vendredi 17 décembre 2010

detectives....





Who do they remind you of?

Tell me what you know concerning each of them

If you need help (you are maybe too young to know about these characters)
You may try here
Or else here

You are fed up with reading already? well you can listen and watch then, but then again, you can also read
If the address above does not work, or if you have not found all you needed, you can try this website

A musical clue for the last one

A version with Peter Sellers

A hilarious stupid joke.
This is a video, from youtube, but I am too stupid. I didn't manage to embed it....

You may want (or need ) to know more...


Now you know quite a lot about famous detectives
Yu may want to turn into one yourself
Check here, read the text, try to find the clues and try to solve the mystery
Good luck

Holidays!! Let's be stupid!

samedi 11 décembre 2010

CHRITSMAS COLLEGE

To learn more about the mince pie

want to learn more about Christmas?

vendredi 10 décembre 2010

want to enter the USA?



Here is an example of the form you 'll have to fill in if your want to set foot on the Amercian soil..

Don't try to be funny, because they won't be!!

webquest and gamepages

Sherlock Holmes

FBI page for kids


  1. When did the organization begin?

  2. Who brought together the 34 investigators into a special agent force?

  3. What was the name of the organization in 1933?

  4. When did the agency become the Federal Bureau of Investigation?

  5. Do you know the name of the special wallets used to identify FBI agents?

  6. How many different wallets are there? .

  7. What is Jose's job?

  8. Can you find a definition of a law?

  9. How many violations of the law does the FBI investigate?

  10. Name the seven different categories of investigations

  11. Where do Congress meets to make laws?

  12. Find a way to identify people which is great because it never changes

  13. How many new fingerprints does the FBI get each day?

  14. Do identical twins have the same fingerprints?

  15. How many different fingerprint patterns are used to identify people?

  16. Name them:

  17. Which pattern correspond to YOUR fingerprints?

  18. If you don't have fingerprints, what can you use to identify people?

  19. Do identical twins have the same DNA?

  20. What is the name of the instrument used to measure how you react to questions?

  21. What is the other name of this machine?

  22. Who invented it?

  23. What must you do to become a Special Agent on top of having special skills, training or work experience?

  24. Where do Special Agent receive their training?

  25. How long is the training?

  26. What subjects do the future special agents study?

  27. How many times a year are they tested on their shooting skills?

  28. What happens if a special agent doesn't pass tests that check the physical skills?

  29. What techniques are important not to be hurt?

  30. Name the town where Agents practice the skills they learn in class

  31. What's Agent Wayne's job? ................................................................

  32. How many languages does he speak?

  33. Name them.

  34. What is the name of people whose job consists in studying secret messages?

  35. Have you decoded the secret message?



CIA games

samedi 27 novembre 2010

LA POSITIVE ATTITUDE

Gloomy weather outside?
Fear of Doomsday coming?
Why not look at the world in a positive way for once
Here is a positive attitude, a new trend, funemployment

vendredi 19 novembre 2010

New York, New York!!


The big apple!
the city that never sleeps!
here are two of the nicknames given to this wonderful city
Do you want to hear the song?
Here it is

If you want to learn it and sing , the lyrics are available here


Do you want to know more about it?
First a few photos from last July, when I went there with a group of 15 students
Groud zero
As you can see, they are rebuilding the area. New buildings, as well as a memorial will soon replace this site.

A nice and quiet street in Soho, famous for its art galeries and old buildings.And now, the statue of liberty. The photo was taken from the boat that leads to Liberty Island. The island is very small. You need ten minutes to walk round the island. Apart from the statue, there is nothing to see, not even a restaurant!
When we went there, the weather was really bad as you can see with the big clouds on the photo!


A photo to remember our visit of the empire state building!In fact, you have to be very patient!
You have to queue for nearly one hour, then, you enter an elevator. Not even one minute later, you are on the eightieth floor!


Two statues at the entrance of the UN headquarters.
Guess what the artists meant





To finish, a view of the Yankee stadium in the Bronx, where we went to see a baseball match.
Unfortunately, a storm broke out and the match was cancelled. The weather can so unpredictable in New York. One minute it is sunny and hot, the next it is pouring down!!


lundi 15 novembre 2010

which is which? a maze of contradictory information



global warming explained to kids

global cooling explained to kids




and so?
Are we going to freeze to death or to suffer from unprecedented heat waves?

Which do you find the more convincing?
Does it help you to make up your mind on this issue?



and the last question, but maybe the more important, do you really care?and last a link to the big chill brrrrrrr

DEATH PENALTY WHY DO WE KILL PEOPLE WHO KILL PEOPLE TO SHOW THAT KILLING PEOPLE IS WRONG?






























Listen to this interview in which a man whose parents were killed opposes death penalty

To help you understand the names given the the meaning of the interview, you may go and read this article


Can you think of arguments that you would develop to defend your position in favour or against death penalty?
Try to think of the opposite view point so as to be better able to counter your opponents.
To sum up, the arguments in favour and against death penalty in a nutshell

A recent article on the debate in Texas

vendredi 15 octobre 2010

lesson plans

The United Kingdom... learn more about each country composing it

audio docs on UK culture

want to know about the answers? here

news

strikes over pension cause chaos in France. Here
pocket money reduced because of the economic crisis. Here

mardi 12 octobre 2010

rescued chilean miners, acclaimed as heroes ??

here is the whole article from the BBC on the rescue of the first of the 33 miners who were trapped for more than two months in a mine.
you can also watch the video.

If you think it is too complicated, here is a lighter version from September 17th. A new one should be coming soon.
It is interesting in this link to listen to the audio document and then try to read the article (the same document) while paying attention to pronounciation and intonation.
It is a very good training, even for almost fluent pupils.

the end of the operation is described here
some excerpts:
No one has survived as long trapped underground.
They are in far better condition than expected.
The supervisor of the mine said 'we have done what the entire world was waiting for'
'We had strength, we had spirit, we wanted to fight, we wanted to fight for our families and that was the greatest thing.'
Mr Pinera said:
'You are not the same and the country is not the same after this. You were an inspiration. Go hug your wife and your daughter.
'The miners are not the same people who got trapped on 5August They have come out stronger and they taught us a lesson. But Chile is not the same either.
I think Chile is mmore united and stronger than ever and I think Chile today is more respected and more valued in the whole world

a whole lesson on the rescue. Here



lundi 11 octobre 2010

globalisation

a mp3 definition on what exactly globalisation means and worksheets to memorise the content, try and do them and if necessary, listen to the document once more.

a worksheet to learn new vocabulary and to give you ideas in a future debate

the text which is refered to on question 5

the forum thread about the question. There you can read about other people's arguments, but you can also give your opinion
If you're the kind of pupils who never have any ideas on such topics, it would be good to go and read what other people think, and then make up your mind.

ENJOY!!!

dimanche 10 octobre 2010

Pen friends

Ballyclare school

here is the website of your penpals's school
Go and have a look, then compare and contrast with your own school

dimanche 19 septembre 2010

vocabulaire

maternelle: Nursery school
to throw a tantrum: piquer une crise
to tear to shreds: déchirer en lambeaux

samedi 18 septembre 2010

getting old?

a BBC program on the question of ageing

ANDY WHAROL

Here is a link to a program on VOA
Special English for learning, it is really clear and well read
You can learn things, and also use the recording as an example to pratice your prononciation and reading abilities

Pigs is pigs

Entrigued?
well, have a look at this short story

lundi 13 septembre 2010

the end of the world as we know it?

To have a look at the most famous American icons
To know how to pronounce the world and its definition

To listen to the extract of a documentary trailer

A a rather pessimistic text

But you know that this is only one side of the story, not the main stream story...but A story

You are asked to think for yourself and make up your mind on various issues with at your disposal lots of contradicting information

Chosing and knowing for sure becomes difficult

the end has always interested people

here are the lyrics of the Door's famous song The End

and if you don't know it, you'd love to listen to it

You wonder what the song really means, what it is all about?
You can go and check here, some people gave their own interpretation to the lyrics

vendredi 26 mars 2010

From reconstruction to Jim Crow laws (USA 1863-1896)

Cette période marque la fin de la guerre civile aux Etats -Unis et l'abolition de l'esclavage.
C'est une période charnière car il a fallu intégrer de nouvelles données dans la construction de la nation et l'une des questions essentielles à laquelle il a fallu répondre était de savoir que faire des anciens esclaves.
Si la période débute par beaucoup d'espoir, avec une société égalitaire, cela ne durera pas et bientôt la ségrégation se met en place.

Voici une courte chronologie de la période avec les faits marquants

Chronology : the south during reconstruction


FIRST PERIOD: RECONSTRUCTION

1820 Missouri Compromise: agreement between pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions in the US Congress involving primarily the regulation of slavery in the Western territories

1861

  • restoration of the union, not emancipation generated the widest support for the war effort

  • First confiscation act: authorized confiscation of any confederate property (including slaves)

1862

  • Second confiscation Act: liberation of slaves who resided in Union-occupied territories or escaped to Union lines + land: permanent seizure by the Union

  • Law: a draftee could avoid service by producing a substitute (20 slaves)

  • September Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation

1863

  • Emancipation proclamation : all slaves free except more than 700,000 from the border states (Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland and Missouri + Tennessee + some portions of Virginia and Louisiana – states that had not seceded from the Union)

  • December 8 Proclamation for Amnesty and Reconstruction: full pardon and restoration of all rights (except the right to own slaves) to people who took an oath of future loyalty and pledged to accept the abolition of slavery + ten percent plan: when in any state the number of loyal southerners amounted to 10% of the votes cast in 1860, this minority could establish a new state government

1864

  • July the Wade-Davis bill in Louisiana: proposed to delay the start of Reconstr until a majority of a state’s white males had pledged to support the fed constit (the Ironclad Oath). Guaranteed blacks equality before the law, although not the suffrage

  • the 13th Amendment: abolition of slavery – importance given to Congress which “shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation”

1865-85 memorial movement for white southerners: to cope with the trauma of war and defeat + bereavement – to give meaning to defeat and turn the page

1865-67 Presidential Reconstruction (very lenient plan)

1865

  • March creation of the Freedmen’s Bureau (belief that the fed gvt must shoulder broad responsibility for the emancipated slaves, including offering them some kind of access to land)

  • April 9, Lee surrenders at Appomatox

  • May W. L. Garrison wanted to dissolve the American Anti-Slavery Society but it was refused so Wendel Phillips replaced him as the society’s president

  • May creation of the National Anti-Slavery Standard (now motto “No Reconstruction without Negro Suffrage”)

  • May 29, 2 proclamations by Johnson

  • Amnesty and pardon (+ restoration of property except for slaves)

  • The Black codes: a series of state laws, intended to define the freedmen’s rights and responsibilities but also an attempt to stabilize the black work force and limit its eco options. Mississippi and South Carolina enacted the first and most severe black codes (end 1865)

Ex. Mississippi required all blacks to possess, each January, written evidence of employment for the coming year + apprenticeship laws obliged black minors to work without pay for planters

  • December congress refuses to admit southern representatives and senators under Johnson’s plan

1866

  • January bill which extended the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau and authorized agents to take jurisdiction of cases involving blacks and punish state officials denying blacks the “civil rights belonging to white persons”

  • January The Civil Rights bill: all persons born in the US (except Indians) as national citizens so rights without regards to race (first attempt to give meaning to the 13th amendment, to define in legislative terms the essence of freedom)

both laws passed over Johnson’s veto

  • 14th amendment equality before the law – definition of citizenship

  • First clause: prohibited the states from abridging equality before the law

  • Second clause: reduction in a state’s representation proportional to the number of male citizens denied suffrage. Aim: prevent the south from benefiting politically from emancipation (before the war 3/5 of the slaves had been included in calculating congressional representation; now as free persons all would be counted). So choice to white southerners: enfranchise the freedmen or sacrifice representation in congress

  • Third clause: barred from national and state office men who had sworn allegiance to the Constitution and subsequently aided the Confederacy (excluded from office most of the South’s prewar political leadership)

2 pbs: it implicitly acknowledged the right of states to limit voting because of race + introduction of the word ‘male’ feminists felt betrayed

  • Southern Homestead Act passed by Congress: reserved public land in 5 southern states to be leased to people who cultivated it for 5 years (46 million acres) – repealed in 1876

  • Milligan Case: a US Supreme Court case ruled that the application of military tribunals to citizens when civilian courts are still operating is unconstitutional

  • race riots in Memphis and New Orleans - riot in New Orleans => major impact on the election

  • Republicans win three-fourths majority in congressional elections

  • Ku Klux Klan founded as a Tennessee social club

1867-77 Radical Reconstruction

1867

  • January a bill enfranchising blacks in the D.C. became law over the president’s veto

  • Habeas Corpus Act greatly expanded citizens’ ability to remove cases to federal courts

  • The Reconstruction Act established military rule but only as a temporary measure to keep the peace with the states assured a relatively quick return to the Union + enfranchisement of freedmen. A mixture of idealism and political expediency

2 amendments added by the Joint Committee:

  • Anyone disqualified from office under the 14th A could not elect or serve as constitutional convention delegates

  • The Johnson gvts were subject to modification or abolition at any time and prohibited individuals disqualified under the 14th A from holding office or voting under them

  • Efforts to impeach Johnson fail

1867-69 southern constitutional conventions: clearly embodied republicans’ commitment to equal rights and a new south but inner divisions

1868

  • Tenure of office act: authorized officials appointed with the senate’s consent to remain in office until a successor had been approved

  • Johnson impeached but not convicted. Trial before the Senate for “high crimes and misdemeanors” (contravening the Tenure of Office Act, Johnson had suspended Sec of War Stanton and replaced him by Grant). Reason: increasingly hostile relations between himself and Congress

  • Election of Grant against Seymour (governor of New York) last presidential contest to center on white supremacy. Rep campaigned on a platform of order and stability (usually party of change) and Democrats cast themselves as virtual revolutionaries (usually appealed to continuity with the past)

  • The Public Credit Act pledging to pay the national debt in gold (first statute enacted so eco more important than blacks)

  • 14th amendment ratified

  • Most southern states readmitted under congressional plan of Reconstr

  • August death of Thaddeus Stevens

1870

  • 15th amendment prohibited disenfranchisement because of race (passed in 1869, ratified in 1870).

Pbs: it said nothing about the right to hold office and it didn’t forbid literary, property and education tests (which might effectively exclude the majority of blacks, even if non-racial)

  • Remaining southern states readmitted under congressional plan of Reconstr

1870-71 congress enacted a series of Enforcement Acts to counteract terrorist violence (one protected black votes, one provided federal supervision of southern election)

1871

  • liberal Republicans and Democrats nominate Greeley for president: NY Tribune editor, hostile to free trade and indifferent to civil service reform

  • April the Ku Klux Klan Act (one of the enforcement acts): brought for the first time certain crimes committed by indivi under federal law (if states failed to act)

  • Trials of several klansmen (few found guilty but it restored order)

1872

  • Colfax massacre in Louisiana: bloodiest in the Reconstr era (50 blacks, 2 whites killed) 1873?

  • Election: Grant reelected - decline of radicalism, ascendancy of organizational politics and emergence of liberal reform

The most peaceful election of the entire reconstr period. Saw the death of radicalism as both a political movement and a coherent ideology

1873

  • the Slaughterhouse Cases (US v. Reese): the 14th amendment gave the rights passed by the federal gvt to slaves (access to ports, ability to run for federal office …) not the rights under state control (see also Cruishank 1876)

  • Financial panic brings on economic depression (because Jay Cooke and Co, a pillar of the nation’s banking establishment, collapsed)

  • the Coinage Act: Congress joined the international mvt toward a monometallic standard Deflationary effect

1874

  • congressional elections give Democrats a majority in the House (still presidency, senate and supreme court in Republican hands but gave them a vetoing power)

  • Street battles in New Orleans: the white league, the “military arm of the Democratic party,” led an insurrection against the Republican governor (Kellogs)

1875

  • the civil rights bill becomes a law: prohibited racial discrimination in facilities but it was more a broad assertion of principle than a blueprint for further coercive action by the federal gvt

  • let alone policy” Grant didn’t want to interfere in the states

  • the Specie Resumption Act (Grant administration) : Compromise legislation. Put equal value on greenbacks and golden dollars and provided for an increase in the nb of national banknotes

1876

  • US v. Cruishank: arose from the Colfax massacre. Alleging a conspiracy to deprive the victims of their civil rights. Decision: the postwar amendments empowered the fed gvt to prohibit only violations of black rights by states, the responsibility for punishing crimes by indivi remained with local and state authorities

  • The Hamburg Massacre in S Caro. Blacks against white militiamen

  • Presidential election: Tilden (Dem NY governor) v. Hayes (Rep Ohio governor) disputed

  • Anniversary of the nation’s independence. Centennial exposition in Philadelphia

SECOND PERIOD : REDEMPTION

with main actors called redeemers, bourbons or conservatives. Redeemers because idea that it was necessary for Southerners to redeem the south from the corruption and chaos of control by the scalawags / carpetbaggers / freedmen coalition

1877-92 the conservative era

1877

  • Hayes new president because of a compromise or « Wormley House Bargains » Hayes accepts to withdraw troops from the south and cease military occupation in exchange his election is acknowledged by the democrats

  • fin de l’occupation militaire du sud

  • last southern republican governments collapse

  • Great Strike: every region except New England and the Deep South

  • federal troops intervene in railroad strikes

1880 election of Garfield

1881 Garfield assassinated. Chester Arthur becomes president

1883 the Civil Rights Act is declared unconstit by the Supreme Court

1884 election of Grover Cleveland (Dem)

1885-98 celebration of the lost cause in a new context: a means to reassert white men’s power and to foster unity

1887 Interstate Commerce Act: It initiated federal regulation of railroads and created the 1st federal regulatory agency (the Interstate Commerce Commission)

1888 election of Benjamin Harrison (Rep)

1890s severe depression. Populist upheaval. Near destruction of the structure the Redeemers had erected. monetary policy became THE issue in American politics, thanks in large part to the Alliance mvt

1890

  • Second Mississippi Plan: first example of massive attempt at circumventing the 14th and 15th amendments. Several measures aimed at disenfranchising blacks

  • Lodge bill defeated in Senate: Lodge proposed a bill restoring federal control of federal elections – aimed to fight against fraud (especially in the south). Important turning point: last time congress attempted to legislate on Southern politics

  • Silver coinage bill defeated in senate thanks to an alliance west / south: the rep wanted to coin more money but the west was against it so the west made a deal with the south: you vote against the coinage bill and we vote against lodge bill

1892-96 the triumph of Democratic White Supremacists

1892

  • election of G. Cleveland again

  • peak of the populist mvt: Weaver has more than 1 million votes and 4 states

  • New Orleans general strike 1st general strike in urban history

1883 Civil Rights cases: the civil rights act of 1875 is judged unconstitutional – ended federal protection of blacks against discrimi by private persons and businesses

1894 the Democratic congress repeals much of the Enforcement Acts

1895 Cotton States and International Exhibition: Booker T. Washington y fait son célèbre discours (« the Atlanta Compromise ») où il accepte la ségrégation en disant que c’est une bonne chose et que les noirs doivent prouver leur valeur aux blancs pour que les blancs les acceptent

1896

  • Plessy v. Ferguson: institutionnalise la ségrégation “separate but equal” doctrine

  • Election : William Jennings Bryan (dem) against Mc Kinley (rep)

death of the populist party, absorbed by the democrats.

Mc Kinley wins: return to a strict two-party system + end of dem presence outside the south

1898 Supreme Court upholds Mississippi constit of 1890 in William v. Mississippi