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Guide > Core: The Modules > MODULE 1 - ANALYZING QUESTIONNAIRE 3

ANALYZING QUESTIONNAIRE 3: SITUATIONS

ASSIGNMENT BEFORE CLASS

Once the answers to questionnaire 3 are posted on the Web, tell your students to:

Give them sufficient time.

FOLLOW-UP CLASS ACTIVITY 1 (this can be done at the end of the class, too).

1. Work on references and vocabulary.

Ask students to write on the board words, expressions or proper nouns they have encountered and elucidated, then ask them to clarify them for students. Elaborate if necessary. If students have not been able to find the meaning, either tell them or ask them to send a query on the forum later.

Another vocabulary exercise: Ask students who have worked on the same situation to form groups of 3 or 4 and to get ready to together to mime that situation, as well as a few of the French reactions. After a few minutes, ask each group to mime that situation in front of the whole class. The other students need to provide words to that situation and the different reactions.

Ask students to now group themselves with other students (3 or 4 per group) who have worked on a different situation (any situation) and share their observations. Students share with each other what they have observed about one of their situations and the others, at the end, will say whether they saw correlations or similarities across these different situations (ex: tendency by the French to be more confrontational than the Americans, perhaps - the latter tending to ask a third person to intervene).

Ask groups to share their observations with the rest of the class. If students have worked on the board, you might have the whole class draw arrows connecting certain similar reactions situations and/or concepts which seem to appear often.

Encourage students to make connections with what they might have observed while working on the first two questionnaires. Do they see some correlations? Contradictions? Have students share their findings.

At the end of the class, tell students to post observations on the forums. These can be based on their individual observations as well as on group or class observations.

2. Systematic work on language. (The following example is based upon the Fall 99 answers to the sentence "un bon voisin/a good neighbor".)

Vocabulary

Ask students to say aloud words they don't understand (ex: "dépanner") and see if another student can provide the answer (either a translation or an explanation in French, depending on the level of your students and/or your own wishes). Have the whole class provide other contexts for that word (qui peut-on dépanner? dans quelles circonstances? etc...)

Ask students to try and provide the French translation of: to help; to ask; to smile, etc..; the equivalent of : "to watch over" : garder..? s'occuper de..? surveiller..? Ask: 'que peut-on demander &agrav; des voisins de "garder", de "surveiller", de "s'occuper"? etc...

Grammar

Option 1: work on verbs (one possibility among others). You can ask students - in groups - to: - make a list of all the verbs and provide the infinitive form - organize the verbs by type of endings: verbs ending in --er (dépanner; discuter; garder; proposer, prêter etc..); verbs ending in -- ir (prévenir; accueillir); - ask them if they are regular or irregular verbs (if students have their dictionary in class, have them check) - choose some verbs and have students conjugate (in one or several tenses). ex: dire; permettre; rendre, pouvoir, savoir, etc... - pick out pronominal verbs (ex: "se rendre"; "s'entendre"

Option 2: work on the pronouns (there are likely many of them: Ex: je le lui dis; je lui fais remarquer; je leur parle; je les écoute, etc.. o If there are spelling or grammar mistakes made by the French, tell them to look for them (ex: de bonne relations)