English 31
English 31 is a not-for-profit association, based in Toulouse area, providing high-quality English education to 5- to 18-year-old bi-lingual students schooled in the French system. It is a voluntary association in France working in partnership with the Éducation Nationale and supported by its principal industrial partner, Airbus. It offers the teaching of English within the French school system to pupils who are fluent English speakers. Four to six hours of lessons a week are given by native English-speaking teachers with British teaching qualifications. The main aims are to develop reading and writing skills and an understanding of English-speaking culture.
Primary level education is offered at the École Primaire Lucie Aubrac in Colomiers. Pupils from the age of five have two and a half hours per week. Those aged six to ten have four hours weekly, working on reading and writing skills.
Secondary education is organised in partnership with the Collège and [|Lycée Victor Hugo]. Pupils at the collège have six hours a week of English literature and history in English. Pupils at the Lycée Victor Hugo prepare for the International Baccalauréat.
About
The Section Internationale organises and delivers English lessons to children whose mother tongue is English, or who have proven spoken and written fluency in the language, and who are integrated into the French school system.The broad aim is to maintain a child's proficiency in English while she or he progresses through the French educational system. The bilingual system also enables a pupil to re-integrate into an English-speaking educational system whenever necessary and at whatever level, or to continue within the French educational system up to university level.
Organisation
The Section Internationale operates in the following schools, all in Colomiers:- Nursery Paul Bert
- Primary Paul Bert
- Secondary Victor Hugo
- Secondary Lycée International
The lessons
At primary level, in the integrated programme, four hours of lessons are provided per week, incorporated into the standard French Primary timetable. In the weekly programme 2 ½ hours of English are provided per week on Wednesday afternoon. At collège level, six hours of lessons are provided per week, incorporated into the standard French collège timetable, taking place when French pupils learn English as a foreign language. At lycée level four hours of English are provided per week in Seconde and Première, incorporated into the standard French lycée timetable. This rises to six hours in Terminale if students decide to take the Option Internationale du Baccalauréat in English.French Beginners' class
For children who do not speak French, a French beginners' class exists at primary school level only. This is known as the CLIN. The class is run by the local education authority and was established at Paul Bert at the request of the British Section. It is the only class of its kind in the area. Newly arrived non-French-speaking pupils are placed in a normal class according to age, but are withdrawn from their class at moments during the week to attend lessons in the CLIN. The number of hours spent in the CLIN will depend upon the age and linguistic ability of the child. The process of integration follows a two-year programme.Schools
Lycée Victor Hugo
The lycèe Victor Hugo, a state Lycée Polyvalent International opened in September 1984 and serves the community of Colomiers, a town of 34,000 inhabitants on the western edge of Toulouse. The school has a total of 2,000 pupils from the ages of fifteen to eighteen.Among the pupils are English, American and German children whose parents work in the area. Many English-speaking parents are employed by Airbus; others work for local companies such as Honeywell, Thales, Alcatel and Siemens.
The German pupils attend their own school within the lycée, having all lessons in their mother tongue and eventually taking the Abitur, the German university entrance examination.
The English-speaking pupils are completely integrated into the French educational system and take the French Baccalauréat. In order that they develop complete fluency in the language, English-speaking pupils have special lessons given by teachers of the Section Internationale of the lycée while their French colleagues have lessons in English as a foreign language.
Collége Victor Hugo
Housed within the Lycée building, this "Collège d'Enseignement Secondaire" teaches pupils for the first four years of their secondary education. It is a small collège, having only 200 pupils in all. It specialises in English and German teaching. Section Internationale pupils receive six hours of English tuition per week.For the rest of their programme they are taught by French teachers in classes of 27 with their French colleagues. The French, German and British teaching staff work in close co-operation, and trilingual programmes of study for all pupils also form part of the international education offered in this establishment. The programme is especially appropriate for pupils with an international bilingual background in education. At the end of the four-year cycle pupils transfer into the lycée.
The Programmes
The programme of work is similar to that of schools in England and based upon the English National Curriculum until the end of Key Stage Four. All English-speaking pupils may join the scheme however, regardless of nationality. At the age of fifteen/sixteen, pupils are entered for English GCSE which are organised by the Edexcel. These qualifications provide proof of the successful candidate's proficiency in English. In the final two years of the lycée, Section Internationale students follow the English and history/Geography programmes of the Option Internationale du Baccalauréat, which are jointly run by the Section Internationale's sponsors and Education Nationale, the French national education authority.Option Internationale Baccalauréat
Not to be confused with the Baccalauréat International, the OIB is organised by the French Education Nationale and offers formal recognition at Baccalauréat level of the bilingual competence of the pupils. The OIB examination is administered via a 1901 Association whose members are the various Sections Internationales that offer the OIB as part of their curriculum. This Association is called ASIBA.
Conditions of Entry
Entry into the "Section Internationale – Britannique" at Collège and Lycée Victor Hugo rests with the school authorities. However, pupils who are selected by the school to follow the International programme must belong to English 31. English 31's participation in the selection process is limited to an assessment of a pupil's ability to follow the programme.Applications are submitted to Victor Hugo by 14 April. To judge ability in English, all applicants are required to sit an entry test.
The test takes place in the Lycée/Collège Victor Hugo during May. The test is a two-hour test comprising a piece of extended writing and a comprehension test.
Candidates do not have to be British or native English speakers but they have to have a level of spoken and written English which will allow them to benefit from the English programme delivered by the Section. Pupils whose mother tongue is not English are tested following application to the section. If they are considered to have the level required they will be admitted to the section subject to the availability of places within the appropriate English class and to the availability of places within the appropriate French class for those candidates applying for a full-time place at Paul Bert or Victor Hugo.
Pupils are expected to make progress in English during the year. Assessment of progress is based upon results of standardised tests taken in March/April and upon the reports of the class teachers. If a pupil has not made satisfactory progress, parents will be requested to withdraw their child from the programme at the end of the school year. Weekly homework is set for the pupils and this is a compulsory part of the programme. Pupils who frequently fail to produce homework will be considered as not making satisfactory progress.
Committee 2014-2015
President: Sharon Pearman-WrightTreasurer: James Westgarth
Secretary: Anne-Laure Parmantier
Communication: Garrett Smith
Social Events: Melanie Norwood & Kerri Poirier
Special Projects: Catherine Bortolotti & Florent Robart