Required
Texts
| Widmaier
& Widmaier: Treffpunkt Deutsch, 5th ed.: Package combining the textbook & "1KEY CC access kit" for the online Workbook [ISBN: 9780132427456] |
| Janosch: Oh, wie schön ist Panama [Paperback edition; ISBN: 3407780028] (P) |
Recommended
Texts
| Webster's
New World German Dictionary, Concise Edition
($14, orange; conventional dictionary with >100,000
entries) |
| Harper
Collins Beginner's German Dictionary, 2nd ed. 10,000
(??) entries, lots of helpful usage examples, especially
easy to read and use. |
| Zorach
& Melin: English Grammar for Students of
German, 4th ed. |
| Brown:
A Practical Guide to Language Learning |
Recommended
Texts for Motivated Students Info on these books
is on the Deutsch 103 homepage
| Crossgrove
& Crossgrove: Graded German Reader |
| Bürger:
Münchhausens Abenteuer |
| Martin:
Kein Schnaps für Tamara |
| Sempé/Goscinny:
Asterix, Volume 1 |
Course
Requirements and Grading Scheme
| Attendance
& Participation |
15% |
| Homework |
15% |
| Free
Writing Assignments |
10% |
| Final
Role-Play |
5% |
| Spontaneous
Combustion |
0% |
| Chapter
Tests |
30% |
| Final
Exam (Freitag, 14. Dezember, 10:30 - 12:30) |
20% |
| Oral
Exams |
5% |
Course
Website:
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/german/hmr/103/
Textbook websites for Treffpunkt Deutsch:
- You will be completing and submitting activities from the Student Activities Manual via the CourseCompass website for the 5th edition of Treffpunkt Deutsch. You purchased the "OneKey Access" for this with your textbook package; if you bought the textbook online or used, you can use a credit card to purchase an access key via the site. Your instructor will hand out specific access info for the site in class. The general CourseCompass Portal is at:
- For all the exercises whose answers are not open-ended, your answers will be graded automatically online. You can try the exercises repeatedly until you are satisfied with your score. The audio and video tracks you will need to complete the exercises will be automatically accessible on the site together with the exercises themselves.
- In addition to the exercises we will assign you to do for homework, you will be able to access lots of additional grammar and vocabulary exercises and other supplementary materials via the site.
- Your access key will allow you to access this site until roughly one month after the semester ends. You will be able
to continue accessing the audio materials and some of the supplementary grammar and vocab exercises via the freely accessible companion website [just use the pull-down menu to navigate to the chapter you want] at:
Grammar vs. Speaking? No: Grammar Through Speaking!
Class time will be the only time when most of you will be able to practice actually speaking German. There are only about 200 hours of class time in the entire language requirement sequence, so we want to use as much as possible of those 200 hours to let you speak. We use a lot of partner and group activities (which we hope you will find to be an enjoyable, low-stress way of speaking German without worrying about mistakes!), since otherwise you would only get to say one or two sentences per class, and thus less than 400 German sentences during the entire language requirement sequence!
Grammar can be studied and practiced outside of class, so in order to maximize class time for practicing speaking, we ask you to read about the grammar covered in class before we actually cover it in class. This does not mean that you are on your own for learning grammar! We design class activities so that you can focus on speaking and exchanging interesting information while at the same time "painlessly" (we hope ) practicing the grammar you read about at home. Don't worry if the grammar confuses you when you study it on your own: you will find that the practice in class will usually clear things up; if the class seems to need it, your instructor will provide explicit explanations. Please ask questions: your fellow students will be grateful to you!
Students sometimes assume that learning a language means sitting in class struggling doggedly with grammar charts and drills, but researchers in classroom language
teaching all agree that "drills are out" [the title of a recent journal article!] and that maximizing the time for communicative
practice in class is the most effective way to teach students
all aspects of a language in a lasting way. The best thing you can do to learn to speak good German is to relax, come to class prepared, have fun speaking in class, and ask questions when you know you're confused!
Language
Program Director:
Hartmut Rastalsky
(3214 MLB; 647-0404).
Final
Exam, Chapter Tests, Oral Exams
- Please
take note of the date of the final
exam, and schedule travel plans, diseases etc.
around it.
- 5
chapter tests will be given in class. Dates for the chapter tests are listed on the syllabus that will be handed out in class!
- Oral
Exams will consist of two informal conversations in
your instructor's office, for which you are strongly
encouraged to practice, e.g. by going to conversation hours.
You may sign up to take the oral exams individually
(in which case it will consist of a 5-8 minute conversation)
or in pairs (10-15 minute conversation) or groups
of three (15-20 minute conversation).
Final
Role Play and Kothe-Hildner Prize
At
the end of the semester, you will write and perform
a final role play. It is important for you to
demonstrate your ability to speak freely (as opposed
to reading from notes) when you perform the role play.
Here are the details of this assignment:
-
10 minutes or so in length
-
done in groups of 3 or 4
-
must be comprehensible to the class
-
can be about anything picking up on some of the themes
or people that have come up in class (in Treffpunkt
Deutsch, in the videos shown in class, in discussions
in your section).
-
Your fifth Free Writing Assignment will be written
by your group, and will consist of the first 250 words
of the script of your role play.
- Your grade for the essay will be an "E" if you do not contribute to your group's essay, or a "C-" if you do contribute, but not in a timely manner.
- Your grade for the role play will be an "E" if you do not participate in your group's rehearsals, or a "C-" if you do participate, but not reliably.
- The above grades will be given based on the consensus of your group.
- If you anticipate a problem, please notify your group and your instructor promptly!
-
Grades for Free Writing Assignment 5 will be awarded
as usual; grades for the role play will work as follows:
-
Content/originality: 1/2
-
Comprehensibility (including pronunciation): 1/4
-
Structural accuracy and complexity: 1/4
- EXTREMELY
IMPORTANT: Guidelines
for content of role-plays: Please
click on the link (or flip to that page if you're
reading this in the coursepack) and
read and follow these guidelines carefully. Ask your instructor if you're in doubt
as to whether something you're planning to do is appropriate.
Otherwise s/he may have to ask you to rethink your
role play or to come up with an entirely new role
play at the last minute.
- Important
note re: comprehensibility: a crucial component of this part
of the grade is that the role play should be performed, not read. A couple of index cards with key cues are OK, but you should try as much as you can to perform the role plays from memory. If you have to read your script, it will be hard for the class to understand it, and your grade will suffer.
-
In order to further promote comprehensibility of
the role plays, please email your instructor a (short!)
list of words you had to look up for your role play
a few days before you perform it, so s/he can put
these on a transparency and go through them (or
let you go through them) for the class prior to
your performance.
- Kothe-Hildner
Prize for Best Final Role play in German 102/103
- Each
semester, a Kothe-Hildner Prize of $200 is awarded
to the group of students performing the best final
role-play in German 102/103. Instructors
of each section will nominate the best role-play(s)
from their section to compete for this prize.
The competition is normally held from 4-6 p.m. the
day after the last day of classes ==> please try
to keep this time free if you can!
Homework and Free Writing Assignments
- Homework is graded on a scale of "check"/"check +"/"check -". "Check" means the homework has been done well or well enough. "Check +" means it has been done exceptionally well. "Check -" means it has been done poorly and/or incompletely. Late homework automatically receives a "check -". Homework will not be accepted if it is more than two class days late (unless you have a very good excuse). Homework that is not done at all receives a "0". At the end of the semester, we add up your homework grades, with a "check" counting as 0, a "check +" counting as +1, a "check -" as -1, and a "0" counting as -2. If the sum of your grades added up in this way is 0 or more (i.e. on average you have done all your assignments punctually and well), your homework grade is an "A."
- Free
Writing Assignments receive letter grades based on
their content/originality, and the extent to which
you successfully integrate and apply in your writing
the grammar and vocabulary covered in class. You may
write about anything that interested you during the
LRC session on the day of the assignment.
Attendance
and Participation Policy and Grading
- To receive an "A" for attendance and participation, you must attend, be on time [=pünktlich], and participate well.
- Excellent participation is not error-free, but it is frequent, enthusiastic, and demonstrates that you are paying attention and have prepared carefully at home in order to be able to contribute constructively in class.
- Don't worry about making mistakes! Research has shown that all language learners proceed through stages of language acquisition (just at different speeds), each characterized by certain patterns of mistakes, so in this sense you have to make mistakes in order to learn.
- ***Speaking and listening in class are an essential part of this course ==> If you have more than TEN absence hours [defined below] at the end of the semester, your FINAL COURSE GRADE will be an AUTOMATIC E***
- If you have 8 - 10 absence hours, your ATTENDANCE AND PARTICIPATION GRADE (15% of your final course grade) decreases by two full grades (e.g. a "B" becomes a "D")
- If you have 4.5 - 7.5 absence hours, your ATTENDANCE AND PARTICIPATION GRADE (15% of your final course grade) decreases by one full grade (e.g. a "B" becomes a "C")
- Ask your instructor about ways to make up "absence hours," such as attending Kaffeestunden or movie nights at the Max Kade House, or attending German tables in South Quad or Bursley. You can make up a maximum of four absence hours.
- Please explain all absences, in advance if possible. Excused absences count as half an "absence hour," i.e. for example 8 excused absences + 2 unexcused absences = 6 "absence hours."
- Absences for the following reasons will generally be excused: medical, psychological or family issues, family events such as weddings, baptisms or graduations, job interviews, trips for musical performances, debates or athletic events in which you are participating, etc.
- Absences for the following reasons will generally be unexcused (but please still tell your instructor what's going on, so s/he won't think you've stopped caring!): oversleeping, hangovers, studying or completing work for another class, fraternity or sorority events, trips to attend concerts or athletic events, family trips, etc.
Max
Kade Haus--making up absences and missed work
- This is the University's German Residence, located in Thieme House in Baits Housing on North Campus.
- There is a weekly "Kaffeestunde," where you can chat informally in German. Don't be intimidated: although you are just beginning to learn German, people will appreciate the effort you are making, and you'll learn a lot from trying.
- If you tell the Head Resident to write down your name, s/he will inform your instructor of your attendance at Kaffeestunde; each Kaffeestunde you attend can erase one absence hour.
- The Kade House also hosts a bi-weekly film series for German students. Click here for a detailed schedule. You can erase one absence hour by watching one of these movies and writing a brief journal about it.
- If you go to a Kaffeestunde or movie night at the Kade House, you can write about this for a Language Learning Journal. Note that you cannot both make up an absence and write an LLJ based on the same visit to the Kade House.
- For directions and more information about the Kade house, check out its website at http://www.lsa.umich.edu/german/german/maxkade/.
Residence
Hall Dinner Tables--another opportunity to make up for absences
These are tentatively scheduled to
take place on
- Tuesdays
from 5:00-6:00 in the South Quad cafeteria
- Thursdays
from 5:30-6:30 in the Bursley cafeteria
An instructor will be present, and you can just eat and chat in German. Look for signs and/or flags marking the table as "Der Deutschtisch."
Advice and Resources
- There is endless potential for having fun in foreign language classes. Make up interesting sentences. Be playful. Get to know fun facts about your fellow students!
- ASK QUESTIONS!! For every question you ask, there are likely to be several people in the class who will be grateful you asked it.
- Take a look at the "Reading Strategies" page on the course website. Above all: (1) Skim texts once before you read them thoroughly. This will save you a lot of time: it is the first thing you will hear in any speedreading course. (2) Fight the urge to look up every unfamiliar word. Use your knowledge and common sense to help you fill in the gaps. Remember how efficiently you do this in English e.g. when you are having a conversation in a noisy place! If you know what the word probably means, don't look it up unless what you read or hear later proves that your guess must have been wrong.
- Look at essays as a way to try out words and constructions you have learned [this is also likely to improve your grade!]. Avoid translating from English!
- Find a study partner in your section or in another section of the course. You'll have more fun, you can share pizza (or Bratwurst), two heads are better than one, and you never learn a thing as well as when you try to explain it to someone else. There is abundant research data to show that students who work in study groups are more successful language learners.
- German Lab: There will be a "German Lab" in the Language Resource Center MTWTh 2 - 5 p.m. During these times, one or more German instructors should always be present to help you with your questions.
- Set aside a time every day to think in German about what you are doing ("Ich stehe auf. Ich putze mir die Zähne. Ich renne nackt durch die Straßen..."). This can be fun, requires no time, and is great practice for the oral exams. Look up words for things you care about.
- Send cookies, weird t-shirts, rare Bruce Springsteen recordings etc. to the course coordinator.He deserves it.
- Watch Deutsche Welle TV at the Language Resource Center or on UMTV.
- Try some of the other "Self-Study Advice" on the Course Website.
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