Engage your beginner French learners with this French Greetings and Introductions Quiz, a perfect tool to review and assess basic greetings in French! Designed for students at the A1 level, this quiz is ideal for classroom use, homework, or remote learning. This resource focuses on key vocabulary and expressions related to greetings, such as "Bonjour," "Bonsoir," "Salut," and "Comment ça va?" It challenges students with multiple-choice questions, fill-in-the-blanks, and a writing prompt. What’s
Use the activities in this lesson to learn about or practice numbers. This also would tie in perfectly with a food unit and as a way to study days of the week! Have your students imagine what else the Very Hungry Caterpillar could eat because she is STILL hungry. Students will write a continuation of the story with numbers 1-20, days of the week vocab, and fruits and veggies vocab. This resource includes a lesson planning page, a vocabulary sorting Tchart activity, a collaborative poster for st
This bundle is designed to make learning French greetings fun, interactive, and meaningful for students. Whether you're teaching greetings for the first time or need engaging review materials, this resource has you covered! What's Included: Greetings slideshow and notes pageSpeaking and Listening: Information Gap Speaking and Listening Practice-Students have an exchange of information following a prompt to practice asking and responding to questions.Writing Practice: Several worksheets for stude
A fun project for your students to learn about numbers, days of the week, and fruits and veggies with the book La Chenille Qui Fait Des Trous. This packet contains a vocabulary sorting activitiy for students to complete as they read the book, a vocabulary page, a writing draft, and a collaborative poster for students to complete in groups.
A fun scavenger hunt for your students to discover some interesting facts about France. Students can research these facts and fill in the answers, then color the page. This would make a great sub plan!
A complete lesson on French greetings customs and formal/informal tone. This resource includes an Instructions for Use page with lesson plan suggestions, materials for 3 stations where students will learn about la bise, formality, and will have a chance to practice speaking. There is also a reflection page for students to complete during the lesson with questions for a warm up activity, comprehension questions, and exit ticket questions.
Engage your students in speaking and listening practice with this fun and interactive French Greetings & Introductions Information Gap Activity! Students will work in pairs to ask and answer questions in French, practicing key phrases such as "Comment tu t’appelles?", "Quel âge as-tu?", and more. Each partner will have different pieces of information and must communicate effectively in French to complete the missing gaps. Perfect for practicing introductions, greetings, alphabet, and numbers!
Help your students master French greetings and introduction phrases with this engaging Dialogue Reorder & Writing Worksheet! In this activity, students will work to unscramble a jumbled conversation, placing the lines in the correct order to form a meaningful dialogue using phrases such as "Bonjour!", "Comment tu t’appelles?". They will also write their own conversation using these key phrases.
An activity to go along with the Alain Le Lait Song "Bonjour Bonjour". Students will fill in the lyrics and answer the questions about the song. This would be a great warm-up activity or review for a greetings and introductions unit!
A fun activity with the song by Louane for beginner French students. The first page provides some background information and lyrics and the second page includes comprehension questions, key vocabulary, and a space for students to rate and review the song. This product includes a first page in color, as well.
A quick project for students to impllement French greetings vocabulary. Includes instructions for students, a draft writing page, suggestions for comments students can make on their classmates' posts, and a rubric for grading.
Students will learn how to pronounce the alphabet in French with this colorful reference page. Use this as a poster in your classroom or individual notes for students to keep in their binders.