Modern Language and Literature

AS 110 Beginning Chinese I

MWF 2:00 ~  2:50 PM

 Instructor

Course Description

Course Objectives

  Required Texts

Requirements

Greading Policy

Academic Honesty

 Disability Statement

Schedule

 

 

Links

Instructor  

Office

Telephone

Office Hours

Email  



 Course Description










 Course Objectives









 




 Required Texts



















 Course Requirements




























 Greading Policy
























 




Academic Honesty 














Disability Statement







 

Course Outline and Schedule


 Yuhua Tsui

Roosevelt Hall, Room 218B

620-341-5400

MWF  11:00-11:50 , or by appointment

ytsui@emporia.edu



This is a course in beginning Chinese. It has a two-fold purpose: to enable students to speak and understand Mandarin Chinese at the beginning level, and to help students recognize and write the most common 200 Chinese characters.

This course is designed to prepare students for real-world language experiences. Cumulative implies that knowledge and abilities acquired in one phase of the learning process will continue to actively be used in later phases, infused with new material.

 


It is expected that at the end of this course, students will acquire the ability to
       1.  pronunce the Chinese words and sentence with 80% accuracy,
       2.  orally express their thoughts in basic sentence with 90% accuracy,
       3.  react appropriately to other's oral behavior,
       4.  write 200 characters and read sentences containing those characters.

 



 

Integrated Chinese , Level 1, part 1: Traditional. 2nd ed. Tao-chung Yao, Yuehua Liu, Nyan-ping Bi, Yea-fen Chen; Liangyan Ge, Yaohua Shi, Xiaojun Wang, and Jeffrey J. Hayden (ISBN: 0887272622)

Integrated Chinese Level 1 Pt. 1 Workbook: Traditional. 2nd ed. Tao-chung Yao, Yuehua Liu, Nyan-ping Bi, Yea-fen Chen; Liangyan Ge, Yaohua Shi, Xiaojun Wang, and Jeffrey J. Hayden. (ISBN:0887272649)

Integrated Chinese Level 1 Pt. 1 Character Workbook: Traditional and Simplified. Tao-chung Yao, Yuehua Liu, Nyan-ping Bi, Yea-fen Chen; Liangyan Ge, Yaohua Shi, Xiaojun Wang, and Jeffrey J. Hayden. (ISBN: 0887274382)

 

 

Attendance:  Class attendance is a required component of your grade.  You should understand that frequent and extended absences will not allow you to develop your oral skills and will therefore influence the instructor’s evaluation of your in-class performance.  If you miss a class, it is your responsibility to find out what material was covered during your absence.  If you are sick, you should show the doctor’s note to your instructor.  If you cannot make it to class, tell the instructor in advance.  If something unexpected happens, you should call the instructor on that day.  Reasons or excuses which are brought up after you come back will not be considered.

Homework:  All assignments must be submitted at the beginning of the class on the day it is due.  Late work will not be accepted.

Quizzes:  Daily/Weekly quizzes, tests and dictations cannot be made up unless you have a doctor’s note or the instructor’s approval in advance.

Lab work: You should plan to attend lab regularly to listen to the tape of the target lesson.

Tutorial: Individual hour will be assigned for each student once or twice a week.  Tutorial sessions are mandatory.  This will enable you to get individual attention from your teacher.



Attendance, Daily Performance  (5 points per class attendance)           200 points

Daily/Weekly Quizzes (20 points per quiz)                                           200 points

Homework                                                                                         200 points

Midterm and Final Exams (150 points each)                                        300 points

Essay and Final Presentation                                                                100 points

Total possible points                                                                            1000 points

Grading Scale


 A

 93-100%

C+          

 77-79%

 A

 90-92%

C            

 73-76%

B+     

 87-89%

C-

 70-72%

 B       

 83-86%

D+

 67-69%

 B-      

 80-82%

D

 60-66%  



  F
   <60%

                                     



At  Emporia State University , academic dishonesty is a basis for disciplinary action. Academic dishonesty includes but is not limited to activities such as cheating and Plagiarism (presenting as one's own the intellectual or creative accomplishments of another without giving credit to the source or sources).

The faculty member in whose course or under whose tutelage an act of academic dishonesty occurs has the option of failing the student for the academic hours in question and may refer the case to other academic personnel for further action. Emporia State University may impose penalties for academic dishonesty up to and including expulsion from the university



 

 Emporia State University will make reasonable accommodations for persons with documented disabilities. Students need to contact the Director of Disability Services and the professor as early in the semester as possible to ensure that classroom and academic accommodations are implemented in a timely fashion. All communication between students, the Office of Disability Services, and the professor will be strictly confidential.


  A detailed syllabus will be provided on a weekly or biweekly basis


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Page updated: August 20, 2006