NUS · Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences · Centre for Language Studies

LAF1201 French 1 · Special Term 1

Bienvenue. An intensive introduction to French — Special Term 1, 2026.

11 May → 17 June 2026 · Mon & Wed, 1pm–4pm · AS8-04-01 · 4 credits

Welcome to LAF1201 — French 1. By the end of this six-week intensive, you'll handle everyday situations in French at the A1 level: introducing yourself, ordering food, asking for directions, and navigating the basics of French grammar with confidence. Allons-y.

Days until our first class · 11 May 2026
Mot du jour · Word of the day
Bienvenue
welcome (literally: "well come")
A still-life of French study materials A line illustration of an open textbook with a fountain pen across the pages, an espresso cup, and a sprig of lavender — items associated with learning French.

00 Pre-course preparation — three things to do this week

  1. Complete the eligibility declaration form on Canvas (mandatory before the course begins).
  2. Order your textbook and workbook — see the books section below. Allow 5 working days for delivery.
  3. Message @frenchatnus on Telegram to receive the class group invite.
Click any section heading below to expand it

01 Schedule

Classes run Monday–Wednesday, 1pm to 4pm, in AS8-04-01 (unless otherwise announced). Because of public holidays and prior professional commitments, four sessions are made up on Fridays — these are compulsory, treated as regular classes.

The four make-up Fridays: 15 May · 29 May · 5 June · 12 June · same time (1–4pm) · venue tbc.

Full schedule

DateWhereWhat
Mon 11 MayAS8-04-01Unités 0–1
Wed 13 MayAS8-04-01Unité 1
Fri 15 MaytbcUnités 1–2 · make-up
Mon 18 MayAS8-04-01Unité 2 + Quiz 1 (5%)
Tue 20 – Sun 25 MayE-learning week (5%) + Vodcast project (due 29 May, 5%)
Wed 27 MayHari Raya Haji — no class
Fri 29 MaytbcReview · Test 1 (Reading + Writing, 20%) + Listening 1 (7.5%) · Group project announced
Mon 1 JuneVesak Day — no class
Wed 3 JuneAS8-04-01Unité 3
Fri 5 JunetbcUnité 3 · make-up
Mon 8 JuneAS8-04-01Unité 4 + Quiz 2 (5%)
Wed 10 JuneAS8-04-01Unité 4
Fri 12 JunetbcReview · Group project due (5%) · make-up
Mon 15 JuneAS8-04-01Full review · Units 0–4
Wed 17 JuneAS8-04-01Test 2 (20%) + Listening 2 (10%) + Speaking (12.5%)

Orange rows = Friday make-up classes · Blue rows = assessment days · Italic rows = no class.

02 Detailed syllabus

Click any session below to see what it covers — textbook pages, communicative goals, grammar, vocabulary, phonetics, culture, missions and ateliers. Hidden by default to keep the page lean; expand whichever sessions you want to study or review.

A timeline of the 14 LAF1201 sessions A horizontal sequence of session markers across two blocks, with the first and final assessment days highlighted in red. 14 sessions · 6 weeks · Unités 0 → 4 11 May → 17 June 2026 BLOCK 1 · UNITÉS 0–2 · SESSIONS 1–7 1 Mon 11/5 2 Wed 13/5 3 Fri 15/5 4 Mon 18/5 5 Wed 20/5 e-learning 6 Mon 25/5 e-learning 7 Fri 29/5 assessment BLOCK 2 · UNITÉS 3–4 · SESSIONS 8–14 8 Wed 3/6 9 Fri 5/6 10 Mon 8/6 11 Wed 10/6 12 Fri 12/6 13 Mon 15/6 14 Wed 17/6 final Teaching session Friday make-up E-learning Assessment

All references are to L'atelier+ A1 (Didier FLE, 2022 edition) — both the livre de l'élève (textbook) and the cahier d'activités (workbook). Workbook exercises corresponding to each Situation should be completed alongside the lesson; specific page assignments will be confirmed in class.

Block 1 — Unités 0, 1 & 2 · Sessions 1–7

Session 1 Mon 11 May · Physical · 3h Unité 0 — Bienvenue ! (complete unit)

Pages: pp. 12–15 (Bienvenue ! + Suivez le guide !)

Establishes the communicative and classroom foundations for the course.

Vocabulary: Greetings and farewells (Bonjour, Bonsoir, Salut, Au revoir); formal vs. informal register (tu/vous); self-introduction (Je m'appelle…, Moi, c'est…); the French alphabet and spelling aloud; days of the week; colours (1); classroom instructions (Écoutez !, Parlez !, Lisez !, Écrivez !); numbers 0–10.

Grammar: S'appeler (present tense, 1st introduction); tu / vous distinction.

Culture: Faire la bise, se serrer la main; Paris vs. la province; la pétanque and la belote.

Session 2 Wed 13 May · Physical · 3h Unité 1 — Situations 1 & 2: Se présenter + Dire sa nationalité

Pages: pp. 16–21

Situation 1 — Se présenter et présenter quelqu'un: Introducing oneself and a third party (Il/Elle s'appelle…, Je vous présente…, Lui, c'est…); professions (1) — acteur, styliste, chef, journaliste, photographe; colours (2, extension); numbers 11–69.

Situation 2 — Dire sa nationalité: Countries and nationalities (français/française, anglais/anglaise, sénégalais/sénégalaise…); the Francophone world; names of countries with their definite articles.

Grammar: Subject and tonic pronouns (1) — je, tu, il, elle, moi, toi; être (present tense, full conjugation); s'appeler (2nd reinforcement); agreement of nationality adjectives (m./f./pl.); definite articles before country names (le, la, les, l'); negation (1) — ne… pas.

Phonetics: The stressed syllable; the alphabet (2); liaisons (1).

Culture: Francophone personalities (Omar Sy, Anne-Sophie Pic, Jean-Paul Gaultier); La Francophonie; la langue française dans le monde.

Session 3 Fri 15 May · Physical · 3h Unité 1 — Situation 3 + Mission + Ateliers: Demander et donner des informations

Pages: pp. 22–27

Situation 3 — Demander et donner des informations: Asking for and giving personal information — age, nationality, languages spoken, contact details; sensations (j'ai froid, j'ai faim, j'ai soif…); numbers 11–69 (reinforcement).

Grammar: Avoir (present tense, full conjugation); questions (1) with quel/quelle (Quel est ton prénom ? Quelle est ta nationalité ?).

Mission — Découvrir une identité: Create an imaginary Francophone identity profile (fiche d'identité).

Ateliers d'expression: (1) S'exprimer poliment — intonation, Bonjour / Merci / Je vous en prie; (2) Remplir un formulaire — completing a French registration form.

End of session: Linguistic review (Bilan linguistique) overview; DELF preparation introduction.

Session 4 Mon 18 May · Physical · 3h Unité 2 — Situations 1, 2 & 3 + Mission: On fait quoi ce week-end ?

Pages: pp. 32–41

Covers all three Situations of Unité 2 in a condensed format. Ateliers d'expression and Projet culturel are carried over to the e-learning session on Wed 20 May.

Situation 1 — Identifier des objets: Everyday objects and their gender; shapes vocabulary; indefinite articles (un, une, des).

Situation 2 — Parler de ses goûts: Likes and dislikes — leisure activities, sports, films; telling the time (Il est quelle heure ?); leisure venues; verbs of appreciation (aimer, adorer, détester); contracted articles with à and de (au, à la, aux; du, de la, des); negation (2) — ne… plus; faire (present tense).

Situation 3 — Sortir: Making plans to go out; suggesting, accepting and declining; time expressions (ce soir, ce week-end, demain); possessive adjectives (1) — mon, ma, mes, ton, ta, tes, son, sa, ses; aller and vouloir (present tense).

Mission — Identifier la sortie du week-end: Agree on a group weekend outing.

Phonetics: L'élision; un et une.

Culture: Les Français et les loisirs; des films francophones.

Session 5 Wed 20 May · E-learning Unité 2 — Ateliers d'expression + Projet culturel + Grammar consolidation

Asynchronous session. Extends and consolidates Session 4. Work independently through the following tasks.

Ateliers d'expression: (1) Souhaiter quelque chose à quelqu'un — wishes and greetings (intonation exercises, written practice); (2) Demander un programme par courriel — drafting an email to request a programme or invite someone to an outing.

Projet culturel: Research and prepare an identity profile of a Francophone film (fiche d'identité d'un film francophone) — title, director, year, country, brief synopsis.

Grammar consolidation: Self-paced exercises on indefinite and contracted articles, appreciation verbs, possessive adjectives, and the present tense of aller, vouloir, faire.

Workbook: Complete the Bilan linguistique exercises for Unité 2 (Cahier, pp. 24–25) and the DELF preparation activities (Cahier, pp. 26–27).

Session 6 Mon 25 May · E-learning Revision — Unités 0, 1 & 2 (Assessment preparation)

Asynchronous revision session, dedicated entirely to preparing for the first assessment on Fri 29 May. Covers all content from Sessions 1–5.

Grammar revision: être / avoir / s'appeler; pronoun use; adjective agreement; negation (ne… pas / ne… plus); all article types (definite, indefinite, contracted); appreciation verbs; possessive adjectives; question forms with quel.

Vocabulary revision: professions, nationalities, colours, numbers 0–69, days of the week, leisure activities, time expressions.

DELF-style practice: A short mock assessment drawn from Unités 0–2 content, covering all four skills — listening, reading, writing, and speaking (recorded oral response or written preparation for the spoken component).

Session 7 Fri 29 May · Physical · 3h FIRST ASSESSMENT — Unités 0, 1 & 2

No new content. Assessment covers all material from Sessions 1–6 (Unités 0–2).

ComponentFormat
Compréhension de l'oralListening comprehension with short-answer questions
Compréhension des écritsReading comprehension (document, form, or short text)
Production écriteWritten task: email, form, or short descriptive paragraph
Production oraleSpoken interaction or monologue (self-introduction, nationality, preferences)

Block 2 — Unités 3 & 4 + Review · Sessions 8–14

Session 8 Wed 3 June · Physical · 3h Unité 3 — Situations 1 & 2: Parler de la météo + S'informer sur une ville

Pages: pp. 46–49

Opens with a 10-minute feedback session on the first assessment — addressing common errors before introducing new content.

Situation 1 — Parler de la météo: Weather vocabulary (Il fait beau / chaud / froid, Il pleut, Il neige, Il y a du vent…); ordinal numbers (premier, deuxième, troisième…); Paris — arrondissements and city geography.

Situation 2 — S'informer sur une ville: Tourist attractions; transport options; getting information about a city.

Grammar: Prepositions before cities and countries (à Paris, en France, au Canada, aux États-Unis); questions (2) — est-ce que… ? qu'est-ce que… ?; agreement of adjectives (1) — feminine and plural forms.

Phonetics: The silent e (1) — le « e » muet.

Culture: Le Québec et la France; des lieux touristiques.

Session 9 Fri 5 June · Physical · 3h Unité 3 — Situation 3 + Mission + Ateliers: Demander et indiquer son chemin

Pages: pp. 50–55

Situation 3 — Demander et indiquer son chemin: Asking for and giving directions (Tournez à gauche / à droite, Allez tout droit, Prenez la rue…); means of transport (le métro, le bus, le vélo, à pied); prepositions of place (devant, derrière, à côté de, en face de); the pronoun y (J'y vais, On y va).

Grammar: Contracted article (3) with prepositions of place; venir and prendre (present tense).

Mission — Voyager ensemble: Plan a group city itinerary.

Ateliers d'expression: (1) Exprimer un besoin, une envie (Je voudrais…, J'ai besoin de…); (2) Écrire une e-carte postale.

Projet culturel: Create an experience booklet of your city (carnet d'expériences).

End of session: Linguistic review; DELF preparation.

Session 10 Mon 8 June · Physical · 3h Unité 4 — Situations 1 & 2: Parler de ses habitudes alimentaires + Faire ses courses

Pages: pp. 60–63

Situation 1 — Parler de ses habitudes alimentaires: Fruits and vegetables; food and drink habits; frequency adverbs (souvent, parfois, rarement, jamais, toujours) and their position in the sentence; manger and boire (present tense).

Situation 2 — Faire ses courses: Quantities and packaging (un kilo de, une bouteille de, un morceau de…); food shops (la boulangerie, la boucherie, l'épicerie, la charcuterie…); numbers 70–100.

Grammar: Partitive articles (du, de la, de l', des) in food context; expressions of quantity; frequency adverbs.

Phonetics: Du / de / deux / des distinction; the silent e (2).

Culture: Les Français et le déjeuner; l'alimentation bio.

Session 11 Wed 10 June · Physical · 3h Unité 4 — Situation 3 + Mission + Ateliers: Faire des projets

Pages: pp. 64–69

Situation 3 — Faire des projets: Making future plans (Qu'est-ce que tu vas faire ce week-end ?); demonstrative adjectives (ce, cet, cette, ces); paying and giving opinions on a restaurant; sounds [p], [b], [v].

Grammar: The near future (futur proche) — aller + infinitive: Je vais manger, Nous allons partir…

Mission — Planifier des menus: Plan a weekly menu for the group.

Ateliers d'expression: (1) Commander au restaurant; (2) Donner son appréciation sur un restaurant.

Projet culturel: Create a chef video (storyboard / script outline).

End of session: Linguistic review; DELF preparation.

Session 12 Fri 12 June · Physical · 3h Review — Unités 3 & 4 Consolidation + DELF practice

Consolidates the grammar and vocabulary of Block 2.

First half — Unité 3 review: prepositions, question forms, venir / prendre, directions, pronoun y.

Second half — Unité 4 review: partitive articles, frequency adverbs, futur proche, demonstratives, quantities.

Final 30 minutes: A DELF-style practice task drawn from Unités 3–4 content.

Session 13 Mon 15 June · Physical · 3h Full Course Review — Unités 0–4 + Final DELF mock

No new content. Three-hour structure:

Hour 1 — Unités 0–2: être / avoir / s'appeler, pronoun use, adjective agreement, negation, all article types, appreciation verbs.

Hour 2 — Unités 3–4: prepositions, question forms, futur proche, frequency adverbs, quantities.

Hour 3 — Final DELF mock: A complete DELF-style mock assessment — listening, reading, writing, and a brief spoken interaction — mirroring the format and scope of the final assessment on 17 June.

Session 14 Wed 17 June · Physical · 3h FINAL ASSESSMENT — Unités 0–4

No new content. Assessment covers all material from Sessions 1–13 (Unités 0–4).

ComponentFormat
Compréhension de l'oralListening comprehension with short-answer questions
Compréhension des écritsReading comprehension (document, form, or short text)
Production écriteWritten task: email, form, or short descriptive paragraph
Production oraleSpoken interaction or monologue (self-introduction, describing plans or preferences)

03 Textbook & workbook

You need two items: the L'atelier+ A1 textbook (livre de l'élève) and the matching workbook (cahier d'activités). Both must be the 2022 edition with the "+" sign — not the older 2019 "L'atelier" without the +.

Bottom line: Most students should use Route A — Kinokuniya (SGD 53.80 total, 5-day delivery): cheaper, books arrive before our first class, NUS partnership. Use Route B — Didier digital (≈ SGD 60, instant) only if you can't wait 5 days or want a screen copy. Click either route below for full details.
★ Route A · Kinokuniya — physical books, SGD 53.80, 5 working days
ItemEditionPrice
Textbook — Livre de l'élève + companion appL'atelier+ A1 (2022)SGD 31
Workbook — Cahier d'activités + companion appL'atelier+ A1 (2022)SGD 18
Delivery within SingaporeSGD 4.80
TotalSGD 53.80
  1. Open the order form: forms.gle/MkbckDEbZwiwA3737
  2. Sign in with your NUS email.
  3. Tick both items — textbook (Livre) and workbook (Cahier). Both required.
  4. Fill in delivery details and follow payment instructions.
  5. Allow up to 5 working days for delivery — order well before Mon 11 May.
  6. Install the free didierfle.app on your phone (App Store / Google Play). Scan any page of your book to access audio, video, and interactive activities.
Route B · Didier FLE digital — instant e-book, ≈ SGD 60 (€39 / USD 44)
ItemISBNPrice
Textbook (Livre numérique)9782278104697€24.70
Workbook (Cahier numérique)9782278093892€14.30
Total€39 ≈ SGD 60
  1. Add the textbook to cart: L'atelier+ A1 — Livre numérique
  2. Add the workbook to cart: L'atelier+ A1 — Cahier numérique
  3. Checkout in EUR or USD. Singapore-issued cards work; expect ~1–3% in cross-border / FX fees.
  4. Activate on educadhoc.fr with the same email; both books appear in Ma bibliothèque.
  5. Read on browser, the EDUCADHOC desktop app, or the mobile app. Licence valid for 2 years from activation.
Buying second-hand? Only accept L'atelier+ A1, year 2022. The pre-2022 "L'atelier A1" is a different edition. Also be aware: the digital companion code may already have been redeemed.

04 Assessments — 100% C.A.

This course is assessed by 100% continuous assessment — there is no final exam. Your final grade combines five components, spread across the six weeks rather than concentrated at the end.

Tests (Reading + Writing)40%
Oral (Listening + Speaking)35%
Quizzes10%
Homework (e-learning + group project)10%
Attendance & participation5%

Reading & writing tests carry the most weight. The oral component (listening + speaking + vodcast) is collectively almost as much. Don't underestimate the 5% attendance — it can be the difference between grade boundaries.

Key dates & weights

Mon 18 May
Quiz 1 5%
Fri 29 May
Vodcast project due 5%
Fri 29 May
Test 1 — Reading + Writing 20%
Fri 29 May
Listening 1 7.5%
Mon 8 June
Quiz 2 5%
Fri 12 June
Group project (projet culturel) due 5%
Wed 17 June
Test 2 — Reading + Writing 20%
Wed 17 June
Listening 2 10%
Wed 17 June
Speaking 12.5%

What each assessment is

  • Quizzes (×2) — short in-class checks on recent units. Vocabulary, grammar, basic comprehension.
  • Tests (×2) — reading comprehension and writing tasks at A1 level.
  • Listening (×2) — short audio passages with comprehension questions.
  • Speaking — held on the final day; structured oral exchange.
  • Vodcast project — a 2-minute video recording introducing yourself in French. Submitted by 29 May, during the e-learning week.
  • Group cultural project — small-group exploration of a Francophone cultural topic. Due 12 June.
  • E-learning homework — guided self-study tasks during the no-class week (20–25 May).

05 Expectations

This is an intensive course

Six weeks of A1 French is what most students cover in fourteen weeks of a regular semester. You should expect to spend time on French every day — short, frequent practice beats long weekend cramming. Plan around it.

Attendance and participation

Attendance counts for 5% of your grade and participation matters: speaking up, asking questions, working with partners. The four make-up Fridays are compulsory, not optional.

Eligibility — please read carefully

Mandatory declaration: Before the course begins, you must complete the declaration form on Canvas. Students with prior formal learning in French are not eligible. False or incomplete declarations are an academic offence.

Note: knowledge of related languages in the same family (Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian) does not count as prior French knowledge. You're welcome in this course.

Workload expectations

  • Attend all classes, including the four Fridays (15 May · 29 May · 5 June · 12 June)
  • Complete the e-learning week tasks (20–25 May) and the vodcast project
  • Optional homework as assigned — recommended for retention
  • Allow ~1 hour per day outside class for vocabulary and review during the intensive period

06 E-learning week · 20–25 May

From Tuesday 20 May to Sunday 25 May there are no physical classes. Instead, you'll work through self-paced e-learning tasks (5%) and prepare your 2-minute vodcast project (5%, due Friday 29 May).

Detailed instructions, materials, and submission links will appear here closer to the date.

Vodcast brief (preview): You're an influencer recording your first French-only reel — sharing with your followers what you've learned in class so far. The 2-minute video has two halves:
  • Minute 1 — Introduce yourself. Name, where you're from, what you study, why you're learning French. Use the vocabulary and structures from Units 0–2.
  • Minute 2 — Qu'est-ce qu'il y a dans mon sac ? Show what's in your bag and name each item in French. (Dans mon sac, il y a un livre, un stylo, des clés…) Use vocabulary from Unit 2 — objects, indefinite articles (un, une, des), and what you like or don't like (j'adore mon agenda, je n'aime pas trop mes écouteurs cassés…).
The full vibe: confident, casual, French-only. Mistakes are fine — the point is to talk. More detailed guidance on Mon 18 May.

07 Resources & useful links

Course platforms

Canvas

canvas.nus.edu.sg/courses/92198
Assignments, gradebook, official announcements.

Telegram class group

Message @frenchatnus for the invite link. Day-to-day questions, peer help.

Apps you'll use

didierfle.app

Companion app for L'atelier+. Scan any page of your textbook for audio, video, interactive drills.

EDUCADHOC

For Route B (digital book) students only. Reader app for the Livre + Cahier numérique.

Beyond the course — recommended

Le Conjugueur

leconjugueur.lefigaro.fr — full conjugation for any French verb in any tense.

WordReference

wordreference.com/fren — dictionary + conjugation + forum discussions.

Forvo

forvo.com/languages/fr — pronunciation by native speakers, word by word.

RFI Savoirs

savoirs.rfi.fr — slow news in French, designed for learners.

TV5 Monde — Apprendre

apprendre.tv5monde.com — graded video exercises.

08 Pourquoi le français ?

Map of the Francophone world A stylized world map showing major cities where French is spoken, from Montréal in the Americas to Hanoi in Southeast Asia. Paris Bruxelles Genève Lyon Casablanca Alger Tunis Dakar Abidjan Yaoundé Kinshasa Antananarivo Beyrouth Montréal Québec Hanoï Nouméa Singapour (notre point de départ) Le monde francophone ~321 million speakers · 5 continents · 29 official countries

French is the only language other than English that's taught in every country in the world. It's official in 29 states, the working language of the EU, the UN, the Olympics, and the African Union. By 2050, demographic projections suggest French will be spoken by ~700 million people, mostly in Africa.

Closer to home: Singapore hosts the French Embassy, the Alliance Française, and a growing community of Francophone businesses. French opens doors in luxury, hospitality, diplomacy, NGOs, the arts — and gives you a foundation for the rest of the Romance languages (Spanish, Italian, Portuguese) which collectively cover most of the Western hemisphere.

But honestly? The best reason is the smaller one: a year from now, you'll be able to read a menu in Lyon, follow a film without subtitles, hold a real conversation with a stranger in Montréal. That's worth six weeks.

09 Frequently asked questions

Can I take this course if I learned French in school?

No — this course is for complete beginners. If you have prior formal learning in French (any level, including secondary school), you're not eligible. Knowledge of Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, or Romanian is fine — those don't count as prior French knowledge.

What if I miss a class?

Attendance is 5% of your grade and the course is fast-paced. If you miss a class for medical or compelling reasons, contact me and the class group as soon as possible. The four Friday make-up classes are compulsory.

Do I really need both the textbook and the workbook?

Yes — both. The livre contains the lessons; the cahier has the exercises we work through in and out of class. They're designed as a pair.

How do I install didierfle.app?

Search "didierfle" on the App Store (iOS) or Google Play (Android). Open the app, allow camera access, and scan any page of your textbook. The audio and video for that page will appear automatically — no separate login needed.

What level will I be at by the end of this course?

A1 (CEFR — Common European Framework). You'll be able to: introduce yourself, ask basic questions about people and places, understand short clear messages, write simple sentences about familiar topics, and survive in basic interactions in a French-speaking country.

Can I continue with LAF2201 (French 2) after this?

Yes — LAF1201 is the prerequisite for LAF2201, and most students who pass LAF1201 continue. LAF2201 takes you to a strong A1 / early A2 level.

How much time should I spend studying outside class?

Plan for around 1 hour per day during the intensive period. Short daily practice (15-min vocab review + 30-min workbook + 15-min listening) beats long weekend cramming. The brain consolidates languages overnight.

What's the e-learning week (20–25 May)?

Five days of self-paced work to compensate for the missed class days that week. You'll get a structured set of e-learning tasks (5%) and you'll record your 2-minute vodcast project (5%, due 29 May). All instructions will be on Canvas and on this site nearer the date.

Where will the four Friday make-up classes be held?

Same time as regular classes (1pm–4pm). Venue is to be confirmed and will be announced on the Telegram group and Canvas at least one week before each Friday.

I'm worried I'll fall behind. What should I do?

The best moment to ask for help is the moment you feel confused. Post on the Telegram group, email me, or come to me after class. The pace of this course makes "I'll catch up later" risky — small confusions compound quickly. Don't wait.

10 Your instructor

A teacher's desk by a window A line illustration of a desk by a window with an open notebook, fountain pen, stack of French books, and a small potted plant.

Dr Daniel K.-G. Chan is Senior Lecturer in French at the NUS Centre for Language Studies and Assistant Dean (Undergraduate Matters) at the Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences. He has been teaching French at NUS for many years and has a particular interest in how technology can support — without replacing — genuine language learning.

How I teach: I think of beginner French as a set of patterns rather than rules to memorise. We'll spend more time noticing how French works than drilling conjugation tables. Expect a lot of speaking from day one — in pairs, in groups, sometimes in front of the class. It's faster, and more honest, than learning silently.

If you're curious about my writing on language, education, and AI, you can find published pieces at oped.withdrchan.com.

11 Pre-class checklist

Before Mon 11 May

  • Eligibility declaration form completed on Canvas
  • Books ordered (Route A or Route B) — both textbook and workbook
  • Telegram group joined (message @frenchatnus if unsure of the link)
  • didierfle.app installed on phone or tablet
  • Calendar blocked for all class dates including the four Fridays
  • This site bookmarked