This lesson contains 37 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.
Items in this lesson
Get out your laptops
Put away your phone
Put your bag on the floor
Slide 1 - Slide
The Goal of this lesson:
*to practise having a discussion
Slide 2 - Slide
Stepping Stones
p. 47
HAVE YOUR SAY!
Slide 3 - Slide
Slide 4 - Slide
Slide 5 - Slide
Slide 6 - Slide
Slide 7 - Slide
WORK
IN GROUPS OF
THREE!
Slide 8 - Slide
Get out your laptop
Put away your phone
Put your bag on the floor
Slide 9 - Slide
Mondeling
een kant kiezen bij een stelling en dit toelichten/eigen standpunt verdedigen
Leg aan een alien uit wat dit voorwerp is
solliciteren naar een baan
Slide 10 - Slide
beoordeling op:
pronunciation
grammar
fluency
idioms
preparation
Slide 11 - Slide
How was Great Britain during the early middle ages different from the Great Britain we know now?
Slide 12 - Open question
What is the migration of the people?
Slide 13 - Open question
“And if death does take me, send the hammered / Mail of my armor to Higlac, return / The inheritance I had from Hrethel, and he / From Wayland. Fate will unwind as it must!”
- 'Beowulf'.
Slide 14 - Slide
BEOWULF
Slide 15 - Slide
Beowulf
Oldest surviving poem
Slide 16 - Slide
MagisterMe >
Alquin Middle Ages >
BEOWULF (page 7 /8/9)
Slide 17 - Slide
Slide 18 - Video
What do you remember about Beowulf?
Slide 19 - Mind map
Beowulf is set in a period when Christianity had yet to become established all across Western Europe. Nevertheless, there are many references to God in the poem.
Can you suggest why this might be?
Slide 20 - Open question
At the start of the first quoted passage. Grendel is introduced as a bloodthirsty monster.
Give a number of examples from which his nature is apparent.
Slide 21 - Open question
Why do you suppose Heaney translated Beowulf in verse form?
Slide 22 - Open question
What, in your opinion, are the pros and cons of such an approach?
Slide 23 - Open question
Why do you suppose Swanton translated Beowulf in prose form?
Slide 24 - Open question
What, in your opinion, are the pros and cons of such an approach?
Slide 25 - Open question
Compare two translations. Which do you prefer and WHY?
Slide 26 - Open question
Get out your laptops
Put away your phone
Put your bag on the floor
Slide 27 - Slide
What are the common aspects of the romances?
Slide 28 - Mind map
Romances
- knight's chivalry
- aid by hero's close friend
- treacherous enemy
- rewarded with romantic love of compliant/passive woman
Slide 29 - Slide
King Arthur
Slide 30 - Mind map
Slide 31 - Video
How can the romance aspects be seen in sir Gawain's story?
Slide 32 - Open question
Can you already make out some differences based on the trailer?
Slide 33 - Slide
Slide 34 - Video
Get out your Stepping Stones
Put away your phone
Put your bag on the floor
Slide 35 - Slide
Apart from the journalists, who else contribute to the content of a newspaper?