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CCOG for GER 211B archive revision 201403

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Effective Term:
Summer 2014 through Summer 2016
Course Number:
GER 211B
Course Title:
Intermediate German Conversation
Credit Hours:
2
Lecture Hours:
20
Lecture/Lab Hours:
0
Lab Hours:
0

Course Description

Stresses conversational skills at the second year level. Recommended: Completion of one year of college level German, simultaneous enrollment in GER 201, or instructor permission. Audit available.

Addendum to Course Description

GER 211B is a second-year level course designed for students who wish to improve their ability to converse in German. Students will have the opportunity to practice the structures and vocabulary they have worked with in their first- and second-year German courses. This is a two-credit transferable course, and it counts as an elective toward associate degrees.

Intended Outcomes for the course

The student:

  • communicates using advanced interactions in predictable and non-predictable settings and uses more advanced vocabulary, the case systems, present tense, future tense and past tense forms

  • applies language-learning skills to various real-life situations

  • recognizes and continues to appreciate linguistic and cultural diversity within the German-speaking world

Outcome Assessment Strategies

Students may be assessed by any combination of the following:

  1. Active participation in class in the target language

  2. Short individual oral presentations

  3. Short frequent contextual written tasks

  4. In-class, interactive student role plays with a partner or in small groups

  5. Oral interviews with instructor

Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)

Include all or some of the following:

  1. Leisure time

  2. Communication

  3. Germany in the 21st century and historical perspectives

Competencies and skills:In a conversational setting the student will talk about him- or herself and the outside world using a variety of grammatical structures, which may include, but are not limited to, the following. The student will:     

  1. Use modal verbs to express desires, skills, needs and wants

  2. Use present, future, and past tenses to talk about past and future concepts

  3. Use conjunctions to form complex sentences

  4. Use relative clauses in descriptions and adding information to discussions

  5. Use word order of time, manner, place to describe plans and other situations

  6. Use negation forms correctly

  7. Use “zu” expressions to talk about complex ideas