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INTERMEDIATE GERMAN II |
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Class Hours: 3.0 |
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Credit Hours: 3.0 |
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Laboratory Hours: 0.0 |
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Date Revised: Fall 06 |
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Catalog Course Description: |
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Continuation of German 2010. |
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Entry Level Standards: |
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Students must be able to read and write at the college level. |
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Prerequisites: |
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GERM 2010 or equivalent |
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Textbook(s) and Other Course Materials: |
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1. Fokus Deutsch –
Beginning German 2 – text,
workbook, cd-rom. 2. Fokus Deutsch – video series: available in library. |
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I. Week/Unit/Topic Basis: |
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Week |
Topic |
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1 |
Im Klassenzimmer. Travel and leisure. |
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2 |
Present tense. Geography and
Landeskunde. |
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3 |
Beschreibungen . Test I |
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4 |
Dative pronouns. Role play activities |
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5 |
Körperteile. Using dictionary effectively. Writing exercises |
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6 |
Present perfect tense. Family relationships. Lyrics to a popular song. Test II |
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7 |
Using pictures to guess the tone of a text: Interviews of teenagers about their relationship with parents |
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8 |
Kleidung. Expressing opinions about relationships. Friendship |
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9 |
Expressing opinions about relationships (continued). The ideal partner |
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10 |
Imperatives. Intercultural relationships. Test III |
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11 |
Expressing differences of opinion. Role play activities. |
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12 |
Stating opinions and feelings (continued). Writing exercises |
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13 |
Prepositions of location and direction. |
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14 |
Contemporary |
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15 |
Test IV. Oral interviews.
Comprehensive final exam |
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II. Course Objectives*: |
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A. |
Listening comprehension: understand the gist of simple conversations spoken at a moderate speed on familiar subjects. II.3 |
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B. |
Speaking skills: communicate in typical daily and travel situations, relying heavily on learned utterances. II.3 |
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C. |
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D. |
Writing skills: write short sentences including statements, questions, and responses. II.3, II.6 |
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E. |
Cultural
understanding: increase knowledge of |
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*Roman numerals after course objectives reference TBR’s general education goals. |
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III. Instructional Processes*: |
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Students will: |
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Use the German language in pair and group exercises to exchange information and talk about their feelings. Communication Outcome, Humanities Outcome |
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2. |
Complete workbook exercises in reading, writing, speaking, and understanding German. Communication Outcome, Humanities Outcome |
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3. |
Develop listening and speaking skills in real contexts through the use of a video and extensive audio program. Communication Outcome, Humanities Outcome |
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4. |
Collaborate in teams to practice verbal exercises and complete written exercises. Communication Outcome, Humanities Outcome |
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Participate in language learning experiences which call for sequencing and memorizing. Communication Outcome. |
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6. |
Read about differences between American culture and German culture, with some analysis of how culture is expressed through language. Humanities Outcome |
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7. |
View and discuss interviews of people who use German in their work. Humanities Outcome |
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*Strategies and outcomes listed after instructional processes reference TBR’s goals for strengthening general education knowledge and skills, connecting coursework to experiences beyond the classroom, and encouraging students to take active and responsible roles in the educational process. |
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IV. Expectations for Student Performance*: |
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Upon successful completion of this course, the student should be able to: |
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Understand statements, directions, questions, and responses in German spoken at a moderate conversational speed, particularly if strongly supported by the situational context. A |
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Differentiate between the polite and the familiar forms of spoken German. A |
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Combine the elements of learned material to ask questions or make statements in German. B |
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Increase fluency in spoken German that is intelligible to a native speaker and grammatically correct. B |
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Understand facts and follow narration in moderately difficult written German. C |
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6. |
Translate the subjunctive mood. C |
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Read signs in German. C |
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8. |
Increase reading vocabulary in German. C |
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Meet limited, practical writing needs; can produce original short messages on very familiar topics. D |
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10. |
Discuss specific aspects of German life such as public transportation systems, the telephone, and the postal service. E |
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*Letters after performance expectations reference the course objectives listed above. |
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V. Evaluation: |
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A. Testing Procedures: 70% of grade |
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There
will be five unit tests counting 50% of the final grade and short quizzes for
20%. |
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B. Laboratory Expectations: 10% of grade |
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Completed
workbook and grammar exercises will count 15% of the final grade. Writing assignments
will count 10% of the final grade. Homework listed on syllabus for each day
is to be completed for next class. For example, homework listed on Friday,
August 24, is to be done for the next class meeting on Monday, August
27. |
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C. Oral Interview: 10% of grade |
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An oral interview will count 10% of the final grade. |
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D. Other Evaluation Methods: 10% of grade |
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Class participation and attendance will count 10% of the final grade. |
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E. Grading Scale: |
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90-100
A |
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VI. Policies: |
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A. Attendance Policy: |
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Attendance in language courses is of critical importance and will affect the final grade. After six (6) absences, the final grade will drop one letter grade for each additional absence. PLEASE READ THIS CAREFULLY because many students fail to understand the severity of missing classes until it is too late. If a student has to miss a class, it is the student's RESPONSIBILITY to find out from classmates what work, assignments etc. were missed and complete them in order to able to join in all classroom activities upon return to class. As a minimum, students must be present for at least 75 percent of their scheduled classes in order to receive credit for the course. Individual departments/programs/disciplines, with the approval of the vice president of Academic and Student Affairs, may have requirements that are more stringent. |
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B. Academic Dishonesty: |
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Plagiarism,
cheating, and other forms of academic dishonesty are prohibited. A
student guilty of academic misconduct, either directly or indirectly through participation
or assistance, are immediately responsible to the instructor of the
class. In addition to other possible disciplinary sanctions which may
be imposed through the regular |
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C.
Accommodations for disabilities: |
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If
you need accommodations because of a disability, if you have emergency
medical information to share, or if you need special arrangements in case the
building must be evacuated, please inform the instructor immediately. Please
see the instructor privately after class or in his/her office. Students must
present a current accommodation plan from a staff member in Services for
Students with Disabilities (SSWD) in order to receive accommodations in this
course. Services for Students with Disabilities may be contacted by going to Goins 127 or 131 or by phone: 694-6751(Voice/TTY) or
539-7153. |
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Posted: January 5, 2007