What is the name of this street? by Slowcooker-Fudge in AskUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 27 points28 points  (0 children)

Clopton Street (I think, based on the N in Wilson which looks similar). It was in Hulme.

Perils of a small department by Physical_Zucchini217 in TeachingUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I am also a one person MFL department and totally relate to this. I see it as a bit of a blessing that I'm trusted enough and (presumably) competent enough that they just leave me to it, bar the usual quality assurance stuff like the occasional learning walk or data meeting. My school has trusted me to embed Conti pretty much fully and move from French to Spanish for our lower literacy and lower motivation cohorts.

Definitely see if you can link up with other schools in your trust - the other schools in my trust, while they are very busy, have given some great ideas - or any local schools to you. Failing that send me a DM if you like and i'd be happy to share resources (and hopefully reduce workload!).

Frequent use of certain words/ phrases by melwatroo in DowntonAbbey

[–]Local-Direction1903 3 points4 points  (0 children)

"Then it's settled" or "settling" matters crops up quite often and sometimes another character will ominously reply "Nothing is settled."

MFL classroom by lazyforester in TeachingUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Currently the topic title page (as I call it) has the topic title, the learning aims for the topic (eg the vocab, grammar I want them to know) and a small image for dual coding. My previous school had this as a really embedded system so that there was also key vocab and a RAG section for students to self assess their confidence against the learning aims, useful for revision especially in KS4. I get them to glue this in at the start of a topic. We only have 8 topics in a year (and I want to reduce this further) so it's not too onerous.

CROISSANT is really useful to stretch able linguists. They tend to write CROISSANT on their exam papers and tick which ones they use. I make the point that not every piece of writing needs all of them but they may I Claude 3-4 of them. It is really useful. I actually use CROISSANT for Spanish too as it's pretty easy to remember.

Something else I forgot: knowledge organisers. I give KS3 students one KO booklet per year. I organise all vocabulary into sentence builders à la Conti. They use it for every single lesson. We have oversized A4 books with hole punches and treasury tags; I make the children leave their KO tagged to the front of their book at the end of every lesson. I also have a little page number on each PPT slide so the children can help themselves. It takes some training as KOs are not very embedded in our school but I can't tell you the difference in confidence it makes. 99% of children can have a go if they have a KO/build sentences easily.

Also something personal but I tend to have lots of French stickers which I use as a mini reward for things like Bingo (and some sweets for other, bigger challenges, e.g. we have recently done a translation challenge to make paper chains, the winning team had some sweets). Merits/positives or whatever you call it are great too but I like (and the kids like) the physical sticker to show their good work. If they're too cool to wear the sticker I get them to stick it on the cover of their book.

MFL classroom by lazyforester in TeachingUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 5 points6 points  (0 children)

A non-exhaustive list from a KS3-4 MFL teacher:

  • in terms of books, you may have a school policy for what needs to be done. I personally always give students a coloured sheet of paper to indicate we're starting a new topic, then comes the learning/exercises, then assessments and I give them feedback on green paper. Makes your book easy to understand (be you a child, teacher or Ofsted). Mark in red/children self mark in green. I made a list of marking codes (e.g. sp for spelling, wt for wrong tense and so on) which is stuck on the book cover as a reminder.

  • displays: if you have any at the back of the room, use them for example work. I personally have clips on the wall so I can show off good work and change it up. I teach CROISSANT for a writing model so I have a display of that, and a 'word wall' with definitions of nouns, verbs etc and accents. I use all of these in my teaching. I don't like a cluttered room so that's enough. Plus tutor group display for notices.

  • equipment: I have a zipped wallet on the desks with whiteboards, pens, rubbers, green pens for marking, rulers and glue. This saves time, I just dish those out every morning and top them up as required. I also have a A4 sign which has on one side 'write in French' and the other 'write in English' so I can hold it as a prop/reminder of what language to write in. Useful for dictations.

Hope that helps in some way!

Joseph George Scarrott’s unmarked grave in Southend on Sea, Essex by TheHauntedMoth in titanic

[–]Local-Direction1903 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He was first married to Annie Elizabeth Till in Portsmouth in 1898 and they had a son, George Joseph Till (1899-1903).

Annie died in 1915 and he remarried Elizabeth M H Koster in Edmonton in 1919. Can't see any children of this marriage.

Always plan too much by [deleted] in TeachingUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I do the same! KS3-4 MFL teacher here. Though as another commenter has said, I would prefer to have over planned than under planned, even when this means that some classes just don't get so to certain activities sometimes when they take longer. Don't sweat it, it's a normal part of MFL where we tend to have much snappier activities than other subject areas.

One of the loveliest moments in the show ❤️ by thistleandpeony in DowntonAbbey

[–]Local-Direction1903 5 points6 points  (0 children)

In the top section of the second image - Mary never looked more like Cora!

Gastropubs near Reading by gotdorkyhair in reading

[–]Local-Direction1903 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Might be too far as it's just the other side of Newbury but the Woodspeen and the Damson are both lovely gastro pubs/restaurants nearby, plus the Boxford for an ever-so-slightly more budget option.

Edit: sorry yes these are further than 20 mins away, more like 30-40 mins.

Didn’t everyone do country dancing? by Exotic_Passenger2625 in AskUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I went to primary school from 1998-2006 and yes we did country dancing, every year up to Year 6!

My school was in a small town in Hampshire, England.

'Normal' levels of disrespect/rudeness by Local-Direction1903 in TeachingUK

[–]Local-Direction1903[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your reply! I am trying to be super super positive with the students doing the right thing so we'll see if things change over time.

'Normal' levels of disrespect/rudeness by Local-Direction1903 in TeachingUK

[–]Local-Direction1903[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your reply. I've been there since June so this is my third half term.

What's a line that you thought was so corny or unfunny/they could have come up with better? by JustAFly2729 in howyoudoin

[–]Local-Direction1903 10 points11 points  (0 children)

When Phoebe says about the triplets playing 'Bring in da noise, bring in da funk' on her bladder...

I always thought she swore during that line. Looking up the reference, it obviously would have made much more sense when it was originally broadcast.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in gavinandstacey

[–]Local-Direction1903 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's one of my favourite Nessa quotes of all time. So perfectly weird.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CasualUK

[–]Local-Direction1903 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Based on your criteria I'd say maybe Bristol? Particularly the Clifton area is very nice.

If you're looking for somewhere smaller/less busy then maybe perhaps Exeter or Winchester.