Contact Information
Prof Laurette Suter: Office in Mariposa Hall 2058
Telephone is (916) 278-7417, Campus e-mail suterla@csus.edu
Course SacCT/WebCT site: http://online.csus.edu/
Office Hours: Mon-Wed-Thurs 10:00am-10:50am and by appointment
Catalog Description
First semester of college French, corresponding roughly to 1-2
semesters of high school French. This is a beginning French course. The
course focuses on the development of elementary linguistic skills, with
emphasis on the spoken language. The relationship of the language to
francophone civilization and culture is given special attention. 4 units.
Student Learning Outcomes
Upon
successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
- Demonstrate that they are able to communicate in culturally
appropriate ways, primarily with formulaic speech to list, enumerate,
identify, express courtesies, agreement and disagreement, focusing
mainly on the present tense and the near future tense.
- Demonstrate that they are able to begin to communicate by
understanding and responding to simple statements and questions, and
participate in informal conversation within the cultural context.
- Demonstrate that they are able to think critically and exchange
personal information, fulfill routine communication needs in the four
language skills (reading, writing, speaking, listening) within the
cultural context.
- Demonstrate a better understanding of the culture of the language
they are studying through the cultural context of the language that
forms the basis of their study, internet searches in the language and
exploration of the perspectives, products, and practices of the culture.
Course Objectives
- To develop equally the four language skills: reading, writing,
speaking and oral comprehension, and to familiarize the student with the
Francophone world. The course objectives are to provide instruction and
practice towards competence in French oral and written communication, as
follows: to present oneself and other persons, to greet others and
answer greetings, to request and thank, to give and receive
instructions, to count to 100+, to tell the date and time, to describe
people physically and their personalities, to talk about one's home and
its furnishings, daily activities/hobbies and places to go, to express
likes/dislikes and agreement/ disagreement, to construct negative
sentences, to phrase simple questions, to be fluent in regular and
irregular present tense verbs, to use the near-future construction, and
to develop the appropriate French language pronunciation, rhythm and
articulation.
- Students will develop skills to understand concepts in written and
oral French, as well as the learned ability to write and speak the
language on their own. This course will provide basic information on
French culture and civilization and open a window on the Francophone
world, through text materials, music, videos and the Internet. In
addition, students will develop valuable electronic communication skills
and presentation skills in general.
Textbook, Audio CD and Computer
- Motifs, by Jansma and Kassen, 5th edition, 2010, is available
for purchase from the CSUS Bookstore. This textbook comes with two audio
CDs in a pocket of the book. This textbook is used for 2
semesters of beginning French at CSUS: French 1A and French 1B, and
intermediate French 2A (third semester). Students should purchase the
textbook only with audio CD insert: no lab manuals are required.
ISBN-10: 0-495-79749-9 (the longer ISBN # is the same book: ISBN-13: 978-0-495-79749-4).
(Individual chapters (Modules 1-5) may be purchased at ichapters.com for about $9.49 per module. This excludes the appendices, dictionary, and other maps and charts.) A Motifs 5th edition textbook is available in the Library Reserve Book Room, for 2 hour loans.
- Homework will consist of written, speaking, reading and listening
components. Listening comprehension homework will be assigned using a
variety of Web sites. Regular language-learning homework (grammar and
writing exercises) will be done on the Web; they will be graded
automatically, and can be repeated for a higher homework grade. There is
no cost for the Web-based activities.
- Students may wish to purchase a French/English-English/French
dictionary as well.
- NOTE: if a used Textbook is purchased, the Audio
CD might be missing from inside the used textbook at the
Bookstore. A copy of this CD may be made in the Practice Lab in MRP 2002
onto a standard CD-R which students provide.
(Students should not purchase Motifs 4th edition, as the material is different than what is used in the 5th edition.)
- Students will be required to have 1) high-speed internet connectivity and a high-speed computer, and 2) a CD player. The class will meet once a week in the Foreign Language Lab (computer lab) in MRP 2000 where online assessments and pronunciation recordings will be made and graded.
Method
- This course will require that students be
highly motivated to learn, and that they spend a good amount of
time at a computer. In the classroom
environment, students will be doing speaking, listening, writing and reading practice.
Students need to spend 10-12 hours a WEEK online doing the assigned homework, practicing with the audio CD, and reading the textbook.
- The
required lab and weekly testing day will be on Thursdays.
- Active participation of the student in class is required. Oral
practice of the French language is essential to become comfortable with
all aspects of the language and the culture. Your grade will depend on
your participation in LIVE class meetings, and on oral assignments
(listening comprehension and pronunciation). Oral participation will
include: repeating, readings, conversations with partners, group
skits/debates, games, songs, and required weekly oral homework. Students
will also collaborate on portions of grammar lessons in group study. The
Motifs text presents materials in a gradual way, so this
beginning course will start out with English explanations and exercises,
moving on to assignments and readings only in French. Master
pronunciation files will be online and on the audio CD, and must be used repetitively to gain
mastery in pronunciation and fluency.
- Students are expected to do assigned homework electronically, and they will be
monitored for electronic participation. Participation will be tallied
with weekly point totals for electronic homework and activities, and attendance at the required in-class meetings; this
total number of points must be met satisfactorily EVERY WEEK. There is a strict weekly goal for
learning acquisition, which will be maintained for the duration of the
course.
Materials presented on Mondays must be mastered by Thursdays, every week.
- Written module exams (midterms) will be given the week after the
Module has been completed, approximately every 3 weeks, on the
following Monday. Written exams (contrary to online quizzes and homework) will be in-person, on campus, with paper/pen-pencil at the normal class time.
Homework
- Students must have a Saclink account for campus
SacCT/WebCT access by the first week of the semester. This is how assignments
and communication with the instructor will occur. Weekly
assignments will be listed in SacCT - students must do every item or
activity listed.
- Within the FIRST TWO DAYS OF THIS COURSE, students must follow very
specific Technical Set-up instructions (provided in SacCT) to make sure their computers work with all the media required for this
course. Failure to follow and/or the inability to understand the
technical instructions will cause the student to be dropped from the
course. Student home, work, or laptop computers must be set up to access
all elements of this technology-based course.
- Students must access SacCT and send both a Group
Discussion message and a Private Mail message to the instructor, by the
2nd week of the semester. Students will be shown how to use the SacCT
program in a computer lab environment in the first week.
- Writing, speaking, listening and reading
assignments are due weekly, every Thursday by 11am. Exercises are automatically
corrected online with the highest score for each kept in the online gradebook; pronunciation and written compositions are corrected
by the instructor.
- Oral pronunciation readings (students recording
their voice for pronunciation assessment) will be assigned weekly, and
recorded and collected every Thursday in the lab, recorded as a digital mp3 file.
- Cultural Assignments: Students will complete a series of 3 Internet
cultural searches into the Francophone world. Results of this search
will be composed into a 2-3 paragraph composition, in French or English,
and will be sent to the SacCT Group Discussion. Cultural information
found on these searches will thus be shared with all students. Students
will also compose questions that will make up part of the cultural exam
at the end of the semester.
- Attendance: Attendance will be graded by participation in this online course by both the completion of grammar homework, pronunciation and writing assignments, and also by attending the regular class sessions.
- Written, listening, pronunciation and practice
exercises making up the homework is due by the due date, once a week,
every week. Late or poorly done homework will result in a 5 point
penalty, with homework still due no later than one week after the due
date. Students who request access to closed electronic activities in SacCT will also receive 5 penalty points. Homework not turned in will receive zero points. Homework
will not be accepted after Module Exams are given that cover that
homework.
- Students are responsible for maintaining a weekly passing grade (viewable on the online Gradebook), and must do the four weekly skills assessments: reading, writing, speaking and listening. Failure to maintain a passing weekly grade will result in an administrative DROP from the course.
- Student homework assignments, online exercises, group Discussion mail messages, private mail and grades will be posted on WebCT. The Gradebook is private for each individual student; students are responsible for completing ALL assignments due in the Gradebook. You will need your Saclink account and password; only students enrolled in the course will have access.
- The course will require 10-12 hours per week of homework time, outside of class.
Culture
- Basic orientation to French culture will be presented with the
Motifs Perspectives Culturelles magazine in the textbook, music,
songs, discussions, videos, and an assignment of 3 sessions on the
Internet to places of Francophone culture in the world. Basic orientation to French culture will be presented with the
cultural sections (Perspectives Culturelles - historical,
geographical and contemporary) from the textbook, music, songs,
food, and videos. Additionally an assignment of 3 sessions on the
Internet to places of Francophone culture in the world will allow
the student to explore culturally-rich authentic sites and share
that information with the class.
Learning elements
- We will cover five (5) Modules (lessons or chapters called Modules 1-5) in your
textbook. There will be scheduled weekly short quizzes in the lab classroom in
the form of dictations, question/answers, vocabulary translations, and
verb conjugations. There will be a required audio components of the
weekly homework. Students will collaborate in class as groups. Students
may use any Internet provider, but must have a Saclink account at CSUS
for access to the instructor's SacCT site. There will be 13 weekly
mid-chapter quizzes, 4 Module Exams, a Cultural Exam and a comprehensive
Final Examination on the last Module (5). Tests will have listening and written components.
Grades
Grades are determined as follows (final point totals are
subject to change):
Assessment & Examination = approx 60% |
1 Final Exam (Oral Interview & Module 5 exam) |
200 |
8% |
4 Module exams |
400 |
16% |
13 Quizzes (approx pts) |
400
|
16% |
1 Cultural Exam |
100 |
4% |
13 wks Conversation Class/Participation |
400
|
16% |
Homework and Participation = approx 40% |
15 homework assignments (approx pts) |
1000
|
37% |
3 Internet searches and Discussion response |
100
|
3% |
Total Points |
2600 |
100% |
* All assignments must be completed and submitted. Failure to submit each of the elements noted above, and/or failutre to attend class through the end of the semester, will result in an F grade, regardless of points.
Grade Threshholds: 2600 pts = A+ 100%, 2340 = A- 90%, 2080 = B- 80%, 1820 = C- 70%, 1560 = D- 60%. A grade of C- is required to be prepared for and to enroll in the French 1B course.
WARNING: Absence due to medical reasons: Absences will be excused ONLY with documentation from a medical facility or doctor. Please discuss with the instructor to clarify personal situations. Unexcused absences, excessive tardiness, or leaving early, will be counted a minus -10 points per day. Any use of cell phones, texting, or electronic devices IS NOT TOLERATED. This is disruptive to the class and will count as an absence. Any use of such devices during a quiz or exam will be an automatic F for the grade of that test.
EXAM DATES for Fall 2011: Sept 19, Oct 10, Oct 31, Nov 14, Dec 14. CULTURAL EXAM: Dec 8 (online in lab). Note that Oral Presentations and the Cultural Exam are during the week of Dec 5-8.
All homework is due every Thursday by 11am online. Poor
mid-chapter test and quiz grades will be dropped if there is
improvement on Module exams and the Final Exam. THERE WILL BE NO
MAKE-UP TESTS. Advance make-up tests can be arranged. Exams are
paper/pencil, on campus, in person.
Late homework (written, oral voice
recordings, electronic exercises, and Internet search postings) AND
incomplete/poorly done homework will be penalized by 5 points
and is due no later than one week after the due date. Example: Homework
assignments are worth 10 points. Turning in complete homework 2 days
late makes it worth 5 points. Turning in poorly done homework on time is
worth 5 points. Submitting, on time, a short, poorly written Internet
report (even in English) is worth 15 points instead of 30 points. No
homework is accepted after the exam covering that material is
given.
There are no penalties if you submit complete
homework, ON TIME, each Thursday. It is recommended that you do some
French homework EVERY DAY so you can make your weekly Thursday homework
due date. (In other words, you do some homework on Thursday, Friday,
Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday !.) This is the best way to
learn any foreign language, and to enjoy learning it. This is a
difficult course; it will be harder if you get behind on the
homework.
Your final grade will be based on the
following:
A |
This reflects a good understanding and knowledge
of vocabulary, grammar , syntax and oral
comprehension. |
90-100% |
B |
This reflects a good understanding and knowledge
of vocabulary, grammar , syntax and oral comprehension, but some
mistakes occur throughout homework and testing. |
80-89% |
C |
Knowledge at this level reflects some
understanding and knowledge of most materials presented, but
confusion exists in the overall understanding of mosts concepts
presented. |
70-79% |
D |
There is very little understanding and knowledge
of vocabulary, grammar , syntax and oral
comprehension. |
60-69% |
I |
Incompletes: Students who do not attend
class, do not turn in assignments and do not take tests will
receive an Incomplete, only if a written completion
contract is signed by both student and
instructor. |
U |
Unofficial drops: Students who do not
attend class or no longer attend class regularly, do not turn in
assignments, who do not maintain their weekly online homework
points, and do not take tests will receive an Unofficial drop.
These will later turn into an "F"
grade. |
Students are expected to check the SacCT Gradebook weekly to check
homework submission grading.
Students must do ALL assigned exercises every week and maintain an
80% weekly grade. Failure to do so will put the student at risk of being
dropped administratively from the course. Students who do not
participate electronically will also be dropped, especially in the first
four weeks.
There will be a weekly Pronunciation Quiz, a weekly Composition, and a
weekly Grammar Quiz.
Technology Requirements
All coursework is done on the Internet and
uses technology like e-mail, digital mp3 voice files, online lab exercises, and the Web to access & submit homework assignments on SacCT
site. Click here to see minimum technology
requirements to make sure your home or work computer is powerful
enough to meet your needs for this course. Campus labs are well-equipped
and are available to all students, some on a 24-hour basis.
Students will use the SacCT/WebCT (a CSUS site) for this course at:
http://online.csus.edu/. At this
page, click on Logon My WebCT, then use your Saclink logon ID and
password, then click on French 1A.
Special Needs
Every effort will be made by this
instructor to accommodate students who have special needs. Please speak
to the instructor in person.
OVERVIEW /
INSTRUCTOR /
DEPARTMENT / CSUS
Page updated: le 25 août, 2011
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