23506 FREN 2002                                            Français intermédiaire II                                  printemps 2009

le lundi, mercredi et vendredi, 12h-12h50, G129

             

    Dr. E. Joe Johnson

 

Heures de réception: A&S, G-210B: par rendez-vous ; Adresse électronique: joejohnson@clayton.edu  

(: (678) 466-4737 Syllabus en ligne: http://a-s.clayton.edu/jojohnso/

 

Textes obligatoires:

    1) Mitschke, Cherie. Imaginez : le français sans frontières, 1ère édition. Boston: (Vista Higher Learning, 2007), ISBN 978-1-600007-171-3

    2) Textbook online-exercises & Web-SAM: http://imaginez.vhlcentral.com/

    3) Graded French Reader, Première étape. 5th edition. By Camille Bauer (Lexington, MA: Heath, 1992). (Vous pouvez aussi vous servir de la 6è édition de ce texte).

 

Sites Web, additional exercises et “tutorials" :

http://espaces.vhlcentral.com/

http://www.utm.edu/departments/french/french.html

 

1ère semaine: 12-15 janvier

Formalités

Leçon 1

Leçon 1

2è semaine: 19-23 janvier

          Pas de cours, c’est la fête de MLK !

Leçon 1

Leçon 1

3è semaine: 26-30 janvier

Leçon 1

Leçon 1

Examen de leçon 1

4è semaine: 2-6 février

Leçon 2

Leçon 2

Leçon 2

5è semaine: 9-13 février

Leçon 2

Leçon 2

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 1

6è semaine: 16-20 février

Leçon 2

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 2

Pas de cours, M. Johnson doit s’absenter pour un

colloque.

7è semaine: 23-27 février

Examen de leçon 2

Leçon 3

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 3

8è semaine: 2-6 mars***

Leçon 3

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 4

Pas de cours, M. Johnson doit s’absenter pour un

colloque.

 

***Nota bene: Le 6 mars est le dernier jour pour abandonner ce cours sans recevoir un F comme note.

 

9-13 mars : LES VACANCES DU PRINTEMPS

 

9è semaine: 16-20 mars

Leçon 3

Leçon 3

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 5

10è semaine: 23-27 mars

Leçon 3

Examen de leçon 3

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 6

11è semaine: 30 mars-3 avril

Leçon 4

Leçon 4

« La Belle et la bête, » chapitre 7

12è semaine: 6-10 avril

La Belle et la bête (film)

La Belle et la bête (film)

Leçon 4

13è semaine: 13-17 avril

Leçon 4

Leçon 4

Leçon 4

14è semaine: 20-24 avril

Examen de leçon 4 et La Belle et la bête

Leçon 5

Leçon 5

15è semaine: 27 avril-1er mai

Leçon 5

Leçon 5

Leçon 5

16è semaine : 4 mai

            Oraux !, révision finale

Derniers cahiers 19 à minuit avant l’examen final.

 

Examen final:            L’Université annoncera les dates pour les examens. Cet examen sera compréhensif.

Date_________ Lieu_________

 

Grading Procedures (100-90=A, 89-80=B, 79-70=C, 69-60=D, 59-0=F):

les examens de module:     20%     

les quizs:                15%

l’oral:                   10%

l’examen final:            15%

devoirs (cahier/labo):       25%

participation et assiduité:    15%              

 

***Midterm grade: Your midterm grade will be an average of all grades to that date.

 

Goals and Objectives of the foreign languages courses:

Our goal in the beginning and intermediate language courses is develop your communicative proficiency in comprehending, speaking, reading, and writing French.  Interaction is our primary means to attain our goals.  There is, therefore, NO ENGLISH in class in this method. The presentation of the material is meant to make the experience of learning French as close to "being there" as possible. Keep in mind that, if you really were in a French-speaking country, you would most likely not understand every word you would hear, so practice listening for the gist and learn to cope with the frustration that comes when you cannot have a translation for every word. Pay attention to context, use your guessing skills to hypothesize about meaning, and relax! Study assigned sections before coming to class: you have English explanations in the text. You will benefit greatly from this course if you allow yourself to go with the flow, enjoy the "game" of language learning and use every opportunity to speak French! To succeed in this course, it is essential that you study your French 1-2 hours on a daily basis; learning language is a process of accumulation.

 

Test and Quiz policy: There will be almost daily short quizzes at the very beginning of class periods on materials covered in the previous classes. Dates of all scheduled chapter tests are on the syllabus.  The chapter tests and final exam will have both written and listening components. While it will emphasize the last chapter, the final will be accumulative. Without prior arrangement or a documented absence, there is no excuse for missing a scheduled test! The chapter tests and final exam will have both written and listening components. While it will emphasize the last chapter, the final will be accumulative. Without prior arrangement or a documented absence, there is no excuse for missing a scheduled test!

 

Oral Exam: There is one oral test during the semester; it is a skit that you will perform with a partner. The oral will last 8-10 minutes and is scheduled during outside of class during my office hours. You and your partner will be expected to demonstrate a good use of vocabulary and grammar points learned in the chapters covered up to that point. The best preparation for this facet of the class is being very active in class discussions and in paired- and group activities where you will have your greatest chance to speak in class. See the online syllabus for oral topics.

 

Workbook/Lab assignments/Compositions (Cahier/ Homework): Unless otherwise instructed, the workbook, lab manual, and video worksheets for each chapter are INDIVIDUAL work and are delivered via E-SAM. It is due at midnight on the day before the chapter test or as otherwise assigned. For your own sake, do the workbook as we cover the material in class or as assigned. At the end of each leçon and unité, you will have at least one short composition assigned. When the workbook is due, turn in this composition printed as a double-spaced Word document. WARNING! Waiting to complete the workbooks and compositions until the night before the chapter exam will only prevent you both from studying and from doing well in the workbook and listening exercises. Plan ahead and get good grades on both. These assignments will help you in all facets of the class. If you do not do all four parts for each chapter (3 online portions and the composition), the effect on your final class average will be dramatic.

 

Class Participation and Attendance Policy: As per university policy, students are expected to attend and participate in every class meeting. For this reason, attendance is carefully noted.  You will receive a 0 for your class participation grade for every absence after the second absence.  Sleeping, reading the newspaper, doing work for another class, etc., constitute an automatic absence with NO warning.  If you are tardy, you will automatically receive a 3 (see below). ***If you have excused absences due to University-sanctioned events (i.e. athletes) or because of official military duty, you are not eligible for other excused absences. You are responsible for any information you miss when absent.  Be sure to get the name, phone number, and e-mail of one or two classmates, as you are responsible for finding out about any changes in the syllabus or any additional assignments announced in your absence. (Do this right now!)

 

Name________________ # __________________ Name__________________ # ______________________

 

Daily, active participation in class is essential, for your success depends largely on maximum exposure to the language.  Please note that QUALITY PARTICIPATION and ATTENDANCE are 10% of your final grade.  You cannot participate if you’re not in class.  This portion of the final grade will take into account all of the following criteria: attendance and punctuality, preparation, initiative, use of French exclusively, positive attitude, primarily on task, other in-class work. It will be assessed daily.

Grading Criteria for PARTICIPATION/PREPARATION: Participation does not grade “correctness,” but rather “effort”.  Participation grades will be assigned as follows:

 

Excellent (5 %): The student frequently volunteers, has always studied the assigned material the night before, stays on task during pair-work, attempts to use complete sentences, always elaborates on answers, and does not speak English in class.  An “A” student comes to office hours to discuss any problems they are having in the course.

Good (4 %): The student occasionally volunteers, sometimes has not studied the assigned material, is involved in pair-work, voluntarily elaborates on answers, and does not speak English in class. Moreover, a “B” student comes to office hours to discuss any problems they are having in the course.

Poor (3 %): The student does not volunteer, is often unprepared when called upon, tends to be off task during pair-work, (especially when the professor is not nearby), gives one-word answers, and often resorts to English in class.  Student was tardy.

Very Poor (2 %): The student is obviously unprepared when called upon, does not do the assigned task during pair-work, and usually speaks English.

Inadequate (1-0 %): The student just sits there in class or does not come to class.  You may receive a “0” for participation with no warning for a period in which you are a distraction to classmates, are disrespectful of the professor or other classmates, or are absent from class.

 

OTHER ACADEMIC ISSUES

Individuals with disabilities who need to request alternate accommodations should contact the Disability Services Coordinator, Student Center 214, 678-466-5445, disabilityservices@mail.clayton.edu.

If you need help in your studies, do not hesitate to visit me during my Office Hours or make an appointment.  If you need “extra” help, the Center for Academic Success http://adminservices.clayton.edu/caa/ offers personalized tutoring in French.  The Center is located below the library.

Academic Dishonesty/Misconduct/Class disruption will not be tolerated under any circumstances.  Please consult the CSU Student Handbook for further information and guidelines and the consequences of cheating, plagiarizing and disrupting the course.

Notebook Computer Requirement:

Each CSU student is required to have ready access throughout the semester to a notebook computer that meets faculty-approved hardware and software requirements for the student's academic program. For further information on CSU's Official Policy, please go to http://itpchoice.clayton.edu/policy.htm.

Computer Skill Prerequisites and In-class usage:

No cell phones or text-messaging in class!