French 201 - 300  Intermediate French I   Fall 2014
MWF 9:10-10:05 am; TR 9:35-10:55 am FAC 254 (updated daily)
Instructor: Nathan Love, Ph.D. (I.U.) Office  FAC 282 | 745-5909
Office hours: MWF 8:00-9:00; TR 9:30-10:30 & by appointment
Web page: http://people.wku.edu/~nathan.love  

Required books
: list. Intrigue companionsite MyFrenchLab
IPA | pour écrire | alphabet | numéros | PPT verbes | musique | conjugaison | dictionnaire | radio | actualités | Schaum verbs | projet
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Placement
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F201/202 Intermediate French I and II are a sequence of courses intended for those who have had F102 or the equivalent. F201 and F202 fill the university wide language requirement, and can count as an elective under Categorical Requirement A-IV. The broad outlines of the grammatical structure of French will be covered. There will be much reading and speaking in French. By the conclusion of F202, a student should be able to take any 300-level course--even if taught entirely in French--with the confidence inspired by ample preparation. Through coursework, experience abroad, and other cultural encounters, the Modern Languages Program cultivates communicative skills and cultural awareness that prepare students at Western Kentucky University to be more knowledgeable and sensitive citizens of the global community.


  F201/202 also count toward completion of General Education Category A II, as stated below:
     Category A II. A student completing the general education program at WKU will have:
    Goal 3 . Competence in a language other than the native language;
        bullet demonstrates basic facility of the vocabulary and grammar of a second language;
        bullet demonstrates basic communication skills in a second language.
    Goal 7 . An appreciation of the complexity and variety in the world’s cultures
        bullet recognizes the contributions of the various world cultures to humanity and
            identifies the ways in which these cultures are interrelated and interdependent;
        bullet identifies differences and similarities among the world’s cultural traditions and social organizations.
  The course goals, which follow in order of priority, clearly speak to the General Education Categories A II A and B.
    1. Speaking: To speak French flowingly and with good pronunciation.
2. Listening: To comprehend French spoken at native rate.
3. Grammar: To deepen knowledge of the basic structure of French and general grammatical concepts.
4. Vocabulary: To expand words and expressions for speaking, writing and reading.
5. Reading: To begin to develop reading comprehension in French.
6. Culture: To become more acquainted with the culture of French-speaking peoples, especially through readings and a variety of media.
7. Preparation: Students will become prepared linguistically to take more advanced French.

The primary objective is cultivation of intermediate communication skills in French, especially oral, exchanging information and providing narratives. This entails an emphasis on speaking and listening comprehension. Class will be conducted in French as much as possible! Initially, students may not understand everything said in class, which is no call for alarm. It is an assumption that communication in French, even at the intermediate level, requires much practice, repetition, trial and error in and out of class. Time is therefore precious. The course will certainly be fast-paced.


Participation and attendance: class attendance is mandatory, and participation is essential; speaking French at every opportunity will help a student with speaking and listening skills. Participation will assure progress toward communication skills. Students are to check Blackboard or my Web page) (http://people.wku.edu/~nathan.love/201-202/f201fall2014.htm) and stay abreast of announcements, assignments and changes in the syllabus frequently. In the event that it is necessary to miss class, it is the responsibility of the student to find out what was covered and to learn the appropriate material. Upon returning to class students are expected to be fully prepared: ready to participate, to turn in assignments, and to take quizzes or exams as scheduled. When/if you miss a class meeting, you can be relatively certain that you missed at least one quiz (see below). If absent, one should contact me before the next class meeting – not to explain or excuse the absence, but in order to find out what was accomplished and, especially, what is to be prepared outside of class, unless you believe that you know with certainty what was missed and have no questions about it. The FN grade will be recorded for students who did not officially withdraw from a course, but who stopped attending PRIOR to or on the 60% point of the term.


Auditing An auditor is one who enrolls and participates in a course without expecting to receive academic credit. The same registration procedure is followed and the same fees charged as for courses taken for credit. An audited course is not applicable to any degree or certificate program. Regular class attendance is expected of an auditor. Other course requirements, which may be obtained in writing from the instructor, will vary depending on the nature of the course. Students interested in auditing a course should secure permission from the instructor and discuss course requirements prior to enrolling. Failure to meet course requirements may result in the auditor being withdrawn from the course at the request of the instructor. A successful audit will be recorded on the transcript with the designation AU. (from: Academic Requirements and Regulations, Undergraduate Course Catalog)


Assignments (or homework) will be posted on the timeline part of the syllabus below by means of a link on the date by which the assignment is due. Thus to know what is to be prepared for the August 30 class meeting, click on the link on "30 aug 11" below. (You will know when the assignment has been uploaded, as the date will appear in bold, and turn blue as a link upon passing the mouse over it.) There will be questions or assignments regularly posted on Blackboard or the Web page to be completed before the next class. Unless instructed otherwise, assignments are not printed out and handed in. The majority of the quizzes will cover these assignments.


Interactivités provide practice to reinforce what is presented or briefly reviewed during class. Some will concentrate on vocabulary, some on grammar, some on listening comprehension. Interactivités will provide essential practice with all of the elements just mentioned. They should also prepare students for quizzes and tests. They may be part of what is assigned as homework. You may complete those worksheets not assigned for review of, and turn them in for feedback, if you wish.


Quizzes will be done in class, although most can be prepared for before class by completing the assignments. There will at least one short quiz every class meeting. They will cover what has been assigned or recently presented. If you arrive after the time class officially starts, you forfeit the right to take quizzes that have already begun! Quizzes over what is assigned will provide an indication whether the assignment has been completed and understood. Quizzes covering what has been recently presented during class will likewise provide an indication of your emerging skills, especially concerning grammar and listening comprehension. Some will concentrate on vocabulary, some on grammar, some on listening comprehension, some will even deal with speaking. Many will be done as small group activities during class meetings. Among other things, they prepare a student for exams. As with worksheets, quizzes are not busywork (none of us has time for that!); each one has a teaching or learning point behind it. Quizzes will be numerous; and may not be made up if missed. Since they will be numerous, you may well miss some or do poorly on others. Rather than drop a certain number of quizzes, your quiz average will be curved approximately ten percent to allow for the normal vicissitudes of life.


Exams/Assessments: The exams are meant to gauge your progress toward the course goals with an efficient use of exam time. They test the language skills you are acquiring, and are not limited to simply covering language content: material, pages, exercises or tables that can be memorized on short order. Consequently, you will speak French, listen to French, read some French and write French -- and not merely rehash specific phrases, vocabulary or exercises. There will be no make up exams. If you anticipate a problem with taking an exam when it is scheduled, or if you should miss an exam, contact me at your earliest opportunity! The day and time of the final exam are established by the Registrar. Whereas there may be changes on the syllabus below, the day and time of the final exam/assessment are absolute. Please do not make plans, therefore, at variance with our scheduled final exam.


Student Engagement Activity : Une page bien écrite. All Student Engagement Activities, university wide, you can -- and really ought to -- record at the WKU SEAT page.


Expectations, in summary, are as follows. Students are expected 1) to study, do assignments, and prepare for class, 2) to attend class, contribute and participate during class, 3) avail themselves of resources, and to seek help from instructor when appropriate, including during office hours or by appointment, 4) to demonstrate knowledge and language skills in progress against what is expected, 5) to work, for instance, on pronunciation, listening comprehension and recognition of spoken vocabulary, 6) to submit by deadlines work required, 7) to turn in for a grade the student’s own work and, of course, not to permit work to be used by another for his/her graded assignments. 8) to stay abreast of announcements, assignments and changes in the syllabus at least three times each week. 9) to keep cell phones turned off and silent during class; to keep cell phones and other electronic devices capable of communication/data retrieval out of sight during all graded activities. The instructor is expected 1) to be prepared for teaching each class session, 2) to offer clear examples and explanations, 3) to encourage participation from students, 4) provide opportunities for you to hear, speak, write and read French and to offer, specifically, as much oral practice in class as possible, 5) to meet with students during office hours and by appointment outside of class, 6) to be fair-minded at all times, 7) to respect students, and their beliefs and opinions, 8) to challenge students to meet the course goals as fully as possible. (Click on statement on teaching to read my thoughts on the entire subject.)


Study some French every day without exception and you will discover why language courses used to meet daily. The best way to learn, to meet course objectives and to maximize benefits derived from study of French is without a doubt to study some French every day. You will not be particularly successful if you learn the material for the moment onlyWhat you learn for this or that assignment or for this or that quiz you will need to retain throughout the semester and specifically for the final exam which is cumulative.


Resources available include the textbooks and consultations and extra practice during office hours. Please drop by my office during office hours for five minutes or so for a short, friendly chat before mid-semester. I can find more resources for anyone needing more than these, and would be pleased to do so. For additional resources for individuals, click here.


Course Grade -- sources & weights:

bullet Student Engagement Activity Project: 10%
bullet Participation: 10%
bullet Quizzes & Graded Assignments: 10%
bullet Midterm Exam: 30%
bullet Final Exam: 40%

Academic offenses and plagiarism: “Students who commit any act of academic dishonesty may receive from the instructor a failing grade in that portion of the course in which the act is detected or a failing grade in the course without possibility of withdrawal” (from the current online student handbook). Acts of academic dishonesty include the use of a translating device to complete writing assignments and failing to turn cell phones and PDAs off before taking an exam. Student work may be checked using plagiarism detection software. See Western's statement on academic offenses in the current online student handbook for more information. See the same source for university policy on plagiarism ‑ "To represent written work taken from another source as one's own is plagiarism. Plagiarism is a serious offense. The academic work of a student must be his/her own. One must give any author credit for source material borrowed from him/her. To lift content directly from a source without giving credit is a flagrant act. To present a borrowed passage without reference to the source after having changed a few words is also plagiarism." The use of online translation aids is strictly prohibited. Students enrolled may not assist one another on graded exercises.


Students with disabilities who require accommodations (academic adjustments and/or auxiliary aids or services) for this course must contact the Office for Student Disability Services in DUC A-200 of the Student Success Center in Downing University Center. The phone number is 745-5004. More information is online at: http://www.wku.edu/Dept/Support/AcadAffairs/SDS/sds.htm. Please DO NOT request accommodations directly from the professor or instructor without a letter of accommodation from the Office for Student Disability Services.


Changes: Changes to all matters above may become necessary, especially regarding the syllabus and/or the due dates of graded work. The instructor reserves the right to make such changes as he/she deems necessary. It is the responsibility of the student to obtain the most recent iteration of the syllabus either as posted on the Blackboard site for this course or as made available in the classroom.


1 lundi 25 aug 14 Intrigue Chapitre 1 ; placement ; Schaum 1 [4, 14-15, 18-21]
2 mardi 26 aug 14 Intrigue Chapitre 1 ; Schaum 7 Négation [242-249] ; articles définis et indéfinis
3 mercredi 27 aug 14 Intrigue Chapitre 1 ; Schaum 6 Questions [232-240] ; Schaum 5 [98 -107] ; contractions à et de ; verbes de la 1ère conjugaison (-er) au présent
4 jeudi 28 aug 14 Intrigue Chapitre 1 ; Schaum 5 Verbes [107 -109] présent 2ème conj. et présent 3ème conj.
5 vendredi 29 aug 14 Intrigue Chapitre 1 ; le présent Intrigue ; le présent encore! ; Schaum 5 Verbes [129 -131] présent (Special Uses)

   lundi 01 sept 14 pas de cours
6 mardi 02 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 1 ; Schaum 5 Verbes ; [132-137] présent : les verbes pronominaux et interactivité ; [137-140] l'impératif ;
7 mercredi 03 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 2 ; Schaum 5 Verbes ; [110 -129] présent des verbes irréguliers ; présent des verbes réguliers et irréguliers ; PPT verbes ; [140-142] participe présent
8 jeudi 04 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 2 ; Schaum 5 Verbes ; pas de cours
9 vendredi 05 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 2 ; Schaum 5 Verbes ; l'article partitif (some, any) ; Schaum 5 [148-156] passé composé - avoir ; le passé composé ; PPT Verbs ; les verbes: passé composé

10  lundi 08 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 2 ; Schaum 5 [142-148] ; révision: l'article partitif (some, any) Intrigue, le partitif, pp. 52-54; imparfait ; PPT Verbs & Imparfait
11 mardi 09 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 2 ; les verbes + être Intrigue, le passé composé, pp. 63-64 ; prononciation : liaison ; participes passés ; cours avancés au printemps : F322, F323 & F421 ; quiz: passé composé
12 mercredi 10 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 3 ; vocabulaire à l'aéroport: p. 86 ; dialogue Au Voleur, pp. 84-86 ; Après avoir lu, p. 86 ; le présent (révision) ; prononciation : voyelles nasales ; prononciation : /y/ ; interactivité: l'imparfait; accord des participes passés ;
13 jeudi 11 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 3 ; Schaum 5 157-161] ; prononciation : semi-voyelles ; adjectifs possessifs [98], 1, 2 ; les vêtements [88, 118-119], 1, 2, 3 ; quiz: imparfait
14 vendredi 12 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 3 ; portraits physiques ; les possessifs [98] ; le courriel de Marie Plouff [96] ; La réponse de Marie Plouff [69]

15  lundi 15 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 3 ; Schaum 5 [161-165] passé composé - usage & imparfait - usage ; imparfait ~ passé composé ; timeline, Blanche-Neige, Clark Kent, 1, 2
16 mardi 16 sept 14 révision ; imparfait ~ passé composé ; 1, 2 ; intrigue02video21 (pc et imparfait) traduction ; intrigue03 lettre (pc ou imparfait?) ; 3 petits cochons ; MyFrenchLab: 02.02 resto, 03.01 vocab., 02.04 dictée, 03.02, dictée
17 mercredi 17 sept 14 révision
First bi-term classes: last day to drop a class with a W. Last day to change a class from credit to audit.
18 jeudi 18 sept 14 premier examen -- format : expression orale
19 vendredi 19 sept 4 premier examen: expression écrite

20  lundi 22 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 4 ; Jean de Florette [jusqu'au chapitre 3, p. 16] , images ; Chapitre 1- personnages ; Schaum 5 [173-181] futur , interactivité , une autre ; Schaum 5 [186-188] plus-que-parfait
21 mardi 23 sept 14 Jean de Florette [chapitres 3 & 4, 16-29] ; Chapitres 2 & 3 , Chapitre 4 ; Schaum 5 [173-181] futur , interactivité , une autre ; poème ; 2 chansons 1, 2 ; api - français , exercice
22 mercredi 24 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 4 ; Jean de Florette [chapitre 5, 29-36] Questions Chapitre 5 ; Schaum 5 [182-186] présent du conditionnel ; prononciation [ə] ;
23 jeudi 25 sept 14 Jean de Florette [chapitre 6, 37-44] Questions Chapitre 6 ; Schaum 5 [186-191] plus-que-parfait, interactivité ; ce, cet, cette, ces ; celui, celle, ceux, celles
24 vendredi 26 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 4 ; Jean de Florette [chapitre 7, 45-48]

25  lundi 29 sept 14 Jean de Florette [chapitre 8, 48-53] ; futur 1 ; décrire les gens, p. 127
26 mardi 30 sept 14 Intrigue Chapitre 5 ; Jean de Florette [chapitres 9 & 10, 53-72] ; Schaum 5 [195-213] ; présent du subjonctif, 1, 2 ; prononciation [R]
27 mercredi 01 oct 14 Jean de Florette [chapitre 11, 72-77] ; p.c. 1

02 oct - 05 oct Fall Break

28 lundi 06 oct 14 Intrigue Chapitre 5, décrire le temps, p. 166, écoutez, le subjonctif, pp. 178-181, interactivité ; Jean de Florette [chapitre 12, 77-81] ; quiz: passé composé ;
29 mardi 07 oct 14 Jean de Florette [chapitres 13 & 14, 81-87] ; Schaum 5 [217] le plus-que-parfait du subjonctif ; résumé du chapitre 12 ; Jean de Floretter : personnages principaux
30 mercredi 08 oct 14 Intrigue Chapitre 5 ; Jean de Florette [chapitre 15, 87-92] ; Schaum 5 [212-213] pour éviter le subjonctif
31 jeudi 09 oct 14 Jean de Florette [chapitre 16, 93-97] ; Schaum 5 [161-165] ; subjonctif ? 1, 2
32 vendredi 10 oct 14 Intrigue Chapitre 5 ; Jean de Florette [chapitre 17, 97-100] ; Schaum 5 [161-165] ; 'to leave' ; imparfait - passé composé 1, 2

33 lundi 13 oct 14 Jean de Florette [chapitre 18, 100-104] révision ;
34 mardi 14 oct 14 examen final -- expression orale
35 mercredi 15 oct 14 examen final -- expression écrite -- format

Changes to the foregoing may be deemed necessary by the instructor. It is the responsibility of the student to obtain the most recent iteration of the syllabus either as posted on the instructor's web page or as made available in the classroom.
Course Grade | Quizzes et Devoirs | Midterm Exam  | Final Exam   | Project

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