Showing posts with label University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University. Show all posts

Friday, 3 June 2016

Teaching Terminale!

So for the final part of my assistantship in Lille, I was working with students in Terminale. They were mainly aged between 17 and 18 (although some were 19) and they were preparing for their BAC exams.

Most of the time I was given groups of 5-3 students and I had to do mock oral exams, so they had to present a 'notion' that they had worked on to me and I had to give them feedback.

 I always asked the students if they wanted to have a couple of minutes to prepare and after their preparation (reading notes) they had to present their work to me.

The majority were incredibly nervous, even though I told them so many times that I wasn't marking them or going to tell the teacher, but overall I was sooo impressed with them and always encouraged them.

Other groups still had to do proper lessons. I tried to incorporate the 'mock exams' into these classes as much as possible so that I could work out which areas they needed to improve. The problems varied but were mainly pronunciation, sentence structure and giving genders to random objects like tables (The table was nice, she was wooden and brown - obviously they weren't doing lessons on tables but this was the only example I could think of).

Other than the mock exam parts of the lessons, I tried to get them to do mind maps of the notions so that we could prepare potential exam questions together. For example, for the notion of progress I had them mind map everything that they knew about progress such as new technology, medicine, science, politics etc. etc.) and then we went through them together. After, I gave them a sheet with a question on like 'Is progress always positive?' and 2 columns with titles 'yes' and 'no'. We then as a class used the board to write our arguments for each column and then the students had to summarize and present their overall ideas to me.

These lessons worked incredibly well and most of the students told me they found it very helpful.

If anyone is looking for ideas of lesson plans or things to do with students in terminale in preparation for their exams, do not hesitate to ask me!

Sorry this post is so short, I will be doing longer posts again soon.

Thank you for reading!

Emily

Thursday, 3 March 2016

Travelling to Bruges!

After Christmas, I was really feeling the back to work blues and so my friend, Jen, and I immediately booked a weekend away in Bruges.

We went from Lille Europe via train to Bruges. We had to stop at Courtrai but overall the journey was not a problem, taking around 2 hours.



As soon as we arrived we had lunch, which of course included some Belgian beer...

It was cherry flavoured.

...And then we went sight seeing, meaning we walked around aimlessly all day and ended up in Zara.

The canal

Me and Jen in front of a random canal

The 'Grand Place'

Another view of 'Grand Place'

After the travelling and walking we headed back to our Hotel which was literally a 2 second walk from Grand Place, down a street. I knew I would need a lie down so I attempted to have a nap but I couldn't and we decided to get ready to go out.

By the time we were ready (Literally 10:00pm) we had to run all over the city centre to find a cash-point and a restaurant that was a) open b) looked appetising c) would let us come in. We eventually found one and they quickly seated us and took our orders.

Escargots

Half a Lobster in garlic butter

I tried escargot for the first time for my starter, they weren't in their shells and so I thought the waiter had given me the wrong thing, but as it turned out, the black mushroom looking things were the snails. I was grossed out but they literally just tasted of garlic.

After that we came upon a very loud bar/ club and unintentionally ended up staying until 4am because the music was too good.

Me and Jen in the bar/club toilets



The next morning/ afternoon, we got up and checked out before walking all around Bruges again. We finally had a Belgian waffle for breakfast and it was insanely delicious but very very sickly.

Belgian waffle with nutella


The rest of the day we spent walking around Bruges, the sky was blue and beautiful, we were so lucky. Then, we got the train back to Courtrai and then Lille at around 4pm, which was again, a smooth journey.



There were beautiful monuments scattered all over the city




INFO FOR IF YOU'RE THINKING OF GOING TO BRUGES:

-We definitely went for the perfect amount of time, any more than 2-3 days may get boring as Bruges is quite small.
-The weather can be a bit crazy at times, one second the sky was blue and the next it started hail stoning and they were like golf balls.
-As expected, food and drinks were generally pretty expensive so don't go thinking you'll not spend a lot.
-Everywhere we went they spoke French and English as well as many others- for those who worry about languages.
-There was a small street just off Grand Place, next to the post office that had lots of chocolate shops, I would strongly suggest going because we got tasters!!
-There are not a lot of cash machines around, we managed to find a BNP Paribas that was open late close to Grand Place, but be aware.
- The horse and carriages literally do not care where you are, we were nearly ran over many many times.
-Bruges is a beautiful place, if you're considering going I would say GO FOR IT!!


Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Updates from France

Its been a while since I've given any updates on life in France, so I thought I would try to cover everything that has been happening in Lille...


Life after the Paris Attacks

By now, everyone will know about the horrific events that took place in Paris. I was at a friends when I heard and hurried back to my flat to watch the BBC news coverage, it was so scary because nobody knew when or where it would end.

The next day, we (British Council assistants) received an email to give us general information and advice on how to stay safe, as the terror threat was, and still is, very very high. Especially in Lille, as you must travel through Lille to get to Paris from Brussels (which shortly after the Paris attacks went into lock down) and vice versa. The general advice was to stay indoors, avoid public transport and the city centre, be aware of everything around you and make sure your school knew where you were.

I stayed indoors for the whole weekend, apart from one trip to the shop to stock up on food. I had expected to see people looking sad or scared but instead I saw a group of young men out jogging and laughing, one of them was just in swim shorts and it was raining. Very strange.

The schools were open on the Monday but the gates had to be closed at all times, usually they were wide open throughout the day, and we were told that if the students wanted to talk about the attacks, then they could and should. Most of my classes that week were discussing how they all felt and what they thought of it all.

 I was very surprised at how open minded they all were, because there had been some awful messages all over the internet about muslims and not letting refugees into Britain, Whereas here were 15 year old students who live near Calais, where the refugees are, and very close to Paris, saying 'we must stay strong', 'it is nothing to do with religion' and 'the refugees are running from terror, why should we deny them safety? what did they do?'.

We had a minutes silence at school and then I just happened to be passing Republique Beaux-Arts on my lunch break when I saw a huge crowd of people standing around a memorial for the Paris victims and I joined them in a minute of applause. 


In the weeks following the attacks, the security around Lille city centre has definitely increased. You now have to have your bags checked in a lot of shops, sometimes with a metal detector, especially in the shopping centre Euralille, which was (falsely) rumoured to be a target. There are also a lot more armed police on the streets and in train stations, which actually makes me feel worse.


The Lead up to Christmas

The Christmas decorations in Lille were put up in mid-November, which was so exciting and they are so pretty! Most main streets have their own welcome signs and set of lights.




The Christmas market is very cute and the food and drink isn't expensive at all like I had expected. The stalls are full of home made things such as Christmas decorations, wines, foods and clothes. There is also the big wheel which gives a great view of Lille city centre.






There is also a snow machine next to the Christmas tree sometimes


 I've also visited Arras Christmas market, it takes about half an hour on the train from Lille and the market is lovely. It is bigger than Lille's and has an ice rink which is great. I also tried maroilles cheese on chips which was very strange, it tasted like a very odd garlic sauce. Apparently it is very smelly (delicious).

Vin Chaud




Other than these things, I've just been working, eating and drinking- its a hard life.

 Thankyou for reading :)


Friday, 16 October 2015

Greetings from Lille!

I have finally started my year abroad! Well actually I started 3 weeks ago, but we just got WIFI on Tuesday and I had a lot of TV to catch up on...

I am living in Lille, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France, for the next 7/8 months and am working as an English Assistant in a French Lycée, which is a public French secondary school where the students are between the ages of 15 & 18.

So I arrived in Lille, by the Eurostar, on the 25th September. I had never been before and had no idea what to expect, although I was told that the weather would be terrible (like at home in the North East..) and that French people weren't friendly but people in Lille were friendlier..


Place du théatre

Flace du Général de Gaulle

Walkway to Rihour



Vieux Lille (Old Lille)

  
The weather was beautiful when I arrived and stayed gorgeous up until this week, when all of a sudden it turned absolutely freezing almost overnight and has rained quite a lot. The people, mostly, have exceeded expectation and all been very welcoming and friendly and always speak to me in French even if they can speak English and cannot understand a word I'm trying to say, they always help out and really appreciate my efforts.

I am living just outside of the city centre next to the Bois du Boulogne, its a quiet area but the public transport is great in Lille so I can get into the city by bus or by metro in 15 mins. I'm living in a shared house alongside 2 Russian Assistants and a German Assistant, all are very nice.


This took absolutely ages and keeps falling down during the night and giving me the shock of my life, 
I'm hoping I've secured it now,,




My Bedroom


View from my bedroom

We have a simple kitchen (with no bloody oven) and a shower room, which always has hot water so that's great but,..


The toilet is outside?!?!?!?!!?


Its enclosed which is good (but doesn't lock..) and actually doesn't cause as much of a problem as I had thought it would...BUT now that its freezing on a night, I have to force myself to go twice and not drink anything after half 9 so that I won't have to get up and go.

Anyway, so that is where I'm living and all about Lille itself so far...

Now I'm going to give some brief details of my time observing classes in the Lycée (I don't start teaching till after the school holidays)...

- So far the most popular question when the students have to 'quiz' me has been 'Do you like French people?'- obviously I'm not going to say no am I?!

- The weirdest and most random questions that I have been asked are: 'Matt Smith or Peter Capaldi?', 'Is it true that English people stop everything at 5pm to drink tea?' and 'Is it true that every English person has read Wooster and Jeeves?'

- French school days are loooooooong.. 8am-6pm with a 2 hour lunch and some students come in on Saturdays too!!

-My school has 4 floors and no lift, each floor takes 2 flights of stairs to get to... it took me most of the lessons to recover when I was on floor 4.

- French school lunches generally consist of 1 main meal such as pizza and mash (what the hell) and vegetables if you want, 3 'sides' like salads and things, a cheese (of course), some bread and then a dessert........How they can then continue with another 4 or 5 hours of school after this is beyond me.

-I cannot count the times I have been mistaken for a student by staff and by students until I manage to blurt out 'JE SUIS L'ASSISTANTE D'ANGLAIS' and they laugh and tell me I'm small.

-All French classrooms,the staff room and even the staff toilets are locked (at least they are in my school) and I don't have any keys yet, so until I found the student toilets I would hold it all day and I creepily hang about outside the staff room until someone goes somewhere and I can sneak in (They got sick of me knocking all the time).

-The French students are cheeky but also hilarious, e.g. In one class they were doing a listening exercise about Oprah Winfrey and how she managed to go from 'poverty to celebrity' (the phrase they used) and one boy at the side just randomly came out with 'started from za bottom now we're here' in the most monotone voice I've ever heard. Another example was when the class were fascinated with a stretchy rubber mouse while their English teacher was desperately trying to get them to answer questions, they were throwing it to each other sneakily and stretching it and sticking it to the window until it was confiscated.

-Most of the students don't want to ask me questions when they are supposed to and so when they have to do work they whisper something random like 'psst.. miss...do you like Arctic Monkeys?' then they squeal and whisper in French when I say yes.

All in all, its been an eventful few weeks and I've really enjoyed being at the school so far. The food has been amazing (except certain school meals) and I'm finally starting to feel more settled and can feel my French starting to progress veeeeery slowly.

Thankyou if you're still reading, the rest of my posts won't be as long- I hope!!!

Thursday, 28 May 2015

My Year Abroad

At the end of April, I received this in an email, FINALLY confirming my offer of an assistantship in France. The region I chose was Lille (North) and I chose secondary school children, who I will be assisting in learning English!!


The next step in the process is sending off for a ICPC (International Child Protection Certificate) to confirm that I have no criminal records etc and obviously this involves having (not so) stunning passport-like pictures taken. After that, I will be finding out which school I should be going to!! Scary stuff.

I set up this blog for during my year abroad and so I just wanted to briefly outline where I am at with the applications and everything. Fingers crossed that everything runs smoothly until then!!

Emily X