bonjour, les élèves! trouvez votre place remplissez la feuille dinformation
TRANSCRIPT
Bonjour, les élèves! Trouvez votre placeRemplissez la feuille d’information
Moi aussi!
Vous avez trois minutes pour trouver autant de choses possibles que vous avez en communavec votre partenaire (en français, évidemment!)
http://languagecenter.cla.umn.edu/lc/FrenchSite1022/VERBpcvsimp.html
N’oubliez pas d’apporter pour lundi:
•Un classeur avec diviseurs•Un carnet de composition
VERBE: RUGIR = TO ROAR
infinitif
RUGIRtrois formes pluriels du
présent
nous rugissons
participe passé
rugiparticipe présent
rugissantle passé simple
often comes from the past participle
vous rugissez
ils rugissent
passé composé
tu as rugi
le futur
je rugirai nous rugirons
le présent
je rugis nous rugissons
plus-que-parfait
tu avais rugile passé simple
je rugis nous rugîmes
tu rugiras vous rugirez
il rugira ils rugiront
tu rugis vous rugissez
il rugit ils rugissent
l’impératif!
(tu) rugis
tu rugis vous rugîtes
il rugit ils
rugirent
(ns) rugissons
(vs) rugissez
le conditionnel
je rugirais nous rugirionsl’imparfait
je rugissais nous rugissions
futur antérieur
tu auras rugi
tu rugirais vous rugiriez
il rugirait ils
rugiraient
tu rugissais vous rugissiez
il rugissait ils rugissaient
conditionnel passé
tu aurais rugi
subjonctif passé (que)
tu aies rugi
le subjonctif (que)
je rugisse nous rugissions
infinitif passé (après)
avoir rugi
tu rugisses vous rugissiez
il rugisse ils rugissent
ˆ
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infinitif trois formes pluriels du présent
nous
participe passé participe présent
vous
ils
passé composé
le futur
je nous
le présent
je nous
plus-que-parfait
tu vous
il ils
tu vous
il ils
l’impératif!
(tu)
(ns)
(vs)
le conditionnel
je nousl’imparfait
je nousfutur antérieur
tu vous
il ils
tu vous
il ils
conditionnel passé
subjonctif passé
le subjonctif (que)
je nous
infinitif passé (après)
tu vous
il ils
)
VERBE: ____________ = TO______________
AP® French Language and CultureCourse and Exam
1
Characteristics
• Focus on three modes of communication: Interpersonal, Interpretive and Presentational
• The course has a thematic approach.
• The course includes a focus on culture as described in the Standards: cultural products, practices, and perspectives.
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AP CourseIntermediate Pre-AdvancedNovice
Performance Guidelines
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A Thematic ApproachGlobal
Challenges
Science and Technology
Contemporary Life
Personal and Public
Identities
Families and Communities
Beauty and Aesthetics
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• The course is designed around an overarching premise:
When communicating, AP® world language students [must] demonstrate an understanding of the culture(s), incorporate interdisciplinary topics (Connections), make comparisons between the native language and the target language and between cultures (Comparisons), and use the target language in real-life settings (Communities).
Focus on Communication
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Communication Modes
Interpersonal CommunicationActive negotiation of meaning among individuals through conversation (face-to-face or telephonic); however, it can also be realized through reading and writing (e.g., exchange of personal letters, notes, summaries or e-mails)
Interpretive CommunicationNo active negotiation of meaning with another individual, although there is an active negotiation of meaning construction; includes the cultural interpretation of text, movies, radio, television and speeches
Presentational CommunicationCreation of spoken or written communication prepared for an audience and rehearsed, revised or edited before presentation; one-way communication that requires interpretation by others without negotiation of meaning
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Six Primary Learning Objectives• Spoken Interpersonal Communication• Written Interpersonal Communication• Audio, Visual, and Audiovisual Interpretive
Communication• Written and Print Interpretive Communication• Spoken Presentational Communication• Written Presentational Communication
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AP® Exam
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• Students will be provided contexts for doing exam tasks. They will not be asked questions that are decontextualized.
Tasks and source materials will come with advance organizers and time for previewing.
Audio sources will be played twice. Most audio sources last from 1 min. 30 sec.—2 min. 30 sec, no longer than 3 minutes.
Characteristics
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Students will work with a variety of authentic materials, both print and audio, reflecting the linguistic and cultural diversity of the French-speaking world.
Literary and journalistic texts but also announcements, advertisements, letters, maps, tables, etc.
Scripted dialogues but also radio interviews, podcasts, public service announcements, brief presentations, etc.
Criteria for selection are comprehensibility (accent, pace, minimal background noise/overlap) and relevance to a course theme and to a topic that could interest students.
Materials will be reasonably chosen, but will also reflect a range of cultural perspectives and linguistic features.
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Characteristics
AP® Exam Format
Section I (Interpretive Communication)Multiple choice (50% of total score): 65 items in 9 sets
4 reading2 listening and reading combined3 listening
Section 2 (Interpersonal and Presentational Communication)Free Response (50% of total score): 4 items
Interpersonal WritingPresentational WritingInterpersonal SpeakingPresentational Speaking
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Section 1: Multiple-Choice Items
• Mix of factual and interpretive questions• Vocabulary in context• Purpose of the text, point of view of speaker/writer• Audience of the text• Inferences and conclusions• Questions of “cultural” or “interdisciplinary” nature
that ask students to show understanding of information contained in the text
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Types of Multiple-Choice Items
For texts that are interpersonal in nature (letters, interviews, promotional pieces): What would an appropriate reply to X be? How does what X says/writes relate to what Y has said/written? (agreement, contradiction, support, elaboration)
For texts that are presentational in nature (brief lectures/presentations, print narratives): How does the speaker/author organize the text? What would be an appropriate summary statement of the text?
For combined sets: How does information in the print text relate to information in the audio text? (general/specific, point/counterpoint)
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AP Exam Format Section 1: Multiple-Choice (65 items, 9 sets; 50% of total score)
Section Task Model Number of Items
Section 1: Interpretive
Communication
Reading Sets
Promotional Material 5Literary Text 7
Article and Chart 11Letter 7
Listening and Reading Sets
Audio Report and Article 104 listen4 read2 both
Conversation and Chart 73 listen3 read1 both
Listening Sets
Interview 5Instructions 5Presentation 8
Introduction Thème du cours: Les défis mondiaux
Dans cette sélection il s’agit d’un match de hockey. La publicité originale a été publiée le 16 février 2010 au Canada par Jour de la Terre Québec, situé à Montréal. Cet organisme réalise des activités éducatives et culturelles pour la protection de l’environnement.
Sample Advance Organizer Print Source
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Introduction Thème du cours : La quête de soi
Vous aurez d’abord 1 minute pour lire l’introduction et parcourir les questions. Dans cette sélection il s’ agit des commentaires sur la politique libanaise faits par l’ écrivain de renom Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio. L’interview originale intitulée Le salon livre francophone de Beyrouth a été publiée le 1 novembre 2009 en France par Diane Galliot, journaliste pour Radio France Internationale. Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio a gagné le prix Nobel de littérature en 2008. La sélection dure à peu près deux minutes et demie.
Sample Advance Organizer Audio Source
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AP Exam FormatSection 2: Free Response (4 items, 50% of total score)
Section and Part Mode Integration of Skills Task Model
Section 2A: Interpersonal Writing Interpersonal Writing based
on Reading E-mail Reply
Section 2B: Presentational Writing Presentational
Writing based on Reading and Listening
Persuasive Essay
Section 2C: Interpersonal
SpeakingInterpersonal Speaking and
Listening Conversation
Section 2D:Presentational
SpeakingPresentational Speaking Cultural Comparison
Free-Response Item 1E-mail Reply (Interpersonal Writing)
Directions (in English and French, printed side-by-side):You will write a reply to an e-mail message. You have 15 minutes to read the message and write your reply.
Your reply should include a greeting and a closing, as well as respond to all the questions and requests in the message. In your reply, you should also ask for more details about something mentioned in the message.
Stimulus: A formal e-mail message (i.e., from a business, organization, university) presented as an e-mail message window; contains a greeting and a closing; contains a request for clarification, elaboration or explanation by the student; contains two questions that cannot be answered yes/no.
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Free-Response Item 2Persuasive Essay (Presentational Writing)
Directions (in English and French, printed side-by-side):You will write a persuasive essay to submit to a French-language writing contest. The essay topic is based on three accompanying sources, which present different viewpoints on the topic and include both print and audio materials. First, you will have 6 minutes to read the essay topic and the printed material. Afterward, you will hear the audio material twice; you should take notes while you listen. Then you will have 40 minutes to prepare and write your essay.
In your persuasive essay, present the sources’ different viewpoints on the topic and also clearly indicate your own viewpoint and thoroughly defend it. Use information from all of the sources to support your essay. As you refer to the sources, identify them appropriately. Also, organize your essay into clear paragraphs.
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Free-Response Item 2 (cont’d)Persuasive Essay (Presentational Writing)
Stimuli:
(1) A print source (journalistic article or literary text) that presents a clear opinion on the topic; opinion is different from that of the audio source (authentic source, may be excerpted)
(2) A map with text, a chart or a table that presents information on the topic—this source doesn’t have to present an opinion (authentic source)
(3) An audio source (interview, report, or announcement) that presents a clear opinion on the topic which is different from the opinion in the print source (authentic source, may be excerpted)
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Free-Response Item 3Conversation (Interpersonal Speaking)
Directions (in English followed by French):You will participate in a conversation. First, you will have 1 minute to read a preview of the conversation, including an outline of each turn in the conversation. Then, the conversation will begin, following the outline. Each time it is your turn to speak, you will have 20 seconds to record your response.You should participate in the conversation as fully and appropriately as possible.
Stimulus: Outline of a conversation in French that contains a description of each of five utterances from the interlocutor (the recording) and each of five utterances from the student; descriptions in the outline focus on communicative functions (e.g., tell your friend what happened, make a suggestion, offer a solution, excuse yourself and say goodbye).
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Free-Response Item 4 Cultural Comparison (Presentational Speaking)
Directions (in English followed by French):You will make an oral presentation to your class on a specific topic. You will have 4 minutes to read the topic and prepare your presentation. Then you will have 2 minutes to record your presentation.In your presentation, compare your own community to an area of the French-speaking world with which you are familiar. You should demonstrate your understanding of cultural features of the French-speaking world. You should also organize your presentation clearly.
Stimulus: There is no stimulus, only a prompt. The goals of this task are for the students to speak first about themselves and their communities (using description or explanation) and then speak of an area of the French-speaking world about which they’ve learned something or have some personal experience (using comparison). Students are encouraged to cite examples from materials they’ve read, viewed and listened to; personal experiences; and observations.
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http://advancesinap.collegeboard.org
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Online Resources• http://advancesinap.collegeboard.org/• http://collegeboard.com/html/apcourseaudit/index.html
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Practice Exam: Multiple-Choice Audio• Interpretive Communication, Print and Audio combined, Sélection numéro 1, Questions 31-40, Source
numéro 2 http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_1_part_B_Sel_1_temp.mp3
• Interpretive Communication, Print and Audio combined, Sélection numéro 2, Questions 41-47, Source numéro 2http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_1_Part_B_Sel_2_temp.mp3
• Interpretive Communication, Audio Texts, Sélection numéro 3, Questions 48-52http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_1_Part_B_Sel_3_temp.mp3
• Interpretive Communication, Audio Texts, Sélection numéro 4, Questions 53-57http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_1_Part_B_Sel_4_temp.mp3
• Interpretive Communication, Audio Texts, Sélection numéro 5, Questions 58-65http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_1_Part_B_Sel_5_temp.mp3
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Practice Exam: Free-Response Audio• Presentational Writing Persuasive Essay, Source numéro 3
http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_2_Part_A_PersuEssay_temp.mp3
• Interpersonal Speaking, Conversationhttp://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_2_Part_B_Conv_temp.mp3
• Presentational Speaking,Cultural Comparisonhttp://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/video_audio/ap/AP_French_Sect_2_Part_B_CultComp_temp.mp3
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=REy3wCFjqZo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0c-BRBl5V2I