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Mme R's French Resources

French resources for busy teachers

February 20, 2016

French music we love!

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Music in French class is so much fun! Want to find some fun, new French songs to play for your  students? Keep reading to find a playlist of French music to play in class!

I’ve been teaching for 12 years now, and I have to admit that I am not always fun. Or interesting.  Sometimes, even I am not interested in what I am doing. While I try my best, I struggle with teaching certain standards in my class. According to my curriculum, I need to teach poetry, but I HATED poetry in school. How can I help the kids appreciate something, analyze something, care about something that I can’t stand myself? MUSIC!

The first major change I made was to bring a new music into my classroom every week, no matter how busy I was or how much I felt I needed to teach certain concepts.  Because I am not a lover of Mondays, I decided to start the week with a French song.

I’ll admit that it has been very time-consuming finding the perfect song each week, and even more challenging if you teach the same students for several years in a row. That requires a LOT of songs!  See, you can’t just bring in a song just because you don’t like Mondays. You have to have the right song for the concepts you are working on, and you have to know your audience. In my case, do teenagers like what I like? I am 20+ years older than they are, so maybe not.

Here are some fun ways I like to use French music for my class:

1. Teach note-taking and culture by creating short PowerPoints about the singers.  These generally take 10-15 minutes to make by doing a quick Google search and typing up some quick facts.  It is great to help students understand the diversity of the French-speaking world.  I find that it helps my kids relate more to the countries we are studying if they can become familiar with some of the country’s people.

2.  Create a cloze activity by erasing some of the lyrics.  I like to do this when we are working on specific vocabulary or verb tenses.  There are lyrics available easily online with a quick Google search.  Just copy and paste into a document, then delete the words you want them to write in.  Super easy!

3.  Have students memorize the song to help them retain certain problematic structures.

4.  Show them the video and have them make inferences based on what they see.

5.  Create a writing prompt or discussion prompt based on the video.  This is great for upper level classes.

6.  Find a video with the lyrics and have a lip-syncing contest.  This is super fun if you have some less-shy classes, and it is a fun way to practice French if some classes are ahead of the others and you are looking for something fun to do while the others catch up.

Great French songs to get you started

For teaching vocabulary and verbs

1.  La Valise – Dorothée
This is a great song when teaching travel vocabulary, clothes, or just when you want to review a lot of nouns.  The video is silly, and my high-schoolers groan when they see it and then grudgingly admit that they like it!

2.  Jean petit qui danse
This is great for body parts.

3.  J’aime les fruits – Alain le Lait
This is great for…yep, fruits.
Alain le Lait has a ton of great videos available on Youtube for beginners!

4.  Si j’étais président – Gérard Lenorman
Great for praticing si clauses.

5.  On ira – Zaz
This is great for the futur simple.

Favorite French songs at the beginning of the year

Thees are great to set the tone for a positive year and get them excited about the music. They are good for any level, but the content is more appropriate for older kids.

Remember, the goal with beginners is not that they understand the entire song. You want them to begin to understand the cultures and appreciate the diversity of the French-speaking world.

1.  Dima – Zaho
My students have always loved this song!

2.  Ma philosophie – Amel Bent
This song has a really positive message.

3.  L’amour à la française – Les Fatals Picards
The video is too funny!

4.  Comme des enfants – Coeur de Pirate
One of my all-time favorite singers!

5.  Parce qu’on vient de loin – Corneille
Great for demonstrating the diversity of the French-speaking world.

6.   Toi plus moi – Gregoire
My kids love this song!  We use it to discuss how sometimes, when things are rough, we have to think positively and make an effort to look at the bright side of things.

7.   Tourne – Shy’m
This song is good for beginners, because it appeals to teenagers.  For more advanced learners, it is a good speaking or writing prompt.  Does modern life have to be so fast-paced?  What do you to to relax?

8. On écrit sur les murs – Kids United
This video and song is all about positivity.

9.  A nos actes manqués – M. Pokora
What could we miss out on if we don’t make the best of every moment?

10. Carmen – Stromae

I love using this one with middle school and high schoolers, because it gets them thinking about social media.

French music that I love for intermediate to advanced learners:

For writing/speaking prompts, these songs have great ideas to write about and/or discuss:

Papoutai – Stromae – My classes LOVE Stromae!

Je suis moi – Shy’m

Je veux – Zaz

Dernière danse – Indila

And last of all, some fun holiday songs for all classes!

L’halloween

La chanson des squelettes – Babelzone

Le Rock de la sorcière – Stéphy Prod

Noël

Petit Papa Noël – original by Tino Rossi, but this song has been remade a lot of times!

Vive le vent – French version of Jingle Bells

Au royaume du bonhomme hiver – French version of Winter Wonderland

For Earth Day:
Respire -Mickey 3D – This video is great and it really gets a discussion going.  There is a grown up word here, so beware!  You can use this with older kids who won’t make an issue, or simply don’t mention it.  If they are not native French speakers, they won’t understand, but if you are uncomfortable with this, I’d just avoid this song.

Aux arbres citoyens – Yannick Noah

Got any other favorite French songs? Leave them below for all to enjoy!

Want even more songs: Check out this French music playlist for secondary French class! 

Filed Under: Teaching tips, French grammar and vocabulary, French music, Middle and high school teaching Ashley 8 Comments

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Comments

  1. Sarah Busch says

    May 11, 2018 at 1:00 pm

    I like to use "Je n'ai jamais pleuré" by Jonny Hallyday to help my kids practice passé composé. I give them the verb infinitives then they write out the past participles and use that as their word bank to fill in the cloze activity.

    Reply
  2. Ashley says

    May 16, 2018 at 6:31 pm

    Thanks for sharing your list, Sarah! That's a huge bunch of new songs to explore! 😉

    Reply
  3. MmeN says

    September 10, 2020 at 1:15 pm

    Disparu- Jean Pierre Mader

    Do a cloze for PC… super easy to get an ear worm from this

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOrNslRnd44

    Reply
    • Ashley says

      September 23, 2020 at 9:52 am

      I didn’t know that song! Thanks for sharing! And the sweatshirt… students would have a lot of fun with the 80s clothes! 🙂

      Reply

Trackbacks

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    October 16, 2018 at 4:26 pm

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    […] My last list of French songs is one of my most-read posts, so I thought it would be nice to share a few more! […]

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  3. French songs for Spring | Mme R's French Resources says:
    September 25, 2019 at 12:15 pm

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