CCOG for FR 201 archive revision 201403
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- Effective Term:
- Summer 2014 through Summer 2021
- Course Number:
- FR 201
- Course Title:
- Second Year French
- Credit Hours:
- 4
- Lecture Hours:
- 40
- Lecture/Lab Hours:
- 0
- Lab Hours:
- 0
Course Description
Addendum to Course Description
Continuing the work begun in First Year French, FR 201 is the first term of the three term intermediate college course in French. Communicative proficiency is the main objective of the sequence. The development of the four skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing is continued with emphasis on active use of these skills. In addition, students will expand their cultural awareness and appreciation.
FR 201 is offered for four hours of transferable credit. It satisfies part of the foreign language requirement for the B.A. degree, counts as an Arts and Letters distribution requirement for the A.A. degree, and contributes to the general education requirement for other Associate Degrees.
Recommended: Successful completion of First Year French at the college level or the equivalent language experience in French, competency to be determined by the teacher. Students whose skill level in French is more advanced than that of FR 201 will not be admitted.
Intended Outcomes for the course
Students successfully completing FR 201:
A. Handle a limited number of uncomplicated communicative tasks in straightforward social situations.
B. Communicate using significant repetition, rephrasing, and circumlocution with native speakers accustomed to dealing with non-native
speakers.
C. Write using paragraph-length connected discourse to narrate and describe in present, past and future time frames with limited
accuracy.
D. Recognize and interpret some cultural behaviors and attitudes within the French speaking world in relation to one’s own cultural
perspective.
E. Further analyze historical and cultural movements in the target culture in relation to key works of art, literature, music, film and/or
performing arts.
F. Further develop and apply strategies for analyzing and responding to limited authentic materials in the target language.
Integrative Learning
Students completing an associate degree at Portland Community College will be able to reflect on one’s work or competencies to make connections between course content and lived experience.
Course Activities and Design
Students are expected to attend all classes, participate actively in classroom activities, and prepare oral and written homework assignments. Students may work with audio tapes in the media center or at home, and they may meet with the teacher in conferences. After the introduction to the course, French will be used in the classroom at all times. Students should plan to spend about one hour in preparation and practice outside of class for each class hour.
Outcome Assessment Strategies
Students are assessed globally rather than from the point of view of the presence or absence of a given linguistic feature. Students will be assessed through a daily evaluation of their individual progress and improving competence in using the language as demonstrated by the quality of oral and written preparation and participation and daily oral and written assignments. Though tests are not used as an assessment tool, attendance is an important factor.
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
The course focuses on the acquisition and correct use of pronunciation and intonation, grammatical structures, functional vocabulary, and cultural concepts for the purpose of successful communication in French. Successful students have reviewed, expanded, and perfected previously learned material, have practiced, and will be able to use the following communication topics and structures:
Communication topics:
- Transportation
- Hypothetical situations
- Suggestions
- Directions
- Housing
- Narration in the past
- Disagreeing and protesting
Structures:
- The two past tenses, pluperfect, conditional, past conditional
- Irregular nouns
- Indefinite expressions
- Additional time and negative expressions
- Causative faire and similar constructions
- Present participle
- Introduction to indirect discourse