Department of Romance Languages and Literatures

910 Clemens Hall

Buffalo, NY 14260-4620

 

French 102 Elementary French 2nd semester

Course Coordinator: Dr. Jeannette Ludwig, 935 Clemens Hall Tel. 645-0877 jmludwig@buffalo.edu

Course description: Language as heard and spoken; development of listening, speaking, reading, and writing; five class hours weekly plus regular drill in the language laboratory. LEC

Course objectives: The two-semester sequence (French 101 and 102) will acquaint you with the culture and language of French-speaking peoples worldwide. The course involves all four language skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing, all in a cultural context. In functional terms, you will be able to use appropriate greetings and farewells, ask simple questions about daily matters, and respond correctly (both orally and in writing) to questions about your own life and opinions, we well as those of others. You should be able to satisfy basic survival needs and social courtesies. Specifically, in 102 you will learn to speculate about the future, relate sentence in more complex fashion, and write brief, coherent, and correct paragraphs on simple topics. French 102 will cover material contained in Chapters 15-32 of Contacts (direct and indirect object pronouns, imperfect, future, and conditional tenses, relative pronouns, and subjunctive).

Placement Policies:

Textbooks: Contacts, Valette & Valette, Houghton & Mifflin, 2008, 8th ed. , QUIA Workbook to accompany Contacts, a French-English/English-French Dictionary

Workload: This course is 5 credits. Students can expect to spend an average of 6 hours per week outside of class time. Students are responsible for the Aperçus, Notes Linguistiques and Notes Culturelles, as well as the dialogues at the beginning of each chapter.

Course Requirements: Students must attend class regularly, and participate fully in all class activities, both oral and written. Laboratory and homework assignments prepared outside of class constitute an integral part of the coursework. At least one hour a week with the audio component of the workbook is indispensable.

Grading Procedures:

Elementary French is a concrete, performance-oriented course, for which accuracy and mastery are essential. In general the following scale will apply:

100%-90%=A, 89%-80%=B, 79%-65%=C, 65%-50%=D

However, the difficulty of the exam and the relative preparedness of the students may necessitate deviation from these cutoffs. Pluses and minuses are taken into account when averaging students' grades.

The final grade is calculated as follows: The combined average of the two types of exams -- quizzes and hourlies -- will begin to determine your grade, i.e. the average grade (not percentage) of the quizzes (25%) and the average grade (not percentage) of the three hourly exams (50%). Fully 25% of the grade is at the discretion of the instructor. It reflects attendance, assignments, and class participation.

Quizzes are written and corrected by the instructor for each section. The hourly and final are written and graded on a course-wide basis. Make-ups are at the discretion of the instructor. The hourlies are announced well in advance, so only the most compelling reasons--stated in advance--should necessitate a makeup.

Incomplete: Typically, incompletes are not given, except in cases of a well-documented medical condition.

Plagiarism: Academic dishonesty will result in a grade of F and disciplinary actions by the university. Examples of academic dishonesty are: copying the work from the Internet or a book, having a friend/relative write the work for you, copying during an exam or quiz, using an electronic word by word translator.

Students with disabilities: Students who require special accommodations because of a diagnosed disability should bring relevant documentation to their instructors as soon as possible. The instructor in conjunction with the course coordinator will oversee arrangements with assistance from the Office of Disabilities.

Course Outline: The following is a SAMPLE course outline. Students who register for this course will receive an updated course outline through UBLearns (Blackboard).

French 102 Course Outline

Texts: Contacts (7th ed) by Valette and Valette.  2001. Houghton & Mifflin AND Contacts Workbook/Lab Manual

Students are responsible for the dialogues and Note(s) Culturelle(s) (=NC) as well as the Aperçus Culturels (=AC) indicated.     

Note:  [ ] = recognition only

Week 1

(Intro, review -er, -ir verbs, etre, avoir) (Review faire, aller, p.c. w/ avoir Ch 16 NC) (Review p.c. w etre p. 206, numbers, weather, time)  

Week 2

(16A, B, C)   (16C,D, E, 17NC)    Aperçu culturel: p. 220-27: 1 region au choix (en classe)

Week 3

(Quiz, 17A, B, Vocab p. 236)  (17A, B, Vocab p. 247, 17C)  (17D, E Vocab p. 256, 18 NC) Aperçu culturel: p. 220-27: 1 region au choix (en classe)

Week 4

(Quiz, 18A, B, C)  (18C, Vocab p. 264-5, Vivre en France p. 268-70)  (19NC, Vocab 276-7, 19B, D)

Week 5

(19C, 20NC, Vocab p. 286 & 290, 20A, B, C) (20C, D, Vocab 294)  (20E, Révision) 

Week 6***

(HOURLY) (Go over hourly, 21 NC, 21A)  (21B,C, Vocab. p. 308) 

Week 7

(21D [21E])   (Vocab p. 332, 22A, B, C)  AC  p. 320-7: 1 section au choix, en classe  

Week 8

(22C, D, Quiz)  (23 NC, 23A, B, C)   (23C, D)   AC  p. 320-7: 1 section au choix, en classe

Week 9

(24A, B, C, Quiz) ([24D, Vocab p. 380-1]  25B, C,D) (25 B,C, D, Revision)

Week 10

(33A,D, Révision)   (HOURLY)   (Go over hourly, 26NC, Vocab p. 396 & 7, 26B)

Week 11***

(26A,B, Vocab p. 402, 27A)   (27A, C, D)   (28A, Vocab p. 440)    AC p. 424-5 on own Last day to w/draw with "R" Grade

Week 12

(28D, vocab p. 447, 29A, B)   (28D, 29B,C,D,E)   (29C,D,E, Quiz, 30 A,B)   AC p. 426-7 on own

Week 13

(30 A,B,C)  ) (31 A,B,C, Vocab p. 494)   (31 D, E, Vocab 497, Quiz)    AC p. 428-9 on own

Week 14

(32B,C, Vocab p. 507) AC p. 430-1 on own

Week 15

32D,E, Vocab p. 508)   (Révision, 32F, Vocab 510) (Révision)  AC p. 432-3 on own

Last day***

(HOURLY)

*** = Week of hourly exam.  No cuts without penalty to your grade.  If you are enrolled after the last day to withdraw, you will receive a real grade (not an "I") for the course.  Typically, incompletes are not given, except for rare, compelling and documented circumstances.

Last updated: August, 2009