aujourd'hui, c'est le mardi 06 septembre 2011 today, it's tuesday 6 th september...

12
Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th September 2011 Bonjour et bienvenue dans la classe de Français. Hello and welcome to the French class. Identifiez vos places, asseyez-vous et remplissez la fiche d'information. Identify your seat, take a seat and fill out the information sheet.

Upload: kemp

Post on 21-Jan-2016

35 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Bonjour et bienvenue dans la classe de Français. Hello and welcome to the French class. Identifiez vos places, asseyez-vous et remplissez la fiche d'information. Identify your seat, take a seat and fill out the information sheet. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011Today, it's Tuesday 6th September 2011

Bonjour et bienvenue dans la classe de Français.Hello and welcome to the French class.

Identifiez vos places, asseyez-vous et remplissez la fiche d'information.Identify your seat, take a seat and fill out the information sheet.

Page 2: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Les Présentations

Qui suis-je?

Who am I? Jacques Nong Bateki

Page 3: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Qui suis-je?

Page 4: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Qui suis-je?

Page 5: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Qui suis-je?

Page 6: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Les élèves se présentent.

Bonjour,

Je m'appelle...

Page 7: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

Matériel nécessaire:1” 3 ring binder

One composition notebook

College ruled paper

Pens/ Pencils/eraser

Highlighter

Colored pencils

Glue stick

3 x 5 index cards

1 tissu box

Page 8: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

5 Good reasons to learn French

1) It is a world language. More than 200 million people speak French

on the five continents. The francophonie, the international

organisation of French-speaking comprises 68 states and governments.

French is also the only language alongside English, that is taught in every country in the world.

Page 9: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

5 Good reasons to learn French

2. The language of culture.

French is the international language of cooking, fashion (Pierre Cardin, Christian Dior, Coco Chanel, Yves Saint-Laurent...), theatre, the visual arts, dance and architecture.

French is the language of Victor Hugo, Molière, Alain Delon, Edith Piaf, Zinedine Zidane, Samuel Etoo.

Page 10: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

5 Good reasons to learn French

3. A language for travel.

France is the world's number one tourist

destination and attract more than 70 million

visitors a year who visit Paris and all the regions

of France.

French also come in handy when travelling to

Africa, Switzerland, Canada, Monaco, the

Seychelles and other places.

Page 11: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

5 Good reasons to learn French

4. A language that opens up the world.

After English and German, French is the third

most used language on the internet.

Page 12: Aujourd'hui, c'est le Mardi 06 Septembre 2011 Today, it's Tuesday 6 th  September 2011

5 Good reasons to learn French

5. A language that is fun to learn.

France is an easy language to learn and it does

not take long to reach a level where you can

communicate in French. French is a good base for

learning other languages, especially Romance

languages (Spanish, Italian, Portuguese and

Romanian) as well as English, since fifty per cent

of current English vocabulary is derived from

French.