concerned about the poor than Lady Diana.
She was less concerned about the poor than Lady Diana. Steve Jobs was more famous than Bill Gates. Queen Victoria was more influential than Abraham Lincoln. Lady Diana was prettier than Marilyn Monroe. Edison was cleverer than Tesla. Florence Nightingale was more caring than Mary Jane Seacole. Joe Frazier was more charismatic than Muhammad Ali. Charles Lindberg was more adventurous than Amelia Earhart.
Roy Lichtenstein was more popular than Andy Warhol. Nikola Tesla was not as rich as Thomas Edison. In pairs, compare your favourite mystery series. How many characters can you hear? Say who and where they are. Focus on the suspects. Gather information about their alibis. Find what the crucial clue is.
Deduce who killed Mrs. Do you agree with your classmates? Read the title, look at the illustration and say what you can. Listen to the dialogue and identify the stressed and unstressed words. Identify the pronunciation of was and deduce the rule. Now, act out the dialogue between the detective and Lord Woolen. Your best friend waited for you at the cinema but you never came. Create your own excuses. Read them aloud, then the class will vote for the best three. Pupil A reads synopsis A and pupil B reads synopsis B. Gather information about your film.
Prepare and ask questions about the other film. Who was arrested by Holmes? Now discuss and decide which film you will buy. Help Holmes write a more formal press release using the passive. Find adjectives to describe a detective and a suspect. Pick out key words, read the Culture flash and check your ideas.
Find details about the story: Find elements that suggest suspense. Do you think the detective will catch the killer? Look at the document and say what you can. Look at the elements around the text and the Culture flash on p. Read the title and say what you think the story is about. Poirot receives letters signed by a mysterious A. In each letter the date and location of the next murder are given. An ABC railway guide is found near every victim… With each murder, the killer is getting more confident — but he might lose elementary prudence. And why did a meticulous man like A. There must be a reason.
Well, only time will tell how clever you can be. Anyway, here is a clue you might must need. Look out for Churston, on the 31st of the month. Rewrite the back cover of Murders in the Rue Morgue to maintain the suspense. One of the sentences is from a different book. Help Poirot read A. In pairs, describe the book covers. Choose the ideas you think belong to these stories. It must be a murder story because… There might be… c. How probable is it that you will read these books? Create your own book back cover for a detective story. Charged with seven counts of residential burglary, each bringing a possible sentence of two to six years, Nick Prugo is potentially facing serious time.
Go directly to jail!
New Hi There 4e
The true story of Frank Abagnale Jr. Jeff Nathanson screenplay , Frank Abagnale Jr. Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Christopher Walken Abagnale spent years as a check forger, con man3 and fake airline pilot… He was finally captured in France in , and served six months in a French prison and six more in Sweden before being deported to the United States, where he was sentenced to an additional 12 years in the federal prison. Pupil A reads press clipping A and pupil B reads press clipping B.
Collect as much information as you can. Then share what you have learnt. Where do you think these people are now? Discuss which film you would like to see. They will get them! Write a factsheet for a crime thriller. So here are the results. Some are private detectives, some belong to the police force… Some are American, some are British, and one is Belgian! Your 10 Favourite Fictional Detectives 1. Mulder and Scully X-Files 5. Jake Peralta Brooklyn 99 8. Olivia Benson SVU 9. Gil Grissom CSI I quite agree with all these names. These detectives are clever, inspired and I love seeing them cracking mysteries and catching criminals!
Find information about the detectives in the list. Share with your classmates. Why do people like them? Can you add other names to the list?
EMI So now, what do you think? Practising grammar 58 fifty-eight 1 Detective Leek est sur les traces de Macavity, le fameux voleur. Moss — garden — Macavity — appear. Roberts — chat — Macavity — hide quickly — behind a tree. What … you … a — do when Macavity … b — escape , Mrs. I … c — garden in the front.
A priori, quoi de moins excitant qu'une suite de nombres? Les nombres premiers n'usurpent pas leur nom. Mille ans avant J. La fausse nouvelle fit l'effet d'une bombe. Beaucoup de questions concernent les surfaces, les volumes, les masses et introduisent la notion de rapports. Commence alors entre eux une magnifique relation. Evidemment pas par hasard. Sumer est le point central de l'Histoire. Pas seulement de les vulgariser. Mon imagination intervient ensuite. Je ne peux pas survoler une chose. Et pas pour m'amuser. On ne peut pas tout faire.
Flammarion septembre - pages ISBN Et Ian Stewart en sait quelque chose. Connaissez-vous l'oracle de Kevin Bacon? De quoi stimuler vos neurones, avec d'autant plus de plaisir que l'humour est au rendez-vous. Le but du jeu est d'accumuler le plus de points possible. Fantasy Sports and Math ematics. Kordemsky Dover Publications Inc. Introduction de Martin Gardner. Lire aussi cette critique , celle de Le Guide. Il est possible de passer commande via Internet. L'ouvrage s' organise en 5 parties:.
Les illustrations, toujours en page de gauche, font largement appel aux couleurs. Un simple jeu de cartes, un morceau de ficelle, un journal, etc. Certains tours utilisent la logique ou al topologie. Cellular Automata Viewer 2. J'ai pu me procurer dans une librairie d'occasion le livre de Pierre Berloquin Le jardin du Sphinx. Le format est original: Mon seul reproche concerne le titre: J'ai Lu 12 mai Collection: Poche - 92 pages ISBN: Comme tout le monde, j'ai mes petites habitudes: Rocco a un braquemart de 18 cm avec lequel il effectue trois va-et-vient par seconde pendant 10 minutes.
Extraits de Les nombres: Extraits de La machine de Turing. Comment planter des arbres dans un verger? Le dilemme du prisonnier: Von Neumann est entre autres! La solution rationnelle est alors que les deux se trahissent mutuellement! Cette queue n'avancera plus. Vous portez un colis dans chaque main? Vous sortez du salon pendant un match de foot? Renseignez-vous autour de vous. Un bon livre toutefois. L'oeuvre d'Euler est aussi disponible en ligne sur le site The works of Leonhard Euler online.
Oh, les Math s! Introduction to Circle Packing: On peut trouver sur son site les images du livre et quelques articles sur ce sujet. Il lui remit un manuscrit. Clerselier finit par admettre qu'il avait en sa possession un autre carnet. Rencontre avec un titan Le fun en math s, dit-il, c'est de trouver, pas de s'enrichir.
Or les statisticiens ont mauvaise presse! Cet ouvrage vient exactement combler ce besoin. Uhry Des mots et des chiffres C. Des outils de la statistique L. Schwartz Les p'tits sous L. Schwartz Triangles quelconques C. Pourquoi ces traces de corde sur ses poignets? Que signifient ces scarifications, ces phrases inscrites dans sa chair? Elle deviendra vite le pire de ses cauchemars Je me demandais pourquoi. Je l'ai su au chapitre 31 du roman. Mais les livres n'ont pas d'autres points communs.
Les enseignants en profiteront pour enrichir leur cours. Qui perd gagne, les dominos, les marelles New York, 28 octobre La fortune sourit aux audacieux. Mieux que le Da Vinci Code! De quoi relancer toute l'histoire des sciences. Dunod 13 mars - pages Collection: Le livre comporte aussi: Et PI ou V2? Sont-ils apparus beaucoup plus tard? Et elle devient vite passionnante lorsqu'elle parle de son monde fabuleux! Vous avez dit hasard? Math doesn't suck et Kiss my math.
- Performance and Power?
- Building A Powerful Vision Board.
- Béville, Gilbert.
- New Hi There 4e.
A qui s'adresse ce livre? Comment organiser des tournois de foot? Que signifie un code barres? Quel est le principe de la datation au carbone 14? Comment calculer facilement la hauteur de votre maison ou bien l'aire de votre terrain? S'il vaut mieux courir ou marcher sous la pluie? Comment fut construite notre gamme musicale? Comment les peintres utilisent la perspective?
Quelle est la trajectoire d'une balle de golf? Thriller College de Trinity, Angleterre. Que sont devenus ses travaux? ISBN Prix public: On peut lire ces cent histoires dans l'ordre qu'on veut: Le cavalier d'Euler est connu depuis fort longtemps. Un livre de Jean-Paul Delahaye Editeur: Seuil janvier - pages Collection: Un soir, son voisin de comptoir l'aborde et lui raconte l'histoire d'une incroyable disparition.
Celle d'une femme, de son fils et de leur chien. Que les truands se le tiennent pour dit, l'Agrapheur est aux aguets Voir le site d'accompagnement du livre. Traduit dans 15 langues. Points 13 mars Collection: Traduit du hongrois pas Georges Kassai. Je n'ai pas encore eu ces brochures entre les mains il y en a 4 disponibles pour l'instant , donc je ne peux pas en dire grand-chose. Alors que le chat n'y comprend rien, M. Les premiers chapitres traitent de questions et de techniques algorithmiques aux origines relativement anciennes, et portent pour l'essentiel sur des calculs de nombres: Que l'on ne s'y trompe pas: Personnellement, j'aime beaucoup ce concept.
Cliquez sur les couvertures ci-dessous pour pouvoir feuilleter ces ouvrages sur Amazon. Combien de chaussettes font la paire?
Avec Rob Eastaway, c'est le contraire: Questions de math s sympas: Alex au pays des chiffres: Comment faire fortune au pub? Quelle est la surface d'un oeuf d'autruche? Qu'est-ce qu'un ours polaire? Et vous vous amuserez au moins autant que vous vous instruirez!
Les 75 exercices sont essentiellement de deux types: L'apprentissage des math s demande une maturation personnelle. Travailler les math s c'est travailler sur soi. Un premier roman plein d'humour. Mon commentaire D'habitude, je ne critique pas les bouquins dans ce blog. Il ne m'a donc pas vraiment plu, mais il pourrait plaire.
X was less… than Y. X was as… as Y. Write a short article for the school blog about two rivals. A huge glass palace housed more than , exhibits from Britain and the British Empire, from the United States and from more than forty other countries in Europe, Africa and Asia. France was the guest of honour. He wanted to promote scientific and technological progress, educate the public and increase cooperation and understanding between nations. The Great Exhibition was an incredible success and became the first of a series of world fairs.
Read the first paragraph and pick out the important facts. Read the second paragraph and note the objectives of the exhibition and the name of the person behind it. Find out about the expositions universelles organised in Paris. Was it a good idea? Are there similar events today? Ask your teachers or look on the Internet and report back.
Balloon debates Take part in a balloon debate. Look at the illustration, describe the situation and say what you know about the people in the balloon. Focus on the verbs in paragraphs 3 and 4 to discover what pupils do during a balloon debate. Listen to an extract from a balloon debate. List potential personalities for a balloon debate. Balloon debates are popular in schools in Britain. They are a fun way to improve speaking skills. The usual scenario is that a group of important people from the past are in a hot air balloon which is falling and will soon crash into a mountain.
It is impossible to save everyone. The pupils choose a personality to defend. They then give a short presentation to convince the class that their personality must stay in the balloon. The class takes notes to help them choose the personalities that deserve to stay. Shakespeare be born in Abraham Lincoln and Charles Darwin be born on the same day in Charles Darwin publish his theory of evolution in Queen Victoria and Prince Albert speak German. Marilyn Monroe win a Golden Globe in Steve Jobs co-found Apple in Lady Diana die in Paris in Lady Diana do a lot of charity work.
Muhammad Ali write poetry. Shakespeare wrote his memoirs. Abraham Lincoln died of old age. Nikola Tesla was born in America. Queen Victoria married again. She smiled a lot in public. Thomas Edison invented the first light bulb. Amelia Earhart flew across Africa. Lady Diana went to university. Yuri Gagarin was the first man on the Moon. Neil Armstrong walked on the Moon in Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet in People first bought stamps … years ago.
People first gave Christmas cards… b. People saw the first post boxes… c. People first travelled on the Underground… d. People discovered the first telephone… e. Muhammad Ali won an Olympic medal. They built a generator which produced alternating current. Shakespeare was a great British playwright. He wrote classic plays like Hamlet and Macbeth. It was reconstructed near its original site. Queen Victoria married her cousin. The Beatles were an English rock band. They came from Liverpool. It went to number 17 in the charts. Queen Victoria was more concerned about the poor than Lady Diana.
She was less concerned about the poor than Lady Diana. Steve Jobs was more famous than Bill Gates. Queen Victoria was more influential than Abraham Lincoln. Lady Diana was prettier than Marilyn Monroe. Edison was cleverer than Tesla. Florence Nightingale was more caring than Mary Jane Seacole. Joe Frazier was more charismatic than Muhammad Ali. Charles Lindberg was more adventurous than Amelia Earhart. Roy Lichtenstein was more popular than Andy Warhol.
Nikola Tesla was not as rich as Thomas Edison. In pairs, compare your favourite mystery series. How many characters can you hear? Say who and where they are. Focus on the suspects. Gather information about their alibis. Find what the crucial clue is. Deduce who killed Mrs. Do you agree with your classmates? Read the title, look at the illustration and say what you can. Listen to the dialogue and identify the stressed and unstressed words.
Identify the pronunciation of was and deduce the rule. Now, act out the dialogue between the detective and Lord Woolen. Your best friend waited for you at the cinema but you never came. Create your own excuses. Read them aloud, then the class will vote for the best three. Pupil A reads synopsis A and pupil B reads synopsis B. Gather information about your film. Prepare and ask questions about the other film. Who was arrested by Holmes? Now discuss and decide which film you will buy. Help Holmes write a more formal press release using the passive.
Find adjectives to describe a detective and a suspect. Pick out key words, read the Culture flash and check your ideas. Find details about the story: Find elements that suggest suspense. Do you think the detective will catch the killer? Look at the document and say what you can. Look at the elements around the text and the Culture flash on p. Read the title and say what you think the story is about. Poirot receives letters signed by a mysterious A.
In each letter the date and location of the next murder are given. An ABC railway guide is found near every victim… With each murder, the killer is getting more confident — but he might lose elementary prudence. And why did a meticulous man like A. There must be a reason. Well, only time will tell how clever you can be. Anyway, here is a clue you might must need. Look out for Churston, on the 31st of the month. Rewrite the back cover of Murders in the Rue Morgue to maintain the suspense. One of the sentences is from a different book. Help Poirot read A. In pairs, describe the book covers.
Choose the ideas you think belong to these stories. It must be a murder story because… There might be… c. How probable is it that you will read these books? Create your own book back cover for a detective story. Charged with seven counts of residential burglary, each bringing a possible sentence of two to six years, Nick Prugo is potentially facing serious time.
Go directly to jail!
Le blog-notes mathématique du coyote
The true story of Frank Abagnale Jr. Jeff Nathanson screenplay , Frank Abagnale Jr. Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Christopher Walken Abagnale spent years as a check forger, con man3 and fake airline pilot… He was finally captured in France in , and served six months in a French prison and six more in Sweden before being deported to the United States, where he was sentenced to an additional 12 years in the federal prison.
Pupil A reads press clipping A and pupil B reads press clipping B. Collect as much information as you can. Then share what you have learnt. Where do you think these people are now? Discuss which film you would like to see. They will get them! Write a factsheet for a crime thriller. So here are the results. Some are private detectives, some belong to the police force… Some are American, some are British, and one is Belgian! Your 10 Favourite Fictional Detectives 1. Mulder and Scully X-Files 5. Jake Peralta Brooklyn 99 8. Olivia Benson SVU 9. Gil Grissom CSI I quite agree with all these names.
These detectives are clever, inspired and I love seeing them cracking mysteries and catching criminals! Find information about the detectives in the list. Share with your classmates. Why do people like them? Can you add other names to the list? EMI So now, what do you think? Practising grammar 58 fifty-eight 1 Detective Leek est sur les traces de Macavity, le fameux voleur. Moss — garden — Macavity — appear. Roberts — chat — Macavity — hide quickly — behind a tree. What … you … a — do when Macavity … b — escape , Mrs.
I … c — garden in the front. Because I… d — see you chatting with Mr. Yes, we … e — talk about the flowers for a minute. The mystery was solved by Sherlock Holmes. Holmes was helped by Dr Watson. The victim was killed by his jealous wife. The weapon was found by Scotland Yard detectives. The killer was betrayed by traces of lipstick on a cigarette. Where were you when Mrs. Sherlock Holmes was created by Arthur Conan Doyle. He b … missing by his wife, Mrs. Detective Leek thinks it was an accident: It d … probably … by a cat.
Roberts and her children e … the sad news by Mrs. Reformule avec le modal qui convient. The light is on. His car is parked in the street. He might lose elementary prudence. The guests and two servants heard a gramophone recording after dinner the first night: They took it as a joke until one of them … e — find dead Ton objectif comprendre une conversation Es-tu capable de: Be careful, there are extra words! Have you ever a visit Planet Alpha?
Yes, I b have! Do you think humans have ever d be to planet Beta? Has D2R2 ever f fly a spaceship? Have you ever i ride in a trans-universe shuttle? Princess LOL — the Deth Star — Darth Veyda — Master Dayo tent — biography — wild — blackmail — detective — jail — spacesuit — Earth — witness — hitchhike — whodunnit — weapon — suspect — evidence — base jump — murder — clue — victim — marathon — astronaut — mystery — novel — desert — alibi — crime scene — fingerprint a. He is the best clever person on Planet Alpha. It is the bigest planet in the universe.
He is the more dangerous person in the universe. She is the beautifulest princess in the world! Listen to their conversation, learn your part and act it out. What are you watching, David? What were you doing when that happened Grandpa?
I was watching it on TV! I saw the astronaut come out of the lunar module. You mean Neil Armstrong, right? It was July ! They threw three free throws through the hoop. Browse the net and check: List what you know about: You can use free software like Calibre or Mobipocket to transform Word pages into electronic format ePUB and create an e-leaflet. AP Create an e-leaflet about Sherlock Holmes. Find out about life in London in Victorian times and note ten interesting facts. Listen to this interview of Charles Dickens, note a few important facts and write a short biography.
Learn more about Oliver Twist. Watch the trailer and identify the characters. Read the summary and create a storyboard or comic book version. Listen to the recordings, then act out the scenes with the help of the playscripts. Read the title and describe the picture.
Guess how much a space trip might cost. Identify the two characters and say where they are. Check your ideas about the cost of a space trip. Describe how she feels about this experience. Do you know that humans have travelled to space and 12 have walked on the Moon? Today, it has become possible to go to space thanks to Virgin Galactic, a spaceflight company founded by Sir Richard Branson. Listen and match the words with the right sound.
Repeat the words with the right pronunciation and find the rule. Listen, observe and repeat the tongue twister. Find out about their experiences. Sir Ranulph Fiennes has completed seven marathons in seven days. Erik is an assistant on the survival show The Island. Help him work out his questions for future contestants Anika and Payton. Have you ever… b. Practise reading the questions with the correct intonation. Discuss and decide who the best contestant for the show is. Interview a famous explorer. It is situated in the Southern Hemisphere and is surrounded by the Southern Ocean. List adjectives to describe extreme places.
Look at the screenshots and react. Describe screenshots 1 and 2 and guess where the video is shot. Look at screenshot 3 and imagine what the video is about. Then identify the characters and say where they are. Can you describe the place the video is about? Find out about life there and pick out activities people can do. Discover what scientists study there and why. Listen to the words and put them into two categories. Repeat the words with the right pronunciation.
Listen to the tongue twister and repeat it as quickly as you can. Discover other extreme environments. Where do you think those places are? Now listen and check. Choose a place, listen again and note down key information, then write a short presentation and read it aloud. Check your answers and recap! Create a Geography World Record Quiz. Of all the adventures and challenges that wait on the vagabonding road, the most difficult can be the act of coming home.
I like getting off the beaten path, of course, but I think you can learn a lot about a country by spending some time in its most overcrowded tourist attractions. Some of my best travel experiences have been the result of boredom, loneliness, and inconvenience. Indeed, the most vivid travel experiences usually find you by accident… 72 seventy-two A.
In pairs, get as much information as you can about Rolf Potts. Share with your classmate. Look at the map and statistics of his journey and sum up his experience. Say which quote you like best. Rolf Potts is an American travel writer and author. A few years ago, he set off from New York City with a cameraman and absolutely no luggage for a six week round-the-world trip.
The few items he did bring, like a few toiletries and a few extra clothing items were stored in his pockets. Our most unusual places Our most unusual places Our most unusual places http: This species of glowworm, which is found exclusively in New Zealand, emits a blue-green glow that illuminates the underground cave river. Listening Reading Meet an adventurer Greetings from Australia! Now recap all the reasons to go off the beaten track. Can you add more? So, you a just a basejump from one of the highest mountains in the world.
You b have any other extreme experiences? Yes, I c have quite a lot of extreme experiences before. I guess you d have the opportunity to visit many countries. I e be to lots of different places. Well, have you g dreamt of base jumping from space? Of course, I have but I h have the opportunity. I guess we i not hear the last of you then! Le present perfect Looking at the Earth from the Space Station has been the most impressive moment of the trip so far. I have never had such an extreme experience before. New York — Paris — London b. Elles viennent de voir le film The Martian.
This film was so cool! One of the a entertaining film at the cine-club this week. It is the b film I c interesting — watch too. And Matt Damon in the leading role was really good. Probably the d actor I e good — see. Have you read the book? I think it is the f story I g intriguing — read. Look at the people Nick is talking to. Say where they are and who they may be. Read the title and imagine how it can relate to Nick. Find information about the people you see and check your ideas. What is the problem in the first screenshot? What is his opinion on his job? Discuss the title with your classmates.
Listen to the extract from the dialogue, find the compound nouns and note how they are stressed. Make up compound nouns with the following words, then pronounce them correctly. Now, write four sentences using as many compound nouns as you can and practise saying them aloud.
You are on a school trip to London. Your class went to a photography exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery. One group learned about Annie Leibovitz, the other about Steven Klein. Share your information with a classmate who was in the other group. What have you learnt about their careers?
Recap to the class. List the elements used in the scrapbook. Say what places and monuments they visited in London. Whose shots of the Gherkin and the Shard would you like to add to the scrapbook? Which are the most artistic? Create an artistic poster of the capital city. Have you seen the film? Read the Culture flash and say where it was shot. Now read the title and guess what the recording may be about. Identify the characters and check your ideas. Listen for places and say which is the most important for Sam. Find the name of the famous person and say how he is linked to Sam.
Is it easy for the journalist to get information? Pick out some of her questions. Wellywood is an informal name for Wellington, New Zealand. The expression refers to the film production business established in the suburb of Miramar. Steven Spielberg also worked on his Tintin movies with special-effects companies based there. Listen and find the intonation at the end of each sentence.
Then, deduce the rule. Listen to the question tags. Then, repeat the sentences. You meet an old friend by accident at the cinema. Act out the scene. Which film genre do you like most and which do you like least? Find information about them online.
Les nombres premiers
The person who finds the most answers wins. Interview with film director Peter Jackson. A journalist interviewed Peter Jackson but his notes are a mess. Now act out the interview! Act out the interview of your favourite actor, actress or director. You can film yourselves with a smartphone or a digital camera!
Street art is an art form exposed in the street for everyone to enjoy or hate. Street art takes various forms: Artists usually try to convey a message; which may be about anything from politics to emotions… Banksy, Invader, Above or Blu are a few famous street artists. Find the different forms street art can take. Say what you think about the pictures. Which is your favourite? Art is for everyone! Where every street was awash with a million colours and little phrases. Where standing at a bus stop was never boring.
Read one quote each. Focus on the transparent words and the words you know, then explain what you understand to your classmates. Which is your favourite quote? Write a page for an eBook about your favourite art form. Remets les mots dans le bon ordre. I took the pictures. The Rolling Stones become famous in the s. Last year, they record a new album. I listen to it yet. I be to three of their concerts so far. They start a new European tour two months ago. All the dates are sold out: