Saturday, February 9, 2013

Talking about Victorian London

Dear students, Now let's get into the time machine and travel back to the 19th century Victorian Britain. YOU are going to be the teachers. In groups of 3-4 people, you will choose 1 of the following topics and prepare a brief speech about it with a powerpoint. You can use any realia or props you think necessary. We'll give you more details in class.

 Topics:
 1.- Industrial Revolution
 2.- Jack the Ripper
3.- Victorian writers: Charles Dickens, the Brontë sisters and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
4.- Queen Victoria
5.- The Commonwealth / the British Empire
6.- Sherlock Holmes; the characters, the film and tv versions
7.- The Victorian society (Puritanism)

 You can bring your laptop to class...

 Your beloved teachers,

Victorian London

In 1837, Victoria became Queen at the age of 18. The time while she was Queen is called the Victorian era. London was busy with trade and industry, and it grew fast. Better lighting, plumbing and transport developed too. By the time she died in 1901, London was a very different city.

Up until the 19th century, the city was a similar size as the Roman Londinium. From 1820 the green areas around were absorved by new arrivers, workers attracted by industrialism. This growth caused problems: the first cholera epidemic broke out in 1832 and in 1858 the Thames was so dirty and it stank - The Great Stench- that the Parliament had to close! The new sewer and river drain system by Joseph Bazalgette (1875) solved the problem.

Railways were built linking much of Britain to the capital. London was the centre of the world trade and had a large powerful empire.

Many of the buildings in London today were built in Victorian times. The most famous is probably the Houses of Parliament, built after a fire destroyed the original buildings.

Electric light was first used in Holborn in 1883. By the 1840's there were also horse drawn buses and from the 1870's horse drawn trams.

The World first underground railway ("The Tube") opened in 1862. At first carriages were pulled by steam trains. The system was electrified in 1890-1905.

A Christmas tradition started in this era still continues: the Pantomime.

Sites from this times:
- Train stations
- The Kensington Museum
- The Royal Albert Hall
- The Leighton House
- The Victoria and Albert Museum
- The London Transport Museum

London, back in time

From now on, with the new book, we'll go back to Victorian London, the time of Sherlock Holmes




Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Evaluating your productions

Here you can see what we will watch and evaluate...

Evaluation sheet on blog productions.pdf by Ogroprofe

Sound script

This will also help you...

Sound script by

Technical Script

You will need to plan your technical script for a professional production...

Technical script by

Explaining vocabulary on Filming

You can start thinking what you want your productions to look like...

Film terminology by