Ideas for Technology Use in the Montréal Unit
Research:
Students may use the world wide web to research
topics they have chosen. Some websites are given in this packet, but many
more are available. Many sites provide links to others dealing with the
same topic. Choose a bibliographic format which students should use to
document sources.
Resources are also available on CD Rom. Check
your school's media center and catalogs for information on geography,
history, Canada, etc. Electronic encyclopedias provide useful data.
Desktop Publishing:
Business card or advertisement: Provide
students with examples of ads for Montréal restaurants, hotels, stores,
and museums. Students will imagine they are the proprietors of a business
in Montréal. They must design a card or advertisment with their own name
listed as propriétaire. The card or ad must have a graphic, a real street
address in Montréal, a phone number and something descriptive to lure
customers, such as "Cuisine traditionelle"; "Vue du Saint
Laurent", etc. Cards or ads are prepared on a computer. Graphics
may be from a clip art collection, downloaded from the world wide web,
or scanned.
Brochure: Students design and produce a
brochure which showcases various aspects of Montréal. A good format is
an 8-1/2 by 11 inch sheet of paper folded to make a tri-fold brochure.
The front may say, "Bienvenue à Montréal". The last panel might
say "Je me souviens!" (the Québec motto - you will see it on
license plates - the French Canadians will not forget their heritage).
The inside panels might feature sites the students find interesting. Pictures
or symbols may be downloaded from a website.
The brochure may also be used for practice of
a grammatical structure. For example, each panel might have an exclamation
starting with a form of "Quel" (Quel bel hôtel!) and a response
beginning with "ce, cet, cette, ces" (Cet hôtel est le Château
Frontenac). Practice of command forms of verbs also works well with brochures:
Visitez....! Voyez....!, etc.
Multimedia Presentation:
After returning home, the class can put together
a multimedia presentation to remember the Montréal trip. Students could
work in pairs, with each pair responsible for one "card". For
graphics, students might scan photos they have taken, postcards, brochures
or pictures downloaded from the world wide web. Students write captions
in French and record themselves reading the text. Music and other sounds
can be added.
Students will improve technology and language
skills while working on this project. Invite other classes, parents and
administrators to view this "electronic journal" which celebrates
your Visit Canada trip to Montréal!
Trip Evaluation
After your return, it is valuable to seek feedback
from your students about the trip. This can be accomplished simply by
asking them to record what they liked about the trip, some things they
learned on the trip, and how they think the trip could be improved. One
way to get students to reflect more deeply is to ask them to write on
two of the following hypothetical situations:
1. The School Board is considering a no trips"
policy in order to save money spent when substitute teachers are hired
to cover the remaining classes of the teacher on a trip. Write to the
School Board expressing your opinion of this suggestion. If you think
trips should be continued, tell how they are educational.
2. A younger student in your school is considering
going on the Canada trip next year. Write this student a letter stating
your opinion on whether it is a worthwhile trip. Give reasons.
3. Your French class has the opportunity to travel
to Paris next year. You would like to go, but need more money. Write to
your kind and wealthy uncle. Tell him how educational travel can be (you
know because you went on the Canada trip). Politely suggest that he might
be willing to help you out financially. Support your request with specifics
on what you learned in Canada and what you might learn in France.