0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
I'm asking for my daughter, so she can take it to her French class for extra credit. I was thinking apple galette.
Frankly, what kind of a French program is your daughter enrolled in?Should European s get extra credit for bringing a hotdog to class?
Nothing could be easier than ratatouille. Though tarte tatin is very easy make, too, and would be more welcomed to eat in class than ratatouille.
Huh?Language classes do this all the time in American schools. Even my French class for adults do this, each of us students are encouraged to share French recipes or food we know how to make at home.
your adult class is a credit class? Students should get college credit in a French course for cooking?? Would it not be better to do something with the language if you are going to get "extra credit" in a language class? I teach languages, but I do not do any of this sh*t. nor do my colleagues.
Let's just say that I'm not going to receive my doctorate in French taking that class. I don't get why it matters to you, Ice Cream.The recipes we exchanged in the class were in French. We learned a bunch of vocabularies when each student shared their recipes with one another. How can that be a bad thing?
My Italian professor encouraged us to have cooking get-togethers off hours to experience Italian cuisine and culture. I remember doing this. We didn't get extra credit for it perse, but it was a nice bonding experience and I remember hanging out and studying with some of my classmates, so maybe it helped that way.
Is Natasha making the recipe? I thought she was just asking for suggestions. Food is a big part of any culture and I think as extra credit it is a great idea. Nobody has to cook if they do not want to.
The OP indicates that bringing a dish of food to class (prepared by mom, it seems) yields extra credit. There are no requirements about a recipe in French. And if the recipe were in French, I am sure google translate would take care of any issues in two seconds.(1) What is the learning outcome of this activity? How are you learning a language by bringing a dish to class? (and watching dubbed movies?)(2) How does it not favor wealthier students who can afford to buy the ingredients and who have the time on their hands to cook this thing?college-level classes are quite different from non-credit adult conversation classes for personal enrichment.
I think you're way too serious to be a language teacher.
I think Ice Cream is a tenured university professor. She would have terrified me as an undergraduate.