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.
Les Présentations
Qui suis-je?
Who am I? Jacques Nong Bateki
Qui suis-je?
Qui suis-je?
Qui suis-je?
Les élèves se présentent.
Bonjour,
Je m'appelle...
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.