• Aucun résultat trouvé

OPTION INTERNATIONALE au BACCALAUREAT BRITANNIQUE

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "OPTION INTERNATIONALE au BACCALAUREAT BRITANNIQUE"

Copied!
46
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)
(2)

OPTION

INTERNATIONALE au BACCALAUREAT

BRITANNIQUE

(3)

La cité scolaire Maurice Ravel

- 1850 élèves et étudiants

Collège : 13 classes (380 collégiens) Lycée : 39 classes

Post-bac : 8 classes Un internat

- 160 Professeurs

- 50 agents (administratif, d’entretien…)

(4)

La cité scolaire Maurice Ravel

Pole langue de l’Est parisien:

Ø  Classe bilangue anglais/allemand

Ø  Sections européennes en allemand et en espagnol Ø  Double diplôme Bachibac et Abibac

Ø  Langue Inter Etablissement

Ø  Echanges avec Frankfurt, Aix la Chapelle…

Ø Voyages scolaires en Pologne, en Irlande…

Ø Assistants de langue

Outils multimédias : Utilisation de tablettes tactiles, TNI, labo de langue

(5)

Qu’est-ce que l’OIB

-  L’Option Internationale du Baccalauréat Britannique Ø  une filière d’excellence

Ø Une pratique de l’anglais approfondie

Ø L’intégration et l’accueil d’élèves étrangers

-  Le profil des élèves Ø Les élèves français Ø Les élèves étrangers

(6)

L’OIB au Brevet puis au Baccalauréat

-  Les épreuves du DNB

Ø  les épreuves communes Ø Un oral d’anglais

Ø Un oral d’histoire-géographie en anglais

-  Les épreuves du Baccalauréat Ø  Les séries option OIB

Ø Une épreuve écrite et orale d’anglais

Ø Une épreuve écrite et orale d’Histoire Géographie en anglais

(7)

Les études post baccalauréat

-  Des points supplémentaires dans la procédure post bac française: procédure APB

-  Une option internationalement reconnue: valorisation dans la sélection des dossiers de nombreuses écoles

-  Une entrée facilitée dans les universités anglo-saxonnes: absence des tests de langue

(8)

La classe de sixième

OIB :

Ø  4 heures d’histoire géographie (dont 2 heures en langue anglaise)

Ø  8 heures en anglais

(9)

La classe de sixième

Accompagnement éducatif :

Ø  Soutien

ü  Etudes encadrées (tous les soirs à partir de 16h) ü  Soutien en français et en maths (1heure par semaine)

Ø  Culture ü  Théâtre ü  Chorale

ü  Club lecture CDI ü  Ciné club…

Ø  Sport

ü  Association sportive

ü  Formation premiers secours…

(10)

Postuler pour la classe OIB

Ø  Non soumis à sectorisation pour Paris Ø  Cas particulier pour l’académie de Créteil Ø  Le calendrier:

§  date limite de retour du dossier d’inscription samedi 2 avril 2016

§  Envoi des convocations début avril

§  Tests (écrit/oral) du 10 au 12 mai 2016

§  Résultats d’admission: Mi-juin par le Rectorat Ø  Le dossier d’inscription

Ø  Le test

(11)

Le test d’entrée

-  Le test de connaissance écrit

Ø  Lecture et compréhension d’un texte (Questions)

Extrait de James and the giant peach:

Q1: Whose skin was taken off the tip of her nose?

Ø Sujet d’invention d’une quinzaine de ligne

Imagine a giant arrived in your street (the scene and the effects it had on the people)

- Le test de connaissance orale

Ø Entretien de motivation en anglais

(12)

Welcome to 6ème

Ø  Milestone in your life

ü  Grown up, autonomous

ü  Grown up world: work, long days Ø  New school, new life

ü  Different teachers

ü  New subjects: technology, physics

(13)

What is an

International Section?

OIB : Option International au Baccalaureat

ü  3 sections in Paris: Balzac, Camille ü  Bilingual, bicultural education Sée

OIB is NOT

ü  A European section

ü  English as a foreign language

section

(14)

Different teaching styles

French Anglo-saxon

Organised and structured Creative and free-flowing Analysis and

interpretation Exchange and communication Teacher transmits

knowledge Teacher inspires students to seek out knowledge

Disciplined Fun

Top down Bottom up

Step by step Piecemeal

A process A final destination

(15)

Who is it for?

Ø  Native English speakers

ü  Always schooled in France ü  Recently moved to France Ø  Francophone students

ü  Lived and studied abroad

ü  Highly motivated and brilliant

(16)

English Programme

Ø  8 hours a week Ø  288 hours a year

Mrs Gaynor

(17)

Objectives

- Foster a love of literature - Encourage independent reading

- Develop a wide range of writing skills - Develop speaking skills and audience awareness

- Foster an appreciation of performance art

- Consolidate bilingualism and prepare for

OIB

(18)

Core Skills in English

Ø  Reading Ø  Writing

Ø  Speaking and listening

(19)

Class readers and extracts

Ø  Novels: Matilda, War Horse,The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas

Ø  Drama: Whispers in the Graveyard, King Lear, Romeo and Juliet

Ø  Short stories: various authors

Ø  Poetry: Robert Frost, W.B. Yeats, Robert Service,

War poets

(20)

As we read we

Ø  Study character Ø  Explore setting

Ø  Look at different points of view

Ø  Focus on the language

(21)

Freeze frames after

reading

(22)

Hot Seat after Reading

(23)

After reading a novel

Ø  Have a huge test

Ø  Prepare a reading companion/study guide to show what we have learned

Ø  Write our own books in the same style (autobiography 5ème)

Ø  Mock trial: characters are put on trial and have to explain their actions

Ø  Make a film inspired by the book or story

(24)

Private Peaceful Trial

Ø 

(25)

Writing Skills

Ø  Laying the foundations: review grammar and spelling, vocabulary building

Ø  Building on the foundations: letter-writing, writing poetry and sketches, theatre reviews, book

reports, short stories in 6 words, 50 words, 1000

words, novels.. .

(26)

Example of Six Word Short Story

Cross street. Red light. Ambulance siren

.

(27)

Student Poem

Subjects

Corrections Hugely boring Oral tests

Obsessive homework

Lame

(28)

Speaking and Listening Skills

Ø  Group discussions Ø  Debates

Ø  Reading aloud in class

Ø  Presentations in class, wider audience

Ø  Drama: acting out sketches

(29)

How we work

Ø  Individually: at home or in class

Ø  Pairwork: discussing ideas and reactions with partner

Ø  Groupwork: discussion, organisation, teamwork Ø  Autonomy: organising work in advance with

minimum guidance

(30)

Individual work

Ø 

Ø 

(31)

Pairwork

(32)

History and Geography Programme

Mrs Termolle

Ø  2 hours a week

Ø  72 hours in the year

(33)

What are they expected to learn?

In History an in-depth knowledge of the past:

Examples:

History of Ireland

History of segregation in the US

(34)

What are they expected to learn?

In Geography

Human geography

Urban and rural land use

(35)

What are they expected to learn?

In Civics

The news (Cartooning for Peace) Different educational systems

Citizenship: China, European Union, USA

(36)

Methodology to develop oral and written skills

Group projects : oral presentations

(Rugby World cup = learning more about many countries)

Class discussions : learning how to debate

(37)

Grading system

General principles:

- mark positively

- A reward system on work and creativity

- students receive a mark at the end of every class

based on oral participation

(38)

Homework

Reading, learning, thinking, writing and research

(39)

Key words in OIB

Knowledge - methodology - creativity - positive thinking!

(40)

Projects

Conflict and Reconciliation:

Exploring conflict and reconciliation in South Africa with Mornay Witness talk on being a teenager in Belfast during the 1980s

Trip to Dublin and Belfast to explore the history and legacy of The Troubles

MUN: Mini United Nations

American Library led: Spelling Bee, Short Story contest

Fun projects: celebrating World Book Day, Halloween, Secret Santa, St Patrick's Day

Guest speakers: Plantu, Nicolas Lebel (detective writer), witnesses from Belfast, pupils from Camille Sée, American specialist on racism, lawyers

(41)

Outings

Ø  Theatre in English: The Incredible Time Machine, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Lessons in Crime

Ø  Shakespeare in the Park: King Lear 2015, Romeo and Juliet 2016

Ø  Museum visits: Musée de l'Armée, Language museum Ø  American Library Treasure Hunt

Ø  Life Sciences Trip to Auvergne: volcano and cheese

Ø  Overseas trips: Dublin and Belfast 2016, Oxford and Bath 2017, Auschwitz 2018, Los Angeles 2019?

(42)

Entry test

-  Written test: 10th May 2016

Ø  Lecture et compréhension d’un texte (8 – 10 Questions)

Extract from a work of children's literature: eg Dahl, Morpurgo etc Q1: Whose skin was taken off the tip of her nose?

Ø Creative writing

Imagine a giant arrived in your street (the scene and the effects it had on the people)

- Oral interview

Ø Conversation in English Ø Discussion on a short text

(43)

Is this for my child?

Ø  Does your child want to come? Is he/she motivated enough to leave friends and venture off all alone for a new adventure?

Ø  Does your child have a strong academic background?

Remember extra hours, extra homework, heavy workload Ø  Does he or she like to read?

If not torture! At least 10 books to be read

Ø  Is your child really bilingual? Reading books aimed at aged 10 and up?

Ø  Is your child ready for a commute and long days?

Ø  If so send us your completed application form before April 2nd.

(44)
(45)

Pour toute information ou question

Le site internet de l’établissement : www. Lycee-maurice-ravel.fr Le téléphone : 01 44 64 87 40

Courriel : laurent.housset@ac-paris.fr

(46)

Références

Documents relatifs

We have provided an improved provably convergent variant of the trust-region method using dynamic accuracy and have shown that, when considered in the context high performance

Eight years after the war, Beloved appears outside Sethe’s house who then adopts her and starts to believe that the young woman is her dead daughter come back to life..

The Mont Morion granite with its country-rocks of migmatitic biotite-bearing gneiss and amphibolite was thus emplaced at middle crustal levels while amphibolite facies

The systematic analysis of the vowel monophonemes, of the grammatical persons and of the adverbs of the Italian language highlights a strong tendency to isomorphism

Charles M éla , Professor Emeritus of the University of Geneva, President of the European Cultural Centre, director of the Fondation Martin Bodmer.. Angelos d elivorrias ,

Because participants with dyslexia had a significantly increased text comprehen- sion with texts having shorter words, our findings support H2.2: The presence of

( 4 ) to calculate the walker state evolution for one time step, in a square lattice with periodic boundary con- ditions. We split the lattice into two regions separated by an

This paper described the interactive installation Soffio (Breath), and Theremino, a hardware and software platform proposed for simplifying the creation of