ARAB 202: Intermediate Modern
Arabic Language and Culture II (Spring Semester)
Course Syllabus
Instructor:
Instructor: Maher Awad
Office: Rayzor
Hall 329
Office
phone: (713) 348-3260
E-mail: awad@rice.edu
Course Description:
In
this fourth course of the Arabic sequence, assignments and activities center on
historical, geographic, social, and literary topics, as well as current issues
in the Arab world. Students will acquire additional forms, structures, and
expressions that help them communicate their thoughts through discourse at the
Intermediate-High level. Prerequisite: ARAB 201, placement test, or
permission of the instructor. This is a Distribution Group I course. (4
credits)
Course Goals in Terms of Proficiency:
By the end of this course, students will
reach the threshold of the Intermediate-High level on the scale devised by the
American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL). The following
statements will roughly describe your four language skills at the end of this
course (taken from the ACTFL guidelines):
SPEAKING: Intermediate‑High
speakers are able to converse with ease and confidence when dealing with most
routine tasks and social situations of the Intermediate level. They are able to
handle successfully many uncomplicated tasks and social situations requiring an
exchange of basic information related to work, school, recreation, particular
interests and areas of competence, though hesitation and errors may be evident.
Intermediate‑High speakers handle the tasks pertaining to the Advanced
level, but they are unable to sustain performance at that level over a variety
of topics. With some consistency, speakers at the Intermediate High level
narrate and describe in major time frames using connected discourse of
paragraph length. However, their performance of these Advanced‑level
tasks will exhibit one or more features of breakdown, such as the failure to
maintain the narration or description semantically or syntactically in the
appropriate major time frame, the disintegration of connected discourse, the
misuse of cohesive devises, a reduction in breadth and appropriateness of
vocabulary, the failure to successfully circumlocute,
or a significant amount of hesitation. Intermediate‑High speakers can
generally be understood by native speakers unaccustomed to dealing with non‑natives,
although the dominant language is still evident (e.g. use of code‑switching,
false cognates, literal translations, etc.), and gaps in communication may
occur.
LISTENING: Learners
at the Intermediate-High level are able to sustain understanding over longer
stretches of connected discourse on a number of topics pertaining to different
times and places; however, understanding is inconsistent due to failure to
grasp main ideas and/or details. Thus, while topics do not differ significantly
from those of an Advanced level listener, comprehension is less in quantity and
poorer in quality.
WRITING: Writers
at the Intermediate-High level are able to meet all practical writing needs
such as taking notes on familiar topics, and writing uncomplicated letters,
simple summaries, and compositions related to work, school experiences, and
topics of current and general interest. Intermediate-High writers connect
sentences into paragraphs using a limited number of cohesive devices that tend
to be repeated and with some breakdown in one or more features of the Advanced
level. They can write simple descriptions and narrations of paragraph length on
everyday events and situations in different time frames, although with some
inaccuracies and inconsistencies. For example, they may be unsuccessful in
their use of paraphrase and elaboration and/or inconsistent in the use of
appropriate major time markers, resulting in a loss in clarity. In those
languages that use verbal markers to indicate tense and aspect, forms are not
consistently accurate. The vocabulary, grammar, and style of Intermediate-High
writers essentially correspond to those of spoken language. The writing of an
Intermediate-High writer, even with numerous and perhaps significant errors, is
generally comprehensible to natives not accustomed to the writing of
non-natives, but gaps in comprehension may occur.
In
addition to the above four linguistic skills, students in this course will gain
information about and insight into the culture of the Arabic-speaking world.
Course Materials:
These books are required:
·
Al-Kitaab with
DVDs: A Textbook for Beginning Arabic, Part One, 2nd edn.,
2004, by Brustad et al.
·
Al-Kitaab with
DVDs: A Textbook for Arabic, Part Two, 2nd edn., 2006,
by Brustad et al.
·
A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic, 4th edn.,
1994, by Hans Wehr.
The following book is not required. It is
a classic, concise, and brief description of the Arabic language:
·
Arabic Language Handbook, Georgetown
University Press, 2003, by Mary Catherine Bateson
(updated reprint of the original 1967 edition).
Course Requirements and Grade Distribution:
1. Attendance
and participation – 20%. You are expected to come to every class meeting
and to come prepared for class activities. This means that before you
come to class you should do the assigned reading, watch the DVDs, study the new
vocabulary, preview the exercises that are to be done in class, and be ready to
answer questions. Quality participation in class is crucial for success.
‘Quality participation’ is a cover phrase for active, engaged, voluntary,
non-disruptive, and consistent participation. Missing class not only means extra
time for you to catch up, it is also unfair to your classmates as you will
undoubtedly slow everyone down. You are allowed three absences during the
semester for any reason and without any justification. Use these absences if
you really need to. If you don’t need to, don’t use them. An absence beyond the
three which is not excused will impact your grade negatively. For an absence to
be excused, it must be for a compelling reason (e.g.
illness, job interview, conference presentation, etc.) and it must be
documented. Furthermore, note that class will begin and end on time and that
two instances of tardiness will count as one absence. You are responsible in
detail for material and information covered in class when you were absent or
when you arrived late or left early. Check with your classmates or with me
about what you may have missed. Note further that your participation grade is
affected by whether or not you stay in touch with me in office hours on a
semi-regular basis throughout the semester.
2. Homework
– 15%. There will be two main kinds of homework: (1) homework that will be
turned in to be corrected and graded, and (2) homework that will be
spot-checked in class for verification that it was done. Expect one or the
other kind of homework every class. At the beginning of class, all written
homework that is not for turn-in must be visible for spot-checking. No late
homework will be accepted without a compelling reason. It is your
responsibility to arrange to turn in your homework on time even if you must
miss class on the day the homework is due. The following grading scale will be
used to grade homework (out of 10 points):
10 = A = excellent/very
good
9 = B = good/above
average
8 = C = okay/average
7 = D = acceptable/below
average
1–6 = F = failing
3. Lab
requirement – 5%. You will log at least 60 minutes of work in the language
lab (
4. Conversation
tutorial requirement – 5%. Along with a small group of your classmates, you
will meet with a native speaker “tutor” for an hour a week to practice your
conversation skills in Arabic.
5. Vocabulary
quizzes – 5%. There will be approximately 5 vocabulary quizzes, one every
time we begin a new chapter in Al-Kitaab.
6. Chapter
tests – 25%. There will be 2 or 3 chapter tests, one every time we cover
two chapters in Al-Kitaab. These tests will be
scheduled as we go and will be announced a week or two in advance.
7. Oral
presentation – 10%. There will be one oral presentation due in class in the
last two weeks of the semester. The script of the oral presentation is due a
few days before the oral presentation is due.
8. Final
exam – 15%. There will be a cumulative final exam during the final exam
period. The date of the final exam will be announced a few weeks into the
semester, as soon as the Registrar’s office releases that information.
Grading Scale: This is the scale that will be used to calculate your
final course grade:
98–100% = A+ 89–91 = B+ 80–82 = C+ 71–73 = D+ 0–64 = F
95–97 = A 86–88 = B 77–79 = C 68–70 = D
92–94 = A- 83–85 = B- 74–76 = C- 65–67 = D-
Your goal is to learn Arabic, not to
obsess over grades. The point of the grades is merely to keep you on track
toward that goal. Do your work well, and the grades will take care of
themselves.
Other Requirements and Expectations:
1.
It is
highly unadvisable to take this course on a pass/fail grading basis as this
tends to create two performance levels in class, the lower-level students being
the ones opting for pass/fail.
2.
You should expect to spend at least
two hours preparing for every in-class hour.
3.
You should come to office hours often
during the semester, not only when there is a problem or an upcoming test. Your
participation grade is affected by whether or not you stay in touch with me in
office hours on a semi-regular basis throughout the semester.
4.
You are required to form groups of 3–4
students each and meet at a regular time for an hour once a week to practice
your Arabic and to study together. Take the initiative in approaching your
classmates to form your group.
5.
Planned
absences (e.g., for religious observance, a job interview, a medical procedure,
a conference presentation, etc.) must be communicated to me during the first
two weeks of class, even if the exact dates of the planned absence are not
known. In general, let me know as soon as you become aware that you must be
absent on a given day. You will be responsible for making up any work you miss
during your absence.
6.
No
makeup exam or test will be given without a compelling documented reason.
7.
You
are required to save every test and assignment returned to you in an organized
folder until after the final grades are assigned at the end of the semester.
This includes assignments that you send me electronically.
8.
Every
requirement in this course, from the smallest to the biggest, will be carried
out in accordance with the letter and spirit of the Rice Honor Code.
Special Needs:
Any student with a documented disability
who needs academic adjustments or accommodations is requested to speak with me
during the first two weeks of class. All discussions will remain
confidential. Students with disabilities will also need to contact Disability
Support Services in the Student Center (RMC).