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PMFL Weekly email

Bonjour! ¡Hola! This week,why not try this idea?

Use one of these songs as part of teaching colours in Spanish or French!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?reload=9&v=DsRKoZGaoEM
Spanish

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4kNeFGBAcw
French

Don’t forget to sign up for one of our 3 free CPD events this year.
Bonne chance! ¡Buena suerte!
Sam and Kay

Sam Henderson-Tucker
Subject Leader and SLE for Primary Languages
Molescroft Primary School
St Leonard’s Road
Beverley
HU17 7HF
01482 861762

Sam Henderson-Tucker
Subject Leader and SLE for Primary Languages
Molescroft Primary School
St Leonard’s Road
Beverley
HU17 7HF
01482 861762

PMFL CPD 2025 2026.pdf

PMFL ideas and CPD

Welcome back everyone! Bonjour! ¡Hola!

We hope that you have had a most wonderful summer break!

Please find attached an advert for available Primary CPD, this is all free to attend and includes a £25 Amazon voucher to put towards language resources for your school.

All three events are the same in content but offered across the year in 3 different geographical locations. We have a limit of 10 places per date.

To book onto the CPD or to see ‘Teaching in Action’,please contact Sam Henderson-Tucker

shendersontucker

Our first event takes place on Wednesday 8th October, 1pm to 4pm at Molescroft Primary School.

Finally, an idea to improve recall of words and phrases. Set up a ‘Say a sentence’ chart in your classrooms across school. Link this to current learning. When taking the register, ask children to respond with their word or phrase.
Example:
J’ai un chat.
Tengo un gato.

Keep it short and snappy!
Active regular recall helps the children to remember.

Gracias! Merci!
Sam and Kay

Sam Henderson-Tucker
Subject Leader and SLE for Primary Languages
Molescroft Primary School
St Leonard’s Road
Beverley
HU17 7HF
01482 861762

PMFL weekly email summer 2

Bonjour!

Fantastic event at Beverley Grammar School last week to celebrate the final of the Translatathon. Huge congratulations to Willerby Carr Lane who took this year’s crown as primary winners with their French team and to Molescroft with their Spanish team.

As we begin to think about next year, it’s maybe time to reflect on the place of MFL in the curriculum. The attached document poses some questions which can help frame further discussion or reflection. When you have answered the questions, consider what you would like to change – is it within your power to do so? If so, you can build these actions into your development plan for next year. If not, can you have a conversation with the person who has the power to support your desired development and share your ideas?

MFL IN PRIMARY SCHOOLS.docx

A multi language easy prepare activity for this week’s suggestion!
Draw a grid on the board – 4 or 6 squares
Ask a question using any language previously learnt and if answered correctly, the pupil’s initials are written in one of the grids
When the grid is full, the next pupil to answer correctly can choose which square they want their initials in and they then replace the previous pupil!
This then provides motivation to keep answering questions rather than sitting back once a pupil has answered one question.
You may want to set a time limit on the activity.
Reward at the end of the task with, for example, Dojo points / sweets.

We look forward to seeing some of you later this week for the subject leader meeting but au revoir for now!

Best WishesKay and Sam

Mrs Kay Ray
Mobile: 07496620712

Weekly email PERLE

Bonjour!

We hope you have had a lovely half term and look forward to seeing some of you on 12th. There are still a couple of places if anyone else would like to join us.

As you may be looking to review your SoLs I’ve got some phonics resources you may want to build in this week.

A nice summary document of common French phonics with a YouTube link from native speaker Marie Odile Guillou:

With a nice poem and worksheet to practice Sound Spelling Correspondences (SSCs) as they are now referred to in GCSE (or phoneme grapheme links). You could also use it as a model for writing.

And another more advanced document with examples which may provide you with some ‘lightbulb’ moments:

13 French vowels sound cards by MOG (two A5 format).docx

Deuxième poème sur mes petites bêtes avec photos MOGv1 080420.pdf

A4 French phonics quizzes for first poem on mini-beasts (with photos)MOG v1.pdf

FRENCH COMPLEX SOUNDS table – Imprégnation graphémique (avec exemples)MOGv2.pdf

Spanish:

Some culture and tongue twisters from Latin America – Spanish but Mexican style!

¡Trabalenguas!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHuDd4PwCa4

Have a lovely week,

Summer Term – Week 5

Morning everyone!

Thank you to all those who have booked onto our subject leader meeting on 12th June. We still have a couple of places left if anyone else would like to join us. Please email jlines@molescroftprimary.net. Remember there is no cost to attend and cover will be paid.

A no effort classroom activity this week – just some internet Tunes to brighten up the week as we almost arrive at half term!

https://bilingualkidspot.com/2021/05/15/disney-songs-in-spanish/

https://www.fluentu.com/blog/french/disney-songs-in-french-lyrics/

https://frenchly.us/best-french-versions-of-disney-songs/

Best Wishes,

Kay

Summer Term – Week 4

Attachments available until 26 Jun 2025

Dear all

If you would like some cultural ideas for the end of term, Sam put together the attached PPT of some of the things she has done with her pupils.

If you want something different for speaking and writing and encouraging independence with full sentences, Sentence generator is a lovely activity for sentence building. The Ppt I found online is a bit of a gimmick for a relatively simple idea and you may want to change the magician to someone more well known to KS2 pupils in 2025 than Paul Daniels – the Ppt is editable so lots of scope!

Best Wishes,

Kay and Sam

Click to Downloadchez le patissier.pptx
15.7 MB

Click to DownloadSentence Generator.pptx
330 KB

Click to Downloadideas from Sam.pptx
7.7 MB

Summer Term – Week 3

Good afternoon everyone,

I hope you all enjoyed the bank holiday weekend. This week’s practical idea is linked to literacy. I know many of you have seen various resources I have produced and used across the years using familiar texts and children’s books so when I came across these resources for Dear Zoo, I thought they were worth sharing as inspiration.

Thank you to those who have signed up for our subject leader afternoon on 12th June. We still have a few places left if you want to join us – please let Jenny know (jlines@molescroftprimary.net)

If you’ve not looked at our PERLE website (Perle.org.uk) in a while, we are in the process of updating it and it would be helpful to know if there is anything you would like us to include.

Cher Zoo Frenchx.pptx
dear zoo adjective word cards Spanish.pdf
Dear Zoo French text and ideas.docx
Dear Zoo Spanishx text.pdf
dear zoo writing frame Spanishx.pdf

Listening and speaking using YouTube

Stories

Choose a children’s story book in the target language, with the words written on the screen

which the children can listen to and repeat. One of my favourites in French is Va t’en Grand

Monstre Vert (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHrZ1Zq14bc).

I would ask them to listen to the story a couple of times before joining in. They could start with

just repeating the colours. Some may feel confident copying the whole sentence. They could also

make a voice recording of themselves.

You could then ask them to make a list of the colours in the book and maybe draw and label

something of that colour they can find at home. Or you could send a gap fill of the storyfor

them to complete using the video.

Another story I like is ‘Une Histoire Sombre’

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSiliJKBBoo&t=25s). The phrase ‘sombre, très sombre’ is

repeated throughout the story and is good for practising the nasal vowel ‘o’ and the rolling ‘r’.

I have to admit I have struggled to find similar in Spanish – I have learnt that capital letters are

often used for simple repetitive books, or the background has music in Spanish stories much

more than French ones and this is very distracting.

This is a nice version of The Very Hungry Caterpillar in

Spanish: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Xji5krOhTI

The Spanish is more complicated than the French in the stories above but as it is a familiar

story, children could be asked to identify and repeat the days of the week and/or the foods. They

could then draw the food and label in Spanish and even add the day of the week with the correct

food.