Getting the Buggers into Languages (Getting the Buggers)
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Average customer review:Product Description
The fully updated new edition of this practical guide provides teachers with a range of innovative strategies for motivating pupils of all ages in modern foreign languages. Containing new material for primary teachers, as well as more teaching tips, additional lesson ideas, and an extended directory, Amanda Barton shows how learning a language can be fun. Brimming with useful tips and inspirational advice on every aspect of modern language teaching, this book will prove essential reading for every modern language teacher.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #165463 in Books
- Published on: 2006-04-06
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 192 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Amanda Barton is Lecturer in Education and Director of PGCE Modern Foreign Languages at the University of Manchester. She regularly runs in-service training workshops for modern language teachers.
Customer Reviews
How to motivate students to communicate in another language
From the phenomenal success of Sue Cowley's "Getting the Buggers to Behave" book evolved a whole series of books on the same subject - many written by Cowley herself, but more recently other authors have been commissioned to share their expertise in the same light-hearted, easy-to-read style, too. This particular volume has been written by a lecturere and teacher educator who clearly has a lot of advice and experience to share. Many of her strategies are so well-known that they are probably already employed by most language teachers, but I found a few new ideas which will be very useful. I also liked the particular emphasis on getting boys to read and write in another language. I did miss the children's quotes and actual examples that are so prevalent in the other "Buggers" books and was disappointed that many general comments such as "boys seem to encounter..." were not backed up by either some research or an actual classroom quote. It would have also been useful to have some chapters dedicated to classical languages such as Greek and Latin - but maybe the publishers, Continuum, are saving this for an additional book? On the whole, a useful and pleasant book to read - but most likely one you would only read once!



