1 / 18

The Age of Stuarts

The Age of Stuarts. A CLIL module. Pier Luigi Errani Liceo Classico Alighieri Ravenna. What is Clil.

Télécharger la présentation

The Age of Stuarts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Age of Stuarts A CLIL module Pier Luigi Errani Liceo Classico Alighieri Ravenna

  2. What is Clil • Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) involves teaching a curricular subject through the medium of a language other than that normally used. The subject can be entirely unrelated to language learning, such as history lessons. • Teachers working with CLIL are specialists in their own discipline rather than traditional language teachers. The key issue is that the learner is gaining new knowledge about the 'non-language' subject while encountering, using and learning the foreign language. The methodologies and approaches used are often linked to the subject area with the content leading the activities.

  3. Benefits of Clil CLIL's multi-faceted approach can offer a variety of benefits. It: • builds intercultural knowledge and understanding • develops intercultural communication skills • improves language competence and oral communication skills • develops multilingual interests and attitudes • provides opportunities to study content through different perspectives • allows learners more contact with the target language • does not require extra teaching hours • complements other subjects rather than competes with them • diversifies methods and forms of classroom practice • increases learners' motivation and confidence in both the language and the subject being taught

  4. This course: methodology The lesson will be divided into four moments: • introduction by the teacher • multimedia presentation, such as a movie (listening) • analysis of a text, such as an historical document or a contemporary text (reading) • exercises or production (speaking and writing)

  5. Your final task Making a video about this topic. See a very sophisticated example in a bit You must create 5-6 groups. Every group must have one person capable to use a software like Movie Maker Ending date: 10th April

  6. Timeline • You have to create a timeline where putting the dates of the events 1603 Death of Elizabeth 1689 Glorious Revolution

  7. People • Monarchs • Protectors • Others

  8. Kings and Queens The House of Stuarts – first Kings of Scotland then of Great Britain (for the first time in history)

  9. Kings and Queens • James I of England (James VI of Scotland) 1603 – 1629 : son of Mary, Queen of Scots [executed for treason by Elizabeth in 1567] • Charles I of England, Scotland & Ireland1629 – 1649, executed, son of James I • Charles II of England, Scotland & Ireland1649 – 1685, son of Charles I of England, Scotland & Ireland. In exile from 1649 to 1660, during a republican period of government known as the Commonwealth of England • James II of England and Ireland and James VII of Scotland 1685 – 1689, brother of Charles II who died with no legitimate issue. Son of Charles I. Overthrown at the Revolution of 1688 • Mary III + William III of Orange, 1689 - 1702

  10. Lord Protectors of Commonwealth • Oliver Cromwell Lord Protector of the Commonwealth 1653 - 1658 • Richard Cromwell Lord Protector of the Commonwealth 1658 - 1659

  11. Others Royalists • George Villiers,1st Duke of Buckingham • Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford • Archbishop William Laud Parliamentarians • John Pym • Thomas Fairfax

  12. Events • The wars. Revolution, Civil War, Bishops’ War,English Civil War, British Civil War, First, Second, Third… (1638-1660) • Parliament against Monarchy, Commonwealth (1653-1658), Restoration (1660), Whigs and Tories • Countries: England, Scotland, Ireland • Old and new religions: Catholics, Protestants, Puritans, Presbyterians, Witches • New social classes: gentry (lesser nobility), yeomen (farmer owner)

  13. Great Works King James, Bible (1604-1611); Literature: William Shakespeare, Macbeth (1607); John Milton, Aeropagitica (1644); Samuel Pepys ( /’pi:ps/;), Diary(1659-1669;Daniel DeFoe, A letter to dissenter (1688); Philosophy: Francis Bacon, Novum Organum (1620); Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan (1651); John Locke, The Second Treatise of Civil Government (1689); Architecture: Inigo Jones, Banqueting House (1619-1622); Christopher Wren, St. Paul’s Cathedral (1669); Music: Henry Purcell (/’pɜrsəl/ ‘), Dido and Aeneas (1688) ; Science: Isaac Newton, Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687)

  14. Typical Words Short, Long, Rump, Barebones Parliament; Cavaliers ,Roundheads, Ironsides, New Model Army; Levellers and Diggers, Putney Debates; Petition of Rights, Habeas Corpus, Bill of Rights; Commonwealth and Restoration; Ship money; Gunpowder Plot (1605); Union Flag and Union Jack (1606); God Save the King (1619); Pilgrim Fathers (1620); Great Plague (1665-1666); Great Fire of London (1666)

  15. Listening • Henry VIII – Abba, Money money

  16. Reading • ROBERT BUCHOLZ, A History of England from the Tudors to the Stuarts,2003, part III, pp.1 – 2; Lectures 27 – 31 , pp. 9 – 23 • SEAN LANG, British History for Dummies, 2008, pp.201 – 209

  17. Writing • Gunpowder plot: http://www.educationforum.co.uk/KS3_2/gunpowderplot.htm , • download the exercise • watch the video • fill the form: don’t paste images

More Related