mardi 9 novembre 2010

lien baladodiffusion

http://www.ac-paris.fr/porjavascript:void(0)tail/jcms/sites_11056/baladodiffusion?onglet=onglet4&portal=sites_11377&cid=sites_11352

lundi 8 novembre 2010

Textes officiels de référence


BO spécial n°1 du 4 février 2010 : la nouvelle seconde générale et technologique
BO du 29 avril 2010 : nouveaux programmes de LV de seconde
BO du 9 septembre 2010 : nouveaux programmes de LV de première
BO du 9 septembre 2010 : programme d’enseignement spécifique de littérature étrangère en langue étrangère en cycle terminal de la série littéraire
Bulletin officiel n°27 du 8 juillet 2010 : mise en œuvre du livret personnel de compétences
BO n° 11 du 18 mars 2010 : circulaire de rentrée
BO du 26 novembre 2009 : circulaire nationale relative aux actions éducatives européennes
BO n° 21 du 27 mai 2010 : évaluation des LV au baccalauréat professionnel
Courrier 21 septembre 2009 de monsieur le recteur aux principaux relatif aux classes bi-langues

mercredi 23 juin 2010

baccalauréat technologique session 2010

sujet

ST
I-General comprehension
1) b
2) a
3) b
4) b
5) a
6) c
7) a

II-Detailed comprehension
A
1- w l.1 “I read about you in the newspaper”
2- w l.1 “new agency”
3- r l. 8 “My wife an I have two daughters”
4- w l. 9-10 “has not been seen for two months”
5- r l. 26
6- r l. 31
B 1 l 3 proud
2 l 12 took time off
3 l 16 liked to wander / strong interest in nature; l 17 knew a lot about the bush
C 1 Ernest
2 the police
3 every farmer
4 Thobiso
5 Mma Ramotswe
6 people
D 1 passed l 8
2 vanished l 9
3 make a big search l 11; search l 12; look into l 14; check l 20
4 wealthy l 26
5 enquiries l 27
E l 17 He knew a lot about the bush and he would never get into danger from stupidity
F l 23 If I were not a Christian, I would say that some evil spirit had lifted him up and carried him off.

EXPRESSION 1 – Thobiso: Hello, is there anybody home?
Dad: Yes, Thobiso! How extraordinary! So you’re alive and well! Where have you been?
Thobiso: Now look at me Dad: can’t you see how dusty my clothes are? Apart from that I have fared fairly well. I was able to find enough water so as not to die from thirst.
Dad: That does not answer my question.
Son: I can’t answer you precisely daddy. I know I was in nature. I know it can have been as far as a hundred kilometres away from here. [92 words]

2 - Detective stories do not usually appeal to me much. I must admit however that a few of them really caught my attention. I was so eager to know the end that I could hardly stop reading The Little Friend by Donna Tartt or A Secret History by the same. I do not fancy stories which begin with a disappearance or the mysterious discovery of a dead body. I do not see the point in [73 words] motivating an audience through this. I much prefer it when everything goes well and then suddenly something happens that perturbs the balance of things, and then someone comes by and solves the problem and quietness comes back again. [111 words] One can say that detective stories do fit into this pattern. I do not completely agree: they usually start with something wrong. [133 words]

mardi 22 juin 2010

bac S LV2 2010

LV2

I. Compréhension
1. a. From Lwow or more precisely Rotterdam
b. to the U.S.A.
c. for emigration
d. boat
2. a. and b. many, or more exactly, four : the narrator’s grandfather, grand aunt Sylvia, and two girls at least.
3. a. Because they could have lice. They could transmit them to the other passengers. For this reason the girls might not be allowed to embark. That’s why the grandfather was anxious. (34 words)
b. According to the grandfather he sounded a false fire alarm and the mess enticed allowed them to get on board unnoticed by the authorities. (24 words)

4. The narrator is their grandson and grand nephew.
5. When he “interviewed him about his life”. (l. 5)
6. Because it is considered by both the narrator and his grandfather (the one who tells his own story or autobiography) as the phrase that triggers the narration. It’s also the important detail that had the good consequence of helping he grandfather to get into the U.S. of A.. (44 words)
7. a. The narrator was doubtful. (last line), “impressed” (l. 12).
b. ll. 20-22 Later he played the game of just asking the question the grandfather wanted to hear and answer to.

EXPRESSION
1. Narrator: Aunt Sylvia, please tell me, is your brother my grandfather’s version of your entrance / access to the U.S. of A. true? Or would you rather say that he changed a few things, that his vision is biased, that his memory betrayed him, that he falsified facts in order to give a heroic image of himself?
Sylvia: Well grand nephew, since you are being so curious and inquisitive, I will tell you what really happened. I will give you my own version of the facts. Then you can choose between the two versions which are completely different. So here is what you need to know: the girls’ hair was long indeed yet it did not hinder anybody to enter the U. S.. Everything went smoothly as we were admitted on board and floated to the promised land. No exaggerated control of identity. All people went through the medical exams and questioning all right. Some might have been refused. We were not. It’s an ordinary immigrants’ story without incident.
2. Stories that appeal to my imagination necessarily refer to some reality. […]