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Muhammad Nahhas: “Molière's French distinguishes».»

Studying for a Master's degree in International Trade

    Meet Muhammad Nahhas, who finished his studies at Molière in 2013. He tells us how he has done and the advantages he has had thanks to his fluency in French and English.
    What has been your career after the Molière?
    I started my degree in Business Administration and Management in Zaragoza, which I studied with a year of Erasmus in Bulgaria. This year I have just started a master's degree in International Business. Thanks to the internship I did during my degree in Grupo Cooperativo Pastores, I can now aspire to work with them and I am still doing an internship in this company.
    What has training at Molière given you over the years?
    French was decisive for me to be able to join this company. French distinguishes, it is a prestigious language and the level you acquire at the Molière is not just any level, it is a bilingual French, people don't distinguish my Spanish accent when I speak French.
    And what level of English did you acquire at school?
    I was able to complete my degree in English after leaving the Molière. If you have French, you will always study and speak English, that's inescapable.
    What did it give you at a pedagogical level?
    I realise compared to other university classmates that when I study I reason things out, I don't memorise. My head is organised in a different way. Every day in class, at Molière, we did an exercise in reasoning and analysis. At that time it was extra work, but when I look back on it now, I think it has helped me a lot.
    Moreover, the methodology is useful, because in the end the knowledge is always everywhere, but the learning system is unique to Molière.
    Did the school educate you in values as well?
    We have always been instilled with a lot of respect. I am of Syrian origin and I have never felt any difference from my colleagues.
    Do you keep friendships from those years?
    I still have many friends from my time at Molière. I also remember my trip to Brussels in Seconde, among many other good experiences.  

‘Molière's ’La Grande Lessive‘ or ’La Grande Colada'.

The Molière takes part in this world cultural event

    The Lycée français Molière is taking part in La Grande Lessive® or ‘The big wash’. This event was created in 2006 by Joëlle Gonthier. It is a biannual international cultural event. It takes the form of an ephemeral artistic installation made by everyone. Like hanging clothes, ‘La Grande Lessive®’ aims to bring art to the street and to the people, to link society with artistic practice. Since its creation, more than three million people of all ages and from all walks of life have participated, in 72 countries on five continents. Twice a year, clothes lines are stretched inside or outside sites chosen by local institutions. Schools, art schools, town halls, museums, media libraries, libraries, hospitals, nursing homes, parks, companies, neighbourhoods, public places, streets... On the day of La Grande Lessive®, the people who frequent these places are invited to hang a creation (drawing, painting, collage, photomontage, photograph, visual poem...) in two dimensions with the help of clothes pegs or clothes pegs.

Press week, at the Molière

Press workshops at the Molière

    The press week at the Lycée français Molière consisted of different workshops where the students put themselves in the shoes of a journalist to tell the news to their classmates and learnt about fashionable concepts such as ‘fake news’ and how to recognise them. And after a visit from a journalist, they wrote a news item which we publish here today.
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The Molière celebrates the Spring of Poets

Poetry and beauty, united in this issue

    The Molière, as well as France, are filled with poetry these days with the popular Springtime of the poets. The theme chosen for this twentieth edition is beauty. The pupils in the 4th year of Primary School have been working on this theme. In addition, we have recorded three pupils reciting poetry in the three languages of Molière: French, Spanish and English.