The course offers: -an activity-based approach through active engagement in every day classroom tasks -motivating activities, aimed at engaging the pupils' natural enthusiasms and interests -songs, classroom games and craft activities in every unit -additional support including cut-outs such as diaries, questionnaires, maps and quizzes for each unit which are then used for speaking activities
Added by: decabristka | Karma: 68075.20 | Coursebooks, YLE | 20 March 2021
13
The course offers: -an activity-based approach through active engagement in every day classroom tasks -motivating activities, aimed at engaging the pupils' natural enthusiasms and interests -songs, classroom games and craft activities in every unit -additional support including cut-outs such as diaries, questionnaires, maps and quizzes for each unit which are then used for speaking activities
From 1942 until 1944, Anne Frank and her family lived secretly in a few small rooms at the back of her father's office in Amsterdam, never leaving the building. Like many other Jewish families at that time, they were hiding from Hitler's Nazis. While she was in hiding, Anne wrote diaries which described her secret life, and the loves, hopes, fears and dreams of a teenage girl in extraordinary times
Languages and the First World War: Representation and Memory
This book examines issues around the representation and memory of the First World War. With contributions from international academics, the chapters cover a wide range of the historiographical aspects of war including the nature of representing the war in letters and diaries; the documentation of language change; the language of representing the war in reportage and literature; and the language of remembering the war.
The Nanny Diaries is an absolutely addictive peek into the utterly weird world of child rearing in the upper reaches of Manhattan's social strata. Cowritten by two former nannies, Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus, the novel follows the adventures of the aptly named Nan as she negotiates the Byzantine byways of working for Mrs. X, a Park Avenue mommy. Nan's 4-year-old charge, the hilariously named Grayer (his pals include Josephina, Christabelle, Brandford, and Darwin) is a genuinely good sort. He can't help it if his mom has scheduled him for every activity known to the Upper East Side.