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memovoc.com Le Prétérit (ou Past Simple) permet de parler d'évènements terminés, passés. Comment se forme-t-il ? Activité 1 : Découvrez le prétérit avec des chansons. regardez bien les verbes en jaune... Activité 2 : Vous avez remarqué que le passé de certains verbes se forme en ajoutant "ed" au verbe. Ces verbes sont réguliers. Par contre, d'autres ne semblent obéir à aucune règle, ce sont les verbes irréguliers. Activité 3 : Entraînez-vous à former le prétérit des verbes réguliers. Activité 4 : Le "ed" se prononce [t], ou [d] ou [id] selon la fin du verbe : [d] comme dans "amazed" [t] comme dans "amassed" [id] comme dans "added". L'essentiel à retenir est qu'on prononce le "e" du "ed" UNIQUEMENT quand le verbe se termine par "t", "te", "d" ou "de". Pour ceux qui veulent aller plus loin et savoir dans quels cas "ed" se prononce "d" ou "t", Yvan Baptiste a préparé toute une série d'activités très intéressantes. Activité 2 : Entraînez-vous à former des questions au prétérit.
Recursos y Materiales didácticos para profesores - Kumubox.com Five more YouTube channels to use with curious students In this post, I am sharing 5 more YouTube channels you can share with your curious students. You might find them appropriate for older and more mature teenagers as well. The only prerequisite is for both you and your students to be curious, open-minded and eager to learn new things about the world. Why do I use videos with my students? I use videos for a number of reasons. What I also often do is ask my students to watch a certain video at home and either treat is as homework (comes with some exercises) or as a way for them to prepare for the next lesson where the video’s content and language will be relevant (comes with a set of instructions and points to pay attention to). The YouTube channels below feature videos that I have already used with both adult and teenage students. #1 Sprouts Authors behind Sprouts make animated videos on education, learning, science, and creative and critical thinking. My pick: The Pygmalion effect #2 Old Time TV My pick: Good Eating Habits #3 DW Documentary
Game-Based Learning Is Changing How We Teach. Here's Why. Dan White, the co-founder and CEO of Filament Games, an educational video game developer based in Madison, WI, knows from personal experience that kids can get a lot more out of video games than entertainment, sharpened reflexes and enviable manual dexterity. Back in the '90s he was a devotee of Civilization, a game where players run an empire from the dawn of time to the Space Age. “Along that timeline you make all sorts of interesting strategic decisions about your empire,” says White. “Now I run a 40-person ‘empire’ at Filament. I have to do a lot of the same strategic thinking that I enjoyed doing in that game.” EdSurge recently caught up with White to talk about how game-based learning (GBL) can help children develop the skills that will be essential in their future jobs, and how Minecraft, specifically, has influenced classroom education and the learning game industry. EdSurge: First things first. What do these skills look like within an actual game? Absolutely.
Ready Player Me - Personal 3D Avatars for Games and VR. Loading... 100 Things You Can Do To Improve Your English - Langports Hester is the Director of Studies at our Langports Brisbane school. She has a strong passion for education and has set up her own website and blog to help her students. Her blog for this week is a list of: Have a read of the below list and we are sure you will find a lot of helpful tips to improve your English! Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. Check out Hester’s blog! Do you want to improve your English some more? Why not study in Australia! Send us an email to info@langports.com Tips For Improving Your Speaking EXTRA-ordinary English ONLY 5 Unexpected Ways that Studying English can Change Your Life Question Tags Hester is the Director of Studies at our Langports Brisbane school. Her blog for this week is a list of: Have a read of the below list and we are sure you will find a lot of helpful tips to improve your English! Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. Check out Hester’s blog! Do you want to improve your English some more? Why not study in Australia! Send us an email to info@langports.com
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