Monday 29 June 2015

Wednesday 13th May 2015. One of our Europe Day activities: Express EUself!

Not too stressed...

First round preparation...


Benoit, Camille & Juliette

Louis, Brooke & Lisa

Edouard, Paul & Joachim

Jean-Baptiste, Thibaud & Antoine
playing it by the rules...


Happy...

Helping the 'Secondes' team
prepare for the final round!

Heated discussion!

Camille & Benoit

Claire, Edouard & Paul

Celia, Blandine & Aurélie:
the brilliant runners-up!

Louis

Louis, again

Lisa

Lisa, Brooke & Louis:
the winning team!

Gabriele making up his mind...

The splendid judges:
Gabriele & Julien!

What is Express EUself?

It's a fun public speaking competition on European Union issues. It's an activity best done outdoors in front of a standing crowd. The crowd is encouraged to heckle and cheer in the spirit of Speaker’s Corner in London’s Hyde Park!

Teams of three speakers compete in three rounds. There can be as many teams as you like.

First round: the teams are given a topic by the judges. The teams have just 20 minutes to prepare their speeches (they are allowed all the help they can get: dictionary, cellphone, friends, teachers, parents, supercomputer, list of quotes and facts & figures given by the judges, etc.!). Then, each team, one after another, gets to address the crowd. Each person in a team gets to speak just 60 seconds (no more!) on the topic, standing on a soapbox or a bench.

The second round follows the same formula as the first round. Four teams compete against each other (though it can be more).

In the final round, there are (usually) only two teams competing against each other.

There are at least two judges (the jury is sovereign but can of course be influenced by the clap-o-meter!).

The winning team gets a big prize!

The 2015 topics for Express EUself! were:
  • ROUND 1: Teachers, who needs them?!
  • ROUND 2: Immigrants, who needs them?!
  • ROUND 3: Politicians, who needs them?!

The winning teams convinced the crowd and judges that we do need teachers, we do need immigrants, but we do not really need politicians!

The organizers/judges this year were: Gabriele B. & Julien H. A HUGE thank you to them!

HUGE thank you too to the APEL parents' association for their support (Mme Carnesecchi in particular for the great photos above!).

Friday 15 May 2015

Jean-Baptiste Massillon oratory prize 2015

The Jury


Baptiste in full flight!


Camille (very stressed candidate)

Edouard, member of the organizing team and Camille

The Jury deliberating


Julien, President of the Jury, about to announce the winners...


3rd prize to Gabriele

2nd prize to Alyette and 1st prize to Leïla

The candidates, the organizing team and the Jury

Friday 8 May 2015

A letter from Arjun in Nepal



Dear sir,

I hope that you are well...

I'm very happy to hear that Massillon is going to co-operate with Grandir au Népal to help the victims of the earthquake in Nepal. We are in need of funds for the rescue and the relief of victims. Perhaps you may have already got the statistics:
  • 7,800 have died (the total death toll may rise to more than 10,000)
  • 16,000 injured
  • more than 500,000 houses destroyed.

Everyday there are at least 5 or 6 earthquakes of 4 to 5 magnitude, sometimes even 5.5. People's lives are still at risk. Many houses which have been partially destroyed are likely to collapse due to these regular earthquakes over the last 15 days.

Our action for the moment is focused on relief and rescue. I am engaged in this work right now with my friends.

I am expecting some help from my friends in France via Grandir au Népal. But up till now we haven't received anything apart from their commitment...

You can go to our website www.grandir-au-nepal.org  for further information; it has been recently updated.

With kind regards,

Arjun Bhusal

Read the important message below!

Thursday 23 April 2015

Not so dumb... Article by Léa Goigoux


On Wednesday 3rd April, Mr Dhumes, our fantastic PE teacher, was interviewed as Dum the cartoonist by Maximilien Gidon and Alyette Maréchal. It was really interesting!
Dum draws for “La Galipote”, an Auvergnat alternative newspaper that has been around for the last 35 years and is sold in more than 700 shops. It’s a bit like a local Charlie Hebdo…
When he was a child, Dum used to copy from Asterix comic books. At university, he drew for a rag that he created with friends. He wanted to share his ideas through his drawings. Cartoons are still his passion. It is very difficult to earn a living as an illustrator, hence his being a sports teacher.
Dum likes many things in cartoons like the speed in the execution of a drawing (a cartoon can be done in an hour) and the fact that we can express ourselves through cartoons.
The role of the cartoonist is also interesting because he (or she) can comment the news through drawings (satirical cartoons of politicians but also of unknown people). Dum explained that the cartoonist is often in opposition with politicians, however the cartoonist sets himself limits, consciously or unconsciously because of his education or his culture, and he has to adapt his drawings to the newspaper that publishes them.
Also, being a cartoonist requires some capacities: according to Dum, the illustrator has to be able to criticize both right-wing policies and left-wing policies. It is more interesting for him to draw about recent events so his cartoons will have more impact on people.
Dum also talked about “les 3 R” : the aim of a cartoon should be to make people laugh (Rire), react (Réagir) and think (Réfléchir). He believes that the most important, for a cartoonist, is to make people think. To achieve this goal, he needs to make people laugh and react. Nonetheless things that make people laugh are different according to their culture or their education. Laughter is a common thing but humour is different from one person to the next.
Finally, the interviewers raised the issue of the attacks on Charlie Hebdo last January in Paris. These did not have much impact on the content of Dum’s drawings because he doesn't draw about religion but it moved him for sure and he felt like drawing even more.
Satirical drawings are a French tradition and Dum believes that we should have more media education, because it is essential to make people think about what is going on in the world. Since the terrorist attack, Dum has given many talks in various schools as a cartoonist.
Dum’s latest project is a little dictionary about school life; finding readers and a publisher is quite a complicated task…

Saturday 4 April 2015

HOLIDAY ENGLISH

Calling all Massillon lycéens!

Come and practice your spoken English during the holidays! You can come for as many hours as you like (priority is given to the DNL Terminale pupils).

Monday 13 April
9:00 to 12:00 & 13:00 to 16:00

Tuesday 14 April
9:00 to 12:00 & 13:00 to 16:00

Wednesday 15 April
9:00 to 12:00

Meet in A26

 Entrance: 5, rue Bansac 

For more information, contact Mr Nettleship
(ortisbateau@gmail.com)

By the way, it's free!

Friday 6 March 2015

Crêpes for UNICEF!


For Candlemas (2 February), Benoît, Antoine, Camille, Mathilde, Célia, Morgane, other members of the Massillon UNESCO club, plus the very efficient Adrien (who is not a member of the club yet!), organized a pancake party to raise money for UNICEF.

The more than 400 delicious pancakes were served during afternoon break, with chocolate spread or jam. They were sold very quickly because everybody was really hungry!

The club raised 237€, which is impressive!

This is the first time the UNESCO club has organized an event, so well done and thank you to them (in particular the girls who spent hours and hours cooking the crêpes for free)!

This was a very good initiative to help the less fortunate children in the world.

Article by Aurélie B

Saturday 21 February 2015

Transcript of the talk given by Louis Buyssens in January (plus further thoughts): 'What Makes You Free? La pensée nous rend libre...'

As you might expect, I had already written my little babble; but then, after rage, savagery and sheer idiocy melt together, resulting in the burst of both tangible and symbolic violence we have known last week, I could not keep my speech the same. It’s not that I'm going to consume myself in emotion and lyricism, but these events certainly make any debate on “freedom” particularly and painfully sharp...

Since a theory of “natural rights” was developed during the 17th century in Britain and France, law has shouldered in western societies the role to define freedom as a set of parameters backed up by a philosophical tradition. An individual is theoretically authorized to do whatever he wants within these parameters. Some of them are universal and abstract (fundamental rights); the others are contextual and concrete (civil, commercial and penal laws). Legally speaking, rights make us free.

Nevertheless, we must bear in mind, that laws were motivated by moral principles, which are the result of a long history: legal rights come from long-running social processes and may be seen as culturally relevant only for a handful of countries. Which is to say that the boundaries for freedom may vary largely from one place to another, or from one individual to another. The right of blasphemy is one example of those culturally variable liberties.

Consequently, law is only legitimate for society as a whole if all its members agree on fundamental moral values. Sharing this values make us free, because it makes the law legitimate to enforce our own freedom, possibly by punishing the acts of others. So to say, law isn’t “self-performing”.

The reason why the killers last week felt entitled to kill, is that they believed they were legitimate to do to so in the prospect of their own moral values.

Central question we should ask ourselves is thus:

What is it that makes us share these fundamental values and views about freedom? What makes us consider law and justice legitimate?

A sense of cultural belonging to the national community we take part in is necessary : it comes mainly from education. May seem paradoxical. If you picture education as a way manipulate or determine children; it may seem contradictory with the idea of freedom. If, on the contrary, you consider –as I do-education as a tool for everyone to understand intellectual foundations to the society we live in, education is a path on which we can explore both the limits and the possibilities of freedom.

Language and ability to express one’s feelings. Alain Bentolila, a French linguist explains that social violence main cause is the impossibility to express frustration or anger. It is, so to say, purely a language problem. Not being able to tell why we feel trapped, or alone, or depressed, or having no one to tell it to, is even more important than not being able to remediate to our problems. There is one simple reason to this: problems that we are able to express may not be solved; but problems we are not able to express can’t be solved, because they can't be named. Language is thus necessary for individuals to negotiate - so to speak - with society and purge the negative impulses that could otherwise lead to violent outcomes (whether they are self-focused (such as suicide) or extroverted (such as murder)). 

If they have been able to realize through language and thought the political, social and even religious absurdity of their bloody project, and to accept this absurdity as obvious, perhaps would have the Kouachi brothers not become murderers; a week ago.

We have, though, to admit, that we are not placed in equally adequate conditions to accept social rules that are at the base of freedom. As citizens, as politically aware individuals, we must struggle to make sure that each and every one of us is able to conquer his own freedom. If prisons weren’t the best school for crime ; if school had offered better possibilities for suburbs kids to express themselves ; if some kids weren't in a state of social maladjustment ; if war against terrorism wasn't precisely a cause of terrorism throughout the globe ; perhaps the brothers would not have become murderers either.

There is a sentence I'd like to remember forever, and it is a quote by John Locke, which I love very much. “Education begins the gentleman, but reading, good company and reflection must finish him”. It is much linked to my subject of today. I believe, I feel, and most importantly, I think that the only path towards freedom is for us to be our most harsh judges. We have to produce a constant effort on ourselves to keep open eyes on the world, especially on perceptions and opinions that diverges from ours. We have to quit intellectual easiness. We have to keep ourselves informed, to read and learn and experience new things and travel; for being a gentleman, in the language of Locke, is to be free but capable to respect our neighbour’s freedom.

I insist: freedom is a right, but it is also, in a way, a skill we conquer by thinking.  I’ll give three reasons:

First, thinking allows us to understand social rules, to grab our freedom by understanding its limits. It tends to suppress most reasons that could lead us to transgress fundamental principles which makes it possible to live peacefully with each other. No point to be free if we consider ourselves entitled to kill: freedom shouldn’t lead us to jail for murder.

Second, thinking may help us to get rid our prejudices. How indeed to pretend to be free if we can’t quietly face facts, and facts only? Pre-thought representations oppose to freedom.

Third, thinking is our first tool to mutually empower others to be free, by political actions and discourse. If I'm able to make this fellow next to me understand his own prejudices, or why he shouldn't cross some limits; I'm helping him to be free. 

In a word, thinking and learning makes us free in our mind. It’s the first and necessary step to freedom in acts.

“Ma seule patrie c’est la langue française...”

Albert Camus

Louis is an alumnus of Massillon. He is in second year of Sciences Po in Paris.

Thursday 22 January 2015

HOLIDAY ENGLISH: 9 + 10 + 11 February!

Come and practice your spoken English during the holidays! It's for all Massillon "lycéens"...


Monday 9 February
9:00 to 12:00 & 13:00 to 16:00

Tuesday 10 February
9:00 to 12:00 & 13:00 to 16:00

Wednesday 11 February
9:00 to 12:00

Meet in A26

Come into Massillon via the 5, rue Bansac entrance

You can come for as many hours as you like!

Priority is given to the DNL Terminale pupils who need help with preparing their BAC conversation topics...

For more information, contact Mr Nettleship
(ortisbateau@gmail.com)

By the way, it's free!