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Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Sujet du Bac de philo

Baccalauréat, not only you have more that 3 subjects ( unlike the UK A'levels)  but you also start the whole series of exams with Philosophy....ha .. this takes me back...
From Le monde 21.06.11

16 juin 2011

go to my new blog to read the proposed corrections, Corrigés des épreuves du Bac Philo 2011

Le Web Pédagogique et ses Professeurs blogueurs vous proposent les corrigés des épreuves du bac philo 2011. Cliquez sur le sujet pour accéder directement à chaque plan détaillé.

Thursday, 16 June 2011

The Apprentice in Paris... or Lost in Translation II?

NextWednesday, 21:00 on BBC One   23 June 11. 


Ce n'est qu'hier soir que j'ai réussi à voir un épisode de la nouvelle série, et encore, j'ai raté le début. Pas le temps de faire des commentaires mais j'ai vu la bande-annonce (trailer) de l'émission de la semaine prochaine.Et surprise, ils vont à Paris. A voir leurs tentatives linguistiques, ils ont dû regretter de ne pas avoir fait leurs devoirs avec plus d'assiduité.....

Synopsis

The venue for the candidates' latest briefing is St Pancras International. With the next Eurostar about to leave, there is just time for Lord Sugar to brief and re-balance the personnel, and then it's off to Paris for half of each team. The others must stay back and choose some new British designs to sell to the French. It is a classic export task, with Lord Sugar on the lookout for proven ability to do business abroad.
While the candidates in Paris arrange sales appointments for tomorrow, the London-based groups are treated to quirky products by entrepeneurs wanting a slice of the French market. There's everything from toys to top-end bikes. It is immediately clear that some of Lord Sugar's budding business partners know very little about the French, and even less about what they will buy. To help, he sets them up with a major French retailer, but the teams must fix all the other pitches. Street-based research gets lost in translation. Candidates struggle to describe in stuttering franglais items they haven't seen, while one candidate proves fluent in French, yet hopeless at diplomacy.
When the teams regroup in Paris, the selected products look less attractive than they sounded. Squabbles ignite, but selling must begin. Paris retailers, baffled by the stumbling pitches, prove tough customers. Lord Sugar's top-end French chain store is characteristically stoney-faced.
Back in the boardroom the teams are subjected to more hard-faced stares, this time from Lord Sugar on hearing that someone decided to employ a playground game to decide who would pitch. And one team discovers it picked a winning product with some blockbusting sales figures. But the losers face an inquisition and then the verbal guillotine: "You're fired!".

Le Monde.fr : A la une