SCANDINAVIAN 100B: Scandinavian Languages and Linguistics (Advanced Languages)

W 11-12 , 6415 Dwinelle. Instructor: Karen Moller

Units: 4

ALL STUDENTS ENROLL IN THE COMMON LECTURE WEDNESDAYS 11-12 + A DISCUSSION SECTION FOR THEIR TARGET LANGUAGE AS FOLLOWS:

Section 101: Swedish, M&F 11-12, 6415 Dwinelle, Christian Gullette

Section 102: Norwegian, M&F 12-1, 6307 Dwinelle, Jenna Coughlin

Section 103: Danish, TT 11-12, 6415 Dwinelle, Karen Moller

 

L&S Breadth: International Studies OR Arts & Literature

 

Continuing students of Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish enrolling in Scandinavian 100B will meet together for one hour of lecture per week (W 11-12) to read and interpret literary and nonliterary texts about inter-Scandinavian communication, linguistics, and language history. In addition to this one-hour combined lecture, students will meet two additional hours per week (in discussion sections with a language instructor) to be instructed in their particular target languages.

 

Students should enroll in the relevant target language section as follows: Section 101 = Swedish; Section 102 = Norwegian; Section 103 = Danish. Students should register in the 100B lecture in addition to the relevant section they will attend. The course is complete with the language and the lecture sections – you must enroll in both parts in order to fully enroll in the course. If you experience a scheduling problem it is essential that you consult the language coordinator.

 

Students will further develop their basic communicative competence in all four foreign language skills (speaking, listening, reading and writing) within a cultural context in their own target language (Swedish, Norwegian, or Danish). Through the weekly lecture they will gain a deeper understanding of the other Scandinavian languages through tasks and readings. Students will NOT be asked to learn to speak the other two Scandinavian languages, but to learn about them.

 

Placement: Scandinavian 100B is open to students who have taken Scandinavian 1A-1B, 3A-3B, or 4A-4B with a passing grade. A placement test is mandatory for other students who have had 90 hours of in-class instruction (reached the Novice High/Intermediate Low proficiency level) in any Scandinavian language and with a passing grade. The placement test must be taken prior to or within the first week of instruction. Contact the language coordinator to schedule a placement test.

 

Native, Near-Native, Heritage Speakers: The specific language sections are only open to learners of the specific Scandinavian language of instruction in the section. The course is not open to native, near-native, or heritage speakers of any Nordic language without prior consent from the language coordinator. The course cannot be repeated without prior consent from the language coordinator.

 

Workload for the combined lecture (e.g. 1/3 of the total grade for SCAND 100B):
Two hours of work outside class a week. Weekly task based homework. A take-home written midterm and a 3-page final project are required.

Workload for the discussion section (e.g. 2/3 of the total grade for SCAND 100B): An average of four hours of work outside class per week. The structure of supplemental language sections depends on the language instructor, but usually includes weekly written assignments, oral presentations, an oral and written midterm and final exam.

 

Section Times:Meeting times for discussion sections might on occasion be changed according to the schedules of the students enrolled, and can therefore vary from the times listed in the online Schedule of Classes. Students should attend the first day of class for more information on possible rescheduling.

 

Texts:

Language sections: textbooks to be announced – most often as readers

Lecture/Culture section: Reader

 

Prerequisite: Scandinavian 100A. The course is not open to native, near-native, or fluent heritage speakers of any Nordic language. Course cannot be repeated without prior consent from the language coordinator.