Description
ABOUT THIS COURSE
This course is specifically targeted and designed for all teachers new to teaching Pearson A-Level French. The sessions are designed to ensure their students have the best opportunity to maximise their potential grades and improve teachers’ understanding of the Pearson A-Level.
Teachers will receive new teaching approaches and techniques, ideas, as well as key guidance in how to develop with advice on the standards of A-Level and best ways to prepare students with the exam as the endgame. Practical strategies will be demonstrated for teaching across a broad range of student A-Level abilities.
BENEFITS OF ATTENDING
- Gain top teaching tips and realistic practical advice from an experienced practitioner
- Take away effective strategies on how to teach the course to maximise student potential
- Find out about the core concepts, key challenges, levels of the specification and ways to structure your course for successful end result outcomes
- Examine lots of ideas to stimulate classroom delivery and performance
- Discuss examples of student work and how to prepare students to get the maximise possible marks
PROGRAMME
Subject content of the specification
10.00am
- What’s involved in the Pearson A-Level French course? (Listening/Reading/Translation/Writing/Speaking)
- Where can I streamline?
- What are the standards in each component?
- Exploring the key challenge spots, and ways to structure your teaching to give time to the most demanding sections
- Paper 1: Listening, reading and translation
- Paper 2: Written response to works and translation
- Paper 3: Speaking
Break
10.40am
Paper 1: Teaching approaches to Listening, reading and translation
11.00am
- Practical strategies to layer the learning of subject content linking to assessment of listening and reading
- Ways to develop the skills students need to demonstrate for Section A: Listening
- What might excellent teaching of Section B: Reading look like to develop students’ open-response skills?
- Strategies to support students using unseen French texts, and ensuring accuracy in language, avoiding translation errors into English
Lunch
12.00pm
Assessing pupils’ readiness for Paper 1
1.00pm
- How do I know when a student has reached the top of the assessment bands?
- Teaching lower and higher ability students to ensure success
- Gain understanding of the ways and means that students may listen and respond and how to plan for this
- Effective methods to assess progress and attainment in reading and listening
Break
2.00pm
Tackling Paper 2: Written response to works and translation
2.15pm
- Why is the written paper challenging for many students?
- Types of examination questions – what to expect and how to achieve good marks
- Looking at the prescribed literary texts and films, focusing on justifying points of view
- Differentiated approaches to encourage learning and using critical and analytical skills for the written response and translation
Teaching Paper 3: The Speaking Paper
2.45pm
- How to approach the teaching of the discussion: effective, strategies, methods and techniques for each of the four themes
- Teaching ideas with associated questions and resources for the independent research presentation
- Making complicated topic areas easy.
- What are the key points for examination success in the discussion on independent research?
Depart
3.45pm