The topic of healthy living is a popular one in syllabuses, for example the GCSE and IB Diploma. And why not? It's important, we like talking about health and food, and it's a vital issue to cover wth young people's well-being in mind. It's also an easy topic to find and generate resources on, including communicative ones. On frenchteacher.net I have a wide range of materials at various levels. Here's the list. Year 9 Health - a mosaic translation Narrow listening Narrow reading Full lesson plan A text with exercises about healthy eating Y10-11 (GCSE) An easy sentence builder Texts with exercises Lucas and Clara describe their lifestyle 10 priorities for a healthy lifestyle France's 2026 policy on eating meat Sleep How well do you sleep? - Narrow reading Protection from UV rays The risks of vaping Tattoos Stress in teenagers Alcohol and health in France French people eating less meat Healthy eating - sugar Locavores - people who like local food Eating meat a...
For over 25 years I have sung in choirs, mostly barbershop choruses and quartets. This has made me spend many, many hours memorising melodies and lyrics. I'm in that mode at the moment as our community choir in East Dulwich, Note-Orious, prepares for our 'disco extravaganza'. Yay! So what does this process of song learning have to tell us about memory and, perhaps by extension, language learning? 1. Repetition + Little and Often is best . This is in line with spacing theory from cognitive science. Hermann Ebbinghaus famously demonstrated how quickly we forget items from our short-term memory. The antidote to forgetting is to make yourself retrieve from memory, at spaced intervals, the information you first tried to remember. No one knows quite what the spacing should be, but one hypothesis is that after the first encounter with information, the intervals between retrieval should be shorter, then gradually increase over time. They call this 'expanding spacing'. I ...