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Instructor |
Yuhua Tsui Roosevelt Hall, Room 218B 620-341-5400 or
by appointment http://www.emporia.edu/~yuhuatsu |
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Course
Description |
This course is the first of the two-semester sequence of Beginning Mandarin Chinese, designed for students who have no or limited knowledge of the Chinese Language. It has a two-fold purpose: to enhance students’ aural-oral fluency and comprehension, and to develop students’ reading and writing skills. It is intended that by the end of the first semester students will be able to read and write 200~225 characters. The focus of this course is to prepare students for real-world language experiences. Knowledge and skills will be assessed cumulatively. 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. Success in this course requires learner’s persistent efforts, including daily review and constant practice. |
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Course Objectives |
It is expected that at the end of this course, students will acquire the ability
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Textbooks |
Integrated
Chinese , Level 1, part 1: Traditional. 3rd ed. Tao-chung Yao, Yuehua
Liu, Nyan-ping Bi, Yea-fen Chen; Liangyan Ge, Yaohua Shi, Xiaojun Wang, and
Jeffrey J. Hayden (ISBN: 9780887276392) 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:
9780887276415) Optional: 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) |
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Course Requirements |
One hundred points is assigned weekly to (A) Attendance (20 points), (B) Homework
(30 points), (C) Daily Quizzes (10 points), and (D) Weekly Quizzes (40
points). A: Attendance and class performance: Class attendance is a required component of your grade. You should understand that frequent and extended absences will not allow you to develop your aural/oral skills and will therefore influence the instructor’s evaluation of your in-class performance. Generally speaking, excused absences
will only be granted to documented illness and documented family
emergency. Entering the classroom 5 minutes after the class starts is
considered tardiness and three tardiness will be considered as
one absence. Tardiness of more than 20 minutes also counts as one unexcused
absence. If you miss a class, it is your responsibility to find out the material covered during your absence and changes made on the schedule. Attendance is assessed in 4 levels: · Attendance with good performance 20 points · Attendance with poor participation 15 points · Attendance without participation 10 points · Absence 0 point B: Homework: Homework
is assigned on the daily basis. All assignments must be submitted at
the beginning of the class on the
following class meeting. Late work will receive penalty unless you
have documented excuses. Homework overdue for two days will be corrected
but not graded. Sloppy homework or homework with too many errors should
be returned to the student for resubmission. Homework is graded in 5 levels: · 30 points (90%): good work submitted on time. · 24 points (80%): average work submitted on time or re-submitted work of good quality. · 21 points (70%): re-submitted work of average quality · 15 points (50%): returned work without re-submission. · 0 point (0%): unacceptable work, missing homework, or homework submitted late. **A portfolio consisting of all assignment should be handed in at the end of the semester. C: Daily Quizzes: Daily quizzes consist of vocabulary and character quizzes. No make-up quiz is allowed. In case of an excused absence, that quiz will be dropped when calculating the final grades. D: Weekly Quizzes: Weekly
Quizzes can be made up with
20 % penalty unless you have documented excuses and schedule a makeup
quiz with your teacher before the quiz day. E: Lab work: You should plan to attend lab regularly to listen to the tape of the target lesson. F: Tutorial: Tutorial sessions are mandatory. Individual hour will be assigned for each student once or twice a week. This will enable you to get individual attention from your teacher. Absence without documented excuses will count as one absence. G: Presentation: At the end of the semester, each student is required to give a 5 to 10-minute presentation in front of the class. Students can choose his/her own topic but the topic must be closely relating to the topics we studied during the semester. Students should be encouraged to incorporate as much of the studied material/ grammar/ vocabulary as possible, but they can be creative in devising form and content of the presentation. For example, the presentation can be a role play, the telling of a story/ experience, the description of a picture or scene, or a re-enactment of the dialogs in our textbook. Students are required to submit a draft of the proposed presentation to the instructor one week in advance. More details will be given in class. |
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Grading Policy |
1. Weekly points 1400 points 100 points per week 2. Midterm and Final Exams (200 points each) 400 points 3. Essay and Oral
Presentations
200 points Two presentation, 100 points each Total possible points
2000
points Grading Scale
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Academic
Honesty |
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Disability
Statement |
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Course Outline and Schedule |
A detailed schedule will be provided on a weekly or biweekly basis See Schedule |
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Click here. |
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Any question or comments regarding the
content Page updated: July 31, 2008 |