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Nov 25, 2024
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2007-08 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
German - Major
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The general purpose of the major program is to educate
students to think and perceive rationally and critically. The student majoring in German will learn
about the world of ideas and cultural values through significant texts and how
these intersect with the great issues in the world, past and present. This will include reading and thinking,
learning about literary and cultural movements and making connections between
the primarily aesthetic literary artifacts of the related cultures and their
political, social and economic histories.
Students will learn to interact through rational discourse and
presentations, both written and oral.
Students are trained, first, to interact effectively in the
German speaking cultures through language.
At all language course levels students make use of the Emerson
Foreign Language Laboratory to allow them to perfect their language
skills. At all course levels of
language, literature and culture students engage with literature, documents and
artifacts housed in the German Culture Center, as well as the holdings
of the library of the College. All
students will learn to value and evaluate information available in electronic
form. Each student majoring in German
will study abroad in the Berlin Residential Program a minimum of one
semester, either in the sophomore or junior year.
Taken together, the program prepares students to think
philosophically and practically by creating their own linkages between the
German major and another major or minor.
Students majoring in German may choose a second major in
another academic discipline or a minor/s to complement their undergraduate
education. German may also be combined
with a program in Education: Inclusive or Adolescence Education.
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Sample Program for the German Major
Students may begin at the GER Elementary (101),
Intermediate (103) or Advanced (201) levels.
Below is a sample beginning at GER 103 level.
Freshman Year
- Perspectives I Credits: 9
- Math and Science Perspectives I Credits: 7
As well as:
Sophomore Year
Minimum of One Semester Abroad Taken in the Fall
- Perspectives I Credits: 6
- Perspectives II Credits: 3
- Math or Science Perspectives II Credits: 3
- Upper Division German Credits: 15
- Elective Credits: 3
(3 credits BER course also counts as a PI)
As well as: Junior Year
- Perspectives II Credits: 6
- Upper Division German Credits: 6
- Liberal Arts Elective Credits: 9
- Electives Credits: 9
Senior Year
- Upper Division German Credits: 12
- Liberal Arts Elective Credits: 3
- Electives Credits: 15
As well as: |
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