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!!!!!    Liens, Leçons
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National French Contest
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Austin Acceuil
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The Fall meeting takes place in Austin on Saturday, October 27, at St. Edward's University, hosted by Dr. Philippe Seminet and the School of Humanities.  We offer 4 LOTE credits with proof of attendance at four sessions to take to your school or institution. There is a full day of sessions, beginning with a breakfast offering at 9:30 a.m. and business meeting with lunch at available at a minimal cost.  We invite all other chapter members to attend.  Check our website at Central Texas Chapter of the AATF in September for the full program.

There are many benefits to becoming a member of our chapter: prompt information about exciting activities and opportunities for French teachers, reduced fees for chapter workshops and conferences, and an opportunity to get to know experienced French teachers and professors from various local institutions: from private and public primary and secondary schools to research universities. 

We are here to help make your job of teaching French language and French and Francophone culture easier, more fulfilling, and even more inspirational. We encourage you to join the Central Texas Chapter.  Please go to the AATF Membership Online link to the left, and specify the Central Texas Chapter when you sign up.

Be a friend of our Chapter Facebook page.

 

Be a friend of the AATF Facebook page

 
The results of the spring elections:
 
  • President:  Anne Cirella-Urrutia graciously accepted to extend her office until the fall when elections for President will again occur. 
  • Treasurer:  Helen Guillory, whose term will expire at the next meeting, so elections for Treasurer will occur again.
  • Historian:  Anne Cirella-Urrutsia and everyone who would like to contribute photos and copy from our meetings.
  • French Contest Administrators:  Jennie Chao and Florence Bernard-Lemoine. 
  • Vice-President Moira Jackson continues the second year of her term.
  • Secretary Esther Boateng continues the second year of her term.
 
The email contact for these members is found on the Officers page.

News from the President:  École des Loisirs, qui publie tous ses albums, présente une vidéo de  Dominique Mwankumi.  

From Phillippe Seminet, 
INTELLIGENT LIFE magazine, March/April 2012

Once a mark of the cultured, language-learning is in retreat among English speakers. It’s never too late, but where to start? Robert Lane Greene launches our latest Big Question ...

For language lovers, the facts are grim: Anglophones simply aren’t learning them any more. In Britain, despite four decades in the European Union, the number of A-levels taken in French and German has fallen by half in the past 20 years, while what was a growing trend of Spanish-learning has stalled. In America, the numbers are equally sorry. One factor behind the 9/11 attacks was the fact that the CIA lacked the Arabic-speakers who might have translated available intelligence. But ten years on, “English only” campaigns appeal more successfully to American patriotism than campaigns that try to promote language-learning, as if the most successful language in history were threatened.

Why learn a foreign language? After all, the one you already speak if you read this magazine is the world’s most useful and important language. English is not only the first language of the obvious countries, it is now the rest of the world’s second language: a Japanese tourist in Sweden or a Turk landing a plane in Spain will almost always speak English.

More . . .


From Anne Cirella-Urrutia: 

Claude Hagège: "Imposer sa langue, c'est imposer sa pensée"

Par Michel Feltin-Palas (L'Express), publié le 28/03/2012 à 11:00, mis à jour à 11:26

Faut-il s'inquiéter de la domination de la langue anglaise? Les langues nationales vont-elles disparaître? Sans chauvinisme ni ringardise, le linguiste Claude Hagège dresse un constat lucide de la situation. Rencontre. 

La Semaine de la langue française, qui vient de s'achever, n'aura pas suffi à mettre du baume au coeur deClaude Hagège. Car le constat du grand linguiste est sans appel : jamais, dans l'histoire de l'humanité, une langue n'a été "comparable en extension dans le monde à ce qu'est aujourd'hui l'anglais". Oh ! il sait bien ce que l'on va dire. Que la défense du français est un combat ranci, franchouillard, passéiste.   Suite . . .