Carol Kennelly, Assistant Head, Parkroyal Community
Primary School, Macclesfield
I had particular goals for
last year's work; I wanted a way of engaging and stimulating boys’
interest in fiction, for the children to have a focus for
cross cultural studies and on a personal note, to develop my
approach to teaching languages in a primary school.
I have no formal language training, but have
had vicarious pleasure from my own children’s exchange programmes
with pupils from Amiens. Between the exchange students and
trips to Amiens, I was beginning to feel like a part-time
Picardian. In Amiens I recalled the city’s favourite son, Jules
Verne; hard to avoid, with statues, roads, a university and a
museum dedicated to the great man and his oeuvre. The germ
of the idea broke the surface like Jules Verne’s giant squid. This
too morphed into a many armed beast, with cross-curricular
tentacles coiled around reading, writing, word and sentence work,
vocabulary, numeracy, map work, science, languages, ICT and art
(luckily a squid has ten tentacles!)
The core of the project and its primary
challenge for me was to identify appropriate texts accessible to
Key Stage 2 children. This done, I then discovered that rather than
having topics for the original target of 3 to 4 weeks,
that I had enough material for a term and beyond by the time we
started.
We began with the life and times of Jules
Verne (1828-1905). Using internet resources, we investigated the
contemporary scientific advances which so enthralled Verne and
inspired his books. What a time! The start of our modern world - if
he had been so blessed, Jules Verne’s journey through life could
have started with a trip on the first railways on George
Stephenson’s Rocket, then across on the first
transatlantic steamship Great Western and ending after the
start of the first aeroplane flights with the Wright brothers.
During his time were Charles Babbage and the first computer,
Charles Darwin’s voyages on the Beagle, the discovery of
anaesthetics and X-rays. In addition to the momentous there was the
mundane; invention of the zip fastener, and especially Thomas
Crapper and the first flush toilet, which as expected, caused great
hilarity.
Boys and girls alike were fascinated by how the
world had changed and related this to similar changes during their
parents’ and grandparents’ lifetimes. The children were fascinated
by tin baths, life without television, mobile phones and
computers!
Consideration of the life and times of Verne
created topics for further lessons almost spontaneously. Children
found the examination of scientific discoveries and the work of
engineers fascinating. Investigating how machines worked allowed
children to design their own Nautilus for undersea
exploration and provide stimulus for their own stories.
Within Verne’s books the children’s
imaginations voyaged around the world, to the centre of the Earth,
beneath the sea and to the moon. The books of Jules Verne,
however, were the birth of Science Fiction (rather than Fantasy)
and were plausible, albeit brilliant extrapolations of sound
contemporary science and engineering. These roots in reality
provide
a wealth of factual information which prompts the
reader to identify destinations, measure distance, meet new people
and discover different languages.
The books gave children opportunities to
introduce the characters in various languages including Spanish,
German and Dutch. The children listened to and read a variety of
languages but principally (in honor of Jules Verne) in French.
We noted the countries visited by Phileas Fogg
and Passpartout and the travels of Professor Otto Lidenbrock and
Axel to Iceland to commence their descent towards the centre of the
Earth. This was an opportunity for map work skills in both English
and French.
Using directions in French nord,
sud, est and ouest children navigated to
Iceland to join Hans on the brink of the volcano and their
adventure to the centre of the Earth. Continuing their journey
children needed to learn the instructions tournez
à droite, à gauche,
allez tout droit and continuez tout droit in order to
negotiate the maze and avoid the monster to win the treasure. Time
being of the essence in their various journeys (particularly for
Phileas Fogg!) it seemed appropriate that we tackled telling the
time.

Before they set off, adventurers need a kit
bag, so the children decided on the contents and researched the
names of the items in different languages. This inadvertently
generated a number of tongue twisters, but the children confirmed
the correct pronunciations on relevant language
websites.
It is estimated that Jules Verne is amongst
the top five most translated authors in the world. The
children loved researching Verne’s books and strove to identify the
many and exotic languages into which they had been
translated. This led to the children creating book covers in
a plethora of languages from Welsh to Chinese.
Throughout the children recorded their
responses to the stories in various ways including Art projects,
photographs and drama. These items and written work they
collated in their own Jules Verne book. Each child also had been
collecting ideas and materials to write their own creative
adventure story. This story was redrafted in chapters and written
up as the last item in their books.
This year our project will continue to grow
and to thrive, projecting Verne into the 21st Century.
From what we know of the Sage of the Somme, we can be sure that
given the opportunity, our Jules would have incorporated modern
computer technology and genetic engineering into his fascinating
stories. The challenge for us is to replicate just a little of
Jules Verne’s prophetic imagination into our own work.
Jules Verne le Maitre, vous nous guidez,
nous suivons.
Resources for this project can be found on the
Parkroyal Community Primary School website