Spanish 103 Syllabus
The Ohio State University
Quito, Ecuador
Spanish 103
-
Amistades. Student Text and CDs, 2nd ed.
Author: Long and Macián
Published by: Thomson Publishing Company, 2008
ISBN: 1-325-62671-5 -
Diario de actividades and CDs
Author: Long and Macián
Published by: Thomson Publishing Company, 2008 - Spanish/English Dictionary: Your choice
Placement Test: All students who studied Spanish for two years or more in high school and have used Spanish to fulfill the admissions requirement, but have not received any previous Spanish credit at The Ohio State University or another university should have taken the placement test. If you have not done so, inform the Resident Director.
Course Objectives: Spanish 103.01 is the third course of a four course sequence (101.01, 102.01, 103.01, 104) which leads to the fulfillment of the foreign language requirement. Spanish is the primary language of instruction. The general goal of the course is to develop basic language skills. During this course students will...
- Continue to increase vocabulary foundation in order to increase language skills. New vocabulary includes but is not limited to: the human body, health and well being, foods, social events, religious celebrations, and travel vocabulary.
- Continue use of acquired grammatical structures.
- Develop working knowledge of grammar structures associated with, but not limited to: describing health symptoms; giving orders and advice using regular and irregular formal and informal commands, using the present subjunctive to express cause and effect relationships, value judgements and emotional reactions, and unknown /unexperienced entities and events; using the imperfect subjunctive of both regular and irregular verbs to express cause and effect relationships, value judgements and emotional reactions, and unknown/ unexperienced entities and events; using the future tense to make plans; using the conditional to discuss hypothetical situations, or what would or could happen.
- Listen to complex passages, or conversations, and answer questions about the content.
- Read complex authentic texts and answer questions about the content.
- Write compositions using acquired vocabulary and grammatical structures.
- Engage in, and sustain face to face conversation with others about a variety of topics.
- Continue to use the Internet to acquire information about the Spanish speaking world.
- The material in the chapters will be adapted to the unique experience of being immersed in Ecuadorian culture. Specific topics dealing with other countries may be modified so that students may take optimal advantage of learning Spanish while in Ecuador.
Attendance and Participation: All students are required to attend all classes and are expected to arrive on time. If an illness or an emergency prevents you from attending class, you are expected to notify the RD as soon as possible. Upon your return to school, you must submit a note from a physician explaining your absence. The Resident Director will notify you if the absence is excused.
- Makeup work will be permitted ONLY when the RD is presented with acceptable documentation and the absence is excused. Students with an unexcused absence will not be allowed to submit makeup work. Class participation points cannot be made up for any reason.
- After two hours of unexcused absences in a course, each additional unexcused hour will result in a one-percentage point reduction of your final grade per absence. This means that if you miss one school day and your absence is unexcused, your final grade will be reduced by 2 percentage points. For example, an 80% becomes a 78%.
- Lateness to class counts toward unexcused hours and will be rounded to the next quarter hour. (If you arrive 9 minutes late, you now have 15 minutes unexcused; arrive 17 minutes late, you now have 30 minutes unexcused, etc.). Repeated lateness and absences will require a meeting with the RD, will be reported to The Ohio State University, and may result in your removal from the class.
- Missing or arriving late to required meetings and required school activities will be counted as an absence and will be treated as outlined above.
Academic Misconduct: Academic misconduct is defined as any activity which tends to compromise the academic integrity of the institution, or subvert the educational process. All suspected cases of academic misconduct will be reported to the Committee on Academic Misconduct as required by University rules. Such instances include, but are not limited to: plagiarism (representing as one's own work anything done by another), cheating on assignments or examinations, collusion, falsification of excuses, submitting work from a previous quarter without explicit permission of the current instructor, violation of course rules contained in the syllabus or provided in class.
For example for a written or oral report you should use the vocabulary, grammar structures, and strategies you've learned. Paraphrase your information and DO NOT "cut and paste" whole paragraphs from the web. Work submitted must be in your own words. "Borrowing" materials without citing sources is plagiarism.
All cases of copying, cheating, plagiarism, fraud, deceit, and other unacceptable academic conduct will be reported to the Resident Director and subsequently to the Office of Academic Misconduct at the Ohio State University in Columbus without exception.
Code of Conduct: Disrespectful or disruptive behavior in this program will not be tolerated and may result in non-completion of the program. Please refer to the OSU Student Affairs "Code of Student Conduct" Web site for rules and procedure.
Disability Services: Anyone who feels they may need an accommodation based on the impact of a disability should contact the RD to arrange an appointment as soon as possible. At the appointment you can discuss the course format, anticipate your needs, and explore potential accommodations. We rely on the Office for Disability Services for assistance in verifying the need for accommodations and developing accommodation strategies. If you have not previously contacted the Office for Disability Services, we encourage you to do so.
Grading
| Exam 1 (Chapter 9 & 10): 10% | Journal (4 entries per week): 10% |
|---|---|
| Exam 2 (Chapters 11): 10% | Current Events Project (3 entries): 10% |
| Exam 3 (Chapter 12 and Final): 20% | Oral Exam: 15% |
| Composition: 10% | Participation and homework: 15% |
Grading Scale |
|
| Letter Grade | Numerical Equivalent |
|---|---|
| A | 93 - 100 |
| A- | 90 - 92 |
| B+ | 88 - 89 |
| B | 83 - 87 |
| B- | 80 - 82 |
| C+ | 78 - 79 |
| C | 73 - 77 |
| C- | 70 - 72 |
| D+ | 68 - 69 |
| D | 65 - 67 |
| E | 0 - 64.9 |
Note: Students are not permitted to take this course as an audit or pass/fail, or receive a grade of incomplete.
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Calendario
Review Chapters 1-8Chapter 9: La Salud
Text 341-344; Diario 239-241
Text 344-348 & 351-355; Diario 242-244, Lectura "Un dia de estos" 260-264
Text 355-357 & 349-357; Diario 250-252
Text 376-379; Diario 275-278 & Comprension Auditiva "Traeme..." 285-286
Text 382-394, Lectura "Dime como eres" 387-388; Diario 278-280, Expansion 280-282
Text 388-393; Diario 283-284 & Lectura 283-884
Composición
Chapter 11: Relaciones InterpersonalesText 416-418; Diario 301-302
Text 419-425; Diario 302-303, Expansión 304-306
Text 423-427; Diario 311-312 & 321-323
Oral Exams
Chapter 12: Las diversionesText 456-459; Diario 329-331, 345-346
Text 459-464; Diario 331-338
Text 465-466; Diario Lectura "Los Viajeros" 352-355, 342-345, 356-358
Review of chapters 9-12
Exam III (Chapter 12 and Cumulative Final)
Exams (40%): All exams will be created by the OSU Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese and proctored and graded by the RD. You may not use notes or dictionaries during the exams. You will find a review for each chapter and the final on the SPPO Web site.
Composition (10%): In Spanish 103.01 you will be required to write one composition that uses the vocabulary and verb tenses that you have practiced in class. This composition will expand upon your homework and the concepts that you have practiced in class and will be proctored and graded by the RD.
Composition (120 - 130 words) |
Capítulo 9: Los órganos donados DA/264 - 267 |
Journal (10%): 4 journal entries per week of 100+ words each will be turned in to the RD at the end of each week.
Current Events Newspaper Project (10%): Taking into consideration the current chapter topic, find 3 newspaper articles from a current Ecuadorian newspaper pertinent to Ecuador or Latin America to:
- Summarize each article in English (good practice for the SLRPE exam!). This should not be a word for word translation, but a summary of the most important issues highlighted in the article (who?, what?, where?, when?, how?, why? and organized to form a cohesive paragraph).
- Include a vocabulary sheet with 5-7 words that you had to look up in the dictionary. Use each one in a unique Spanish sentence to demonstrate your understanding of the word.
Due to the RD the day before your speaking test. Be sure to copy the articles and vocabulary sheets so that you may study them for your oral exam! Inappropriate themes in oral or written work will not be accepted.
Oral Exam (15%): Your pre-scheduled oral exam has two components: a conversation with your instructor; and a discussion of your current events newspaper project. You may NOT use any notes or scripts during the exam.
- Part 1: Conversation with your instructor. Be prepared to role-play one of two situations on your study sheet by asking and answering questions related to the topic selected by your instructor on the day of your exam.
- Part 2: Current Events Newspaper Project. For the second part of the oral evaluation, you will present the information you have learned while researching your topic on the Current Events Newspaper Project. You should be able to present a summary and discuss with your instructor in Spanish the information you have found. Your instructor will ask you simple questions in Spanish about your report. Using the structures and vocabulary you have learned, you should also be able to answer several other additional questions that are related to your topic.
Participation and Homework (15%): Regular attendance, arrival to class on time, and participation in all class activities and outside activities scheduled during the program are essential to a successful language learning experience. In order for you to progress in your understanding and speaking Spanish, you must hear and speak it on a daily basis. Therefore, you must prepare by completing all assignments in advance and be ready to participate in class activities. Inappropriate themes in oral or written work will not be accepted. Homework will be graded and recorded by the instructor.
All your work should be included in your Quito program portfolio.
| Organization of Amistades and the Diario de actividades | |
|---|---|
| In-class activities for Amistades textbook | Out-of-class homework in the Diario de actividades |
| Introducción, Cultura, Expresiones | Pronunciación (Diario CD) |
| Expresiones (Textbook CD) |
Vocabulario
Dictado (Diario CD) |
| Así es | Así es |
| Primera función |
Primera función
|
| Segunda función |
Segunda función
|
| Tercera función |
Segunda función
Comprensión auditiva #3 (Diario CD) |
| (Diario) Expansión in Chapters 10,11: Material will be included on exams. | Expansión in Chapters 9,12: You will only be expected to recognize but not produce the material on exams. |
| Tercera etapa: Comunicación | Tercera etapa: Comunicación |
| Lectura | Lectura and Literatura |
| Composición | Composición & Mi diario |

