2012-2013 General Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG–FOR INFORMATION ONLY]
Department of Foreign Languages and Philosophy
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Department Information
Department Chair: Elise Leahy
General Classroom 108G ~ (435)865-8287
Administrative Assistant: Lana Smith
General Classroom 108 ~ (435) 586-7835
Academic Advisor: Katya Konkle
ST 205G ~ (435) 586-5420
Katyakonkle@suu.edu
Website: http://www.suu.edu/hss/languages/
Faculty: Professors: James W. Harrison, German;
Associate Professors: Elise C. Leahy, French; Kirk Fitzpatrick, Philosophy, Greek;
Assistant Professors: Matias Martinez-Abeijon, Spanish; Rosa A. Perez, French, Humanities; Rachel Kirk, Spanish; James Gustafson, Spanish; Jason Smith, Spanish; James Messina, Philosophy
Degrees Offered
Bachelor of Arts
French
French Education
German (Please note, this program is no longer accepting students)
German Education (Please note, this program is no longer accepting students)
Philosophy
Spanish
Spanish Education
Minors
French
German
Philosophy
Spanish
The department will also consider proposals from students who wish to use the Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies degree.
Secondary Education Teaching License in French, German, and Spanish
Overview of Programs
The Department offers majors and minors in French, German, Philosophy and Spanish. These programs prepare students to communicate well orally and in writing, think critically and analyze literary, philosophical and other texts. Students completing the French, German or Spanish Education Degree are prepared to teach those disciplines in secondary schools. The Department also offers a variety of extracurricular activities which complement and enrich the academic curriculum.
Mission
French, German and Spanish Programs
The mission of the Foreign Language programs in the Department of Foreign Languages & Philosophy is to provide students with a rigorous program wherein they perfect their abilities to communicate in the languages they study. As faculty, we dedicate ourselves to fostering students’ progress in the four skill areas–reading, writing, speaking, listening–and developing cultural awareness as they cultivate productive community connections. Through a series of courses which include language, linguistics, literature, culture and pedagogy, we prepare students for lifelong enrichment, graduate studies, and entrance into the global work force.\
Mission Statement of the Philosophy Program
The mission of the Philosophy Program is two-fold: first, to provide our students with a rigorous foundation in the core areas of philosophy (logic, metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, political philosophy, and history of philosophy), with classes that expose students to the central concepts, thinkers, methods, and debates in these areas; and second, to nurture our students’ critical thinking abilities, by showing them how to identify, analyze, construct, and evaluate arguments of all different types, and by requiring them to actively practice these skills (both orally and in written work). In this way, we equip our students for success after college, whether their plan is to pursue philosophy in graduate school, to attend professional school in another discipline, or to immediately begin their careers.
Department/Program Learning Outcomes
Learning Outcomes: Languages
- Students who acquire a major or a minor in French, Spanish, or German are capable of:
- Narrating and describing in all major time frames
- Speaking and writing about a variety of topics
- Participating as a full conversational partner, initiating exchanges as well as responding
- Discussing abstract subjects and supporting opinions
- Reading texts on a variety of topics and thinking about them critically
- Demonstrating knowledge of the major schools of thought and literary movements and a basic outline of key historical events of the relevant cultures
- Reading and critically analyzing literature
- Demonstrating familiarity with how we learn languages and how languages function
- Graduates certifying to teach:
- Have a sound understanding of theories and approaches to teaching
- Are capable of designing lesson plans for language classes for grades 7-12
- Are capable of incorporating culture into their lessons
Learning Outcomes: Philosophy
Our minors and majors are capable of (1) analyzing philosophical texts by finding and explaining their main theses, (2) reconstructing and evaluating philosophical arguments, and (3) thinking critically about a wide-variety of topics. They are also (4) broadly knowledgeable about the characteristic doctrines and approaches of a number of prominent philosophers in the western philosophical tradition. In addition, our majors are capable of (5) designing and carrying out their own research projects on philosophical topics.
Other Information
Other Languages
In addition to French, German and Spanish, the Department of Foreign Languages & Philosophy is developing courses in Arabic, Greek, Latin and Mandarin. Students are now able to complete the 16 hours of a language needed for a Bachelor of Arts in either Greek or Latin, with Beginning Greek and Beginning Latin offered alternate years. Beginning Mandarin and Arabic are now also offered on a yearly basis.
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