Partner Article
French university launches comedy videos to teach English
Université Paris-Saclay has created a web-series of humorous sketches for learning English called “Crazy Grammar”.
Each episode illustrates typical mistakes made by non-native English speakers by using humour in a situation such as a date or a job interview. They demonstrate that a tiny error in tense, structure, expression, or pronunciation can have unexpected, embarrassing or even disastrous consequences.
In the short videos, Krishna Bagadiya, a comedian, film-maker and English teacher, aims to marry humour with grammar à la Monty Python.
“When the mouth is open for laughter, it’s easier to stuff in some grammar,” he says. Each video has an option to activate subtitles and is designed to improve communication skills.
Université Paris-Saclay places a high priority on language learning, multilingualism and interculturality. The videos are part of a set of learning resources for languages, 14 of which are taught on the insitution’s various campuses.
The first video, called “The Candidate”, follows a job interview where the accent becomes the focus, rather than the candidate’s skills.
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Université Paris-Saclay .
Building a more diverse construction sector
The value of using data like a Premier League club
Raising the bar to boost North East growth
Navigating the messy middle of business growth
We must make it easier to hire young people
Why community-based care is key to NHS' future
Culture, confidence and creativity in the North East
Putting in the groundwork to boost skills
£100,000 milestone drives forward STEM work
Restoring confidence for the economic road ahead
Ready to scale? Buy-and-build offers opportunity
When will our regional economy grow?