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The Art of DC - The Dawn of Superheroes

From 31st March 2017 to 10th September 2017, Art Ludique-Le Musée presents “The Art of DC - The dawn of Superheroes”.

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Lyon, City of Crime … Fiction Literature

Now in its 13th year, Quais du Polar is the largest crime literature festival in France. It will take place from March 31 to April 2 2017 in Lyon. Founded in 2005, this festival invites many authors and filmmakers of the noir genre.

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This Time Brexit Means Brexit

It's taken the best part of a year since the British electorate voted to leave the EU. On 29 March, Prime Minister Theresa May will finally trigger Article 50 to officially start the leaving procedure.

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Robot Videos

The new robot exhibition at London's Science Museum offers several videos on this motivating subject which can lead to work on science and technology, but also on human anatomy, modals and philosophical questions about what it means to be human.

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Beauty and the Beast

In this A2-level article your students will read about the latest musical featuring the well-known characters of Beauty and the Beast. They will probably have seen the animated film on which this version is based when they were younger, but may not be familiar with the unfolding of the plot.

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Mythes et réalités : L’apprentissage des Langues

A new book sets out to find out if there is any scientific basis to some of the "universal truths" about language learning such as : "Learning early is the key to success", "You can only learn by visiting the country" or "Watching films in the language is the best way to learn."

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Ed Sheeran on Top of the World

Remember albums? Those CDs or even vinyl records from the days before music was delivered by phone or computer? Today, charts worldwide are dominated by music streamed from the likes of Spotify and Deezer and Ed Sheeran's new album 'Divide' has broken streaming records.

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April Fools Fact-checking Resources

April Fools Day is a perfect opportunity to get your pupils thinking about the "news" they see. In 2017, April Fools Day will be followed by International Fact-checking Day, a great occasion to do some media education with your classes, working on fake news.

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Beauty and the Beast Again

According to the theme song, it's a "tale as old as time" – the classic fairytale "Beauty and the Beast" returns to cinema screens in a live-action remake of the 1991 Disney animation. Emma Watson stars as a Disney princess who doesn't sit around waiting for anyone to save her.

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Chuck Berry, Rock and Roll Pioneer

Some say he invented rock and roll. He was certainly one of the first to popularise it. Chuck Berry has died, practically guitar in hand, at the age of 90.

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Red Nose Day

This A1 plus-level article will introduce your pupils to an important and fun British charity event that involves many children across the United Kingdom: Red Nose Day. This fundraising event takes place every second year. In 2017, it is on 24 March.

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Basic Income: An Idea Whose Time Has Come?

Canada pioneered an experiment on a universal basic income for all citizens in the 1970s. Now, one province, Ontario, has promised another trial. And other countries or regions are also toying with a basic income for all.

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Robots Invade London's Science Museum

Robots seem futuristic, in the realm of science-fiction. But a new exhibition at London's Science Museum traces their history back 500 years. A hundred mechanical wonders have taken over the museum.

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Red Nose Day: A Very British Tradition

On 15 March, millions of people in Britain will be “doing something funny for money”… and wearing some very strange red noses.

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American Week in Rennes

Chicago is the focus of the first ever American Week organised by the Institut franco-américain in Rennes, from 20 to 24 March.

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Detective Story on Stage Around France

San Francisco theatre company Word for Word are back for their annual French tour in March, with a performance of Edward P. Jones noir story "All Aunt Hagar's Children" in Nancy, Angers and Paris.

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Hidden Figures: Teaching with Trailers

The film Hidden Figures reveals the untold true story of a team of African-American women mathematicians, or "human computers" who helped the success of the Apollo Moon landings program in the 1960s. These videos are a great follow-up after using our B1-level article and teaching activities with your pupils.

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Time to Read: World Book Day

2 March is World Book Day, so grab a book, or bring some book-based fun into your classroom.

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From Penguins to Steampunk…

Oamaru, a town in New Zealand, is famous for its historical white stone architecture and Blue Penguin Colony. But penguins are not the only reason to stay a while in Oamaru. This town is also famous for its Steampunk Festival, its associated Guinness World Record and because it is now considered as the “Steampunk capital of the world”!

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Steampunk Video

Pupils are sure to be intrigued by the larger-than-life visuals and machines that make up the Steampunk universe. This video from the "Steampunk capital of the world" - Oamaru, New Zealand - is a great introduction.

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Teaching With Trailers: Lion

Lion is based on a true story, and these two videos work well together, showing the fiction with the trailer, and the reality, with a Public Service Announcement by star Dev Patel for donations to charities helping lost children in India, like the film's hero, Saroo. In the film , Patel (Slumdog Millionaire) plays Saroo, a young man living in Australia. He was adopted as a 6-year-old in India, after accidentally getting on a train in his isolated village and finding himself in Kolkata. Despite a happy family life, as he reaches adulthood, he becomes obsessed with looking at Google Earth satellite photos, trying to recognise his home village. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ziOLGzKq6oo The first minute of the trailer is an excellent introduction to the film's concept or "pitch". Even at A2 , pupils should be able to work out Saroo's situation in the first 20 seconds - they should be able to catch "adopted" and  "son" when Patel is drinking champagne with his two white parents (Nicole Kidman and  David Wenham). And as he starts seeing flashbacks of his childhood, again the language is very simple and the images add to comprehension, "I had a mother, a brother..." The next couple of images are in Hindi, with English text onscreen. Then 6-year-old Saroo's terror in the train is easy to understand, as is adult Saroo's, "I have to find my way back home." For A2, you could stop there, as "Based on a true story" comes on screen. From B1 , students should be able to follow the rest of the exposition by combining voiceover, dialogue, on-screen text and the images. With help, they should be able to pick out the speculative questions and statements, "It would take a lifetime to search all the stations in India,"  "What if you do find home and they're not even there?" and piece together what they infer. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dQ1LjLvLMw The makers of Lion are working with children's charities Magic Bus and Railway Children India to raise money to help the 11 million children like Saroo living on the streets in India. The campaign is called #Lionheart . This PSA featuring Dev Patel is easy enough for comprehension from A2 and makes a good factual counterpart to the "factional" version of the true story seen in the trailer.   Lion 22 February

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Media Education: Moonlight

Nominated for seven Oscars, Moonlight is a coming-of-age movie about Chiron, an African-American boy growing up in the 1980s and 1990s in a poor housing project in Miami. A short video gives a fascinating insight into how the film was made, and is perfect for working on éducation aux médias et à l'information.

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Fighting for the Right to Love

Loving tells the astonishing true story of an American couple who married in 1958 and spent the first nine years of their marriage fighting the segregationist laws that found them guilty of the crime of loving someone who was a different colour. Richard Loving and Mildred Jeter were childhood sweethearts in Virginia. When Mildred became pregnant, the couple decided to marry. But that brought them up against the state’s Racial Integrity Act 1924, which outlawed mixed couples. The Lovings married in Washington, D.C., but returned to live in Virginia, where they were rapidly prosecuted for, miscegenation – the mixing of “races”. The court, perhaps feeling the wind of civil rights change, suspended the prison sentence it imposed and pointed to an easy solution – the Lovings couldn’t live as man and wife in Virginia, but they could elsewhere. The couple returned to Washington, and had three children. But they longed to return to the rural setting and their families down South. In 1964, Mildred decided to do something about their situation. With the help of the American Civil Liberties Union, the couple appealed against their sentence, and challenged the legality of the Racial Integrity Act. In 1967, the Supreme Court, ruled it unconstitutional. Civil Rights Heroes Like many involved in the battle for civil-rights in the U.S.A., Richard and Mildred Loving were reluctant activists. They just wanted to be able to live their lives. They were quiet people, and weren’t keen to court publicity. The press quickly caught on, though to the irony of the couple’s family name: Richard and Mildred Loving were prosecuted for… loving. But their case, like many other milestones in the fight for civil rights, made a major difference for couples who came after them. This would make an excellent Mythes et héros theme, or could also fit into l’idée de progrès . The film’s French distributors have provided a teaching pack for working with the film. The trailer is relatively simple and clear, it's usable from B1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33g-ZHBQdNU These  documentary  extracts on the National Endowment for the Humanities site are an excellent companion to the film trailer. There is written explanation on-screen that is understandable from A2 . The archive footage and interviews is usable from B1 . Loving 15 February  

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Oscars 2017: NotSoWhite

The 2016 Oscars received as much publicity for the people and subjects it didn’t honour as the red-carpet dresses or the tearful speeches. The #OscarsSoWhite campaign complained that the nominations to all four top categories only featured white faces and white stories. The 2017 nominations are a radical change.

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Computers Learn from the Language of Love

Reading romance novels is a relaxing activity for millions around the world. But could it also be a way for computers and robots to become more human? Researchers at Google’s Brain division have been feeding thousands of romance novels into working an artificial intelligence (AI) system to try to encourage the system used in search and apps to understand and adapt better to real human discourse. The researchers fed 11,000 unpublished novels into the neural network, including 3000 romance and 1500 fantasy novels. It then asked the system to produce language to link two sentences taken from the books. The Romantic poets, love-lyricists and writers of Mills & Boon romances don’t have to fear for their jobs yet. The program was trying to mimic variations in human speech, so the productions tend to be repetitive variations on a theme. Sentences are required to be similar in meaning to those that precede and follow them. On the other hand, it could be interesting material for language teaching. This one reads like a grammar activity on reported speech! (The first and last lines each time are those provided by the researchers. Apparently AI systems are no more interested in punctuation than the current generation of texters!) i want to talk to you. i want to be with you. i don’t want to be with you. i don’t want to be with you. she didn’t want to be with him. This one would be great for a creative writing exercise on telling a story in minimal words – pupils could be asked to imagine what “I” said when she/he/it turned to him: there is no one else in the world. there is no one else in sight. they were the only ones who mattered. they were the only ones left. he had to be with me. she had to be with him. i had to do this. i wanted to kill him. i started to cry. i turned to him. Humans and Computers Andrew Dai, one of the Google researchers, hopes this research will lead to improvements in human/computer interaction. He said, “Hopefully with this work, and future work, it can be more conversational, or can have a more varied tone, or style, or register.” It raises the question: Could users choose the tone they are addressed in, as we choose the voice we want to hear giving directions on GPS systems? Given the popularity of Fifty Shades of Grey in retirement homes, will pensioners have flirty chats with their computers? Asked if in future humans could fall in love with computers, Andrew Dai quoted the ancient Greek myth of Pygmalion, who makes a statue of a beautiful woman and falls in love with her. “If you can fall in love with a statue, I don’t see why you couldn’t fall in love with a neural network trained on romance novels.” It’s a long way off from the scenario of the 2013 Spike Jonze film Her in which Joaquin Phoenix’s character fell in love with his AI computer (voiced by Scarlett Johannson). But science-fiction does seem to have a habit of catching up with fact a lot faster than we expect.  

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