Activitat

I believe I can fly

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Tema: Reading comprehension: information search

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Competència en Comunicació Lingüística

Competència personal, social i aprendre a aprendre

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Espanya > Anglés > 2n ESO > Comunicació

Enunciat

Observacions i context

 Another series of activities is proposed to deepen the knowledge of the character and to cover the different competences:  
  
- I can fly, I can talk: we propose to work with phrases that the protagonist said and summarise her philosophy of life. This can be difficult, so it is preferable to work in groups.   
  
- Knowing Amelia: Viewing of the trailer of the film Amelia, based on her life. You may want to turn on subtitles and use a slower playback speed. 
 

She was a pioneering woman, with an adventurous spirit that led her to play a leading role in some of the most important aviation milestones of her time.  
  
Among the forerunners we can mention  
  
- Raymonde Laroche (France, 1888-1919), who is cited as the first woman to fly a heavier-than-air powered aircraft in 1909.  
  
- Thérèse Peltier (France, 1873-1926), who may have flown an aircraft a year before Laroche. 

- Harriet Quimby (United States, 1875-1912), who obtained her licence in 1911 and a year later flew over the English Channel.   
  
- Ruth Law (United States, 1887-1970), the first woman to fly at night. She fought to break down stereotypes of women aviators. Her article Let Women Fly! (1917) is famous.  
  
Among her contemporaries, the following stand out  
  
- Adrienne Bolland (France, 1895-1975), who flew over the Andes in 1921.  
  
- Hélène Dutrieu (France, 1877-1961), who broke records for speed, altitude and duration, but is remembered for flying without a corset.  
  
- Marie Marvingt (France, 1875-1963), Lydia Litvyak (Russia, 1921-1943) and Mari Pepa Colomer (Spain, 1913-2004), female war aviators who served their countries.  
  
- Beryl Markham (UK, 1902-1986), who, in 1932, shortly after Amelia Earhart's flight, flew from Ireland to Canada, setting the record for crossing the Atlantic from east to west.  
  
-Amy Johnson (England, 1903-1941) pioneer of British aviation.  
  
Later  
  
- Jerrie Mock (United States, 1925-2014) made history as the first woman to fly solo around the world (1964).   
  
- Helen Richey (United States, 1909-1947), the first female commercial pilot in the United States, broke the endurance record in 1933, flying ten days in a row.   
  
- Shaesta Waiz (Afghanistan, 1987- ) who in 2017 became the youngest woman to fly solo around the world.  
  
In Spain, among others, we can name the following women  
  
- M.ª de la Salud Bernaldo de Quirós Bustillo (1898-1983), the first Spanish woman with a pilot's licence,  
  
- Margot Soriano Ansaldo (1908-1991), the second Spaniard to obtain a pilot's licence,  
  
- Irene Aguilera (c.1900- c.1960), said to be the first Spaniard to learn to fly aeroplanes.   
  
- Dolors Vives Rodón (1908-2007), a pilot in the Republican Army during the Civil War, as was Mari Pepa Colomer.  
  
- Bettina Kadner (Madrid, 1946- ), who until 1985 was the only female aviator to fly a passenger plane.    
   
  
Other American women's rights activists of those years include Mary Lou Baker (1914-1965) and Rosalyn Baxandall (1939-2015).  

Descripció

 Distinguishing types of comprehension (general meaning, essential information, main points). 

  We will work on several activities. We will start with a reading and reading comprehension exercise to find out who Amelia Earhart was.   
  
 We will try to point out on a map the last route she took with the aim of remembering or introducing names of countries and oceans in English.   
  
The aim is to work on grammar and logic and try to get the students to reflect and try to explain the meaning of the sentences.   
  

 

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