Elementary Spanish II

This course is the second semester of first-year Spanish language and students enrolled in this course should have taken IA 101 or an equivalent. This class and all subsequent IA courses are taught entirely in Spanish. Students entering this level should be able to use the present, future (ir + a + infinitive), and preterit with some fluency and accuracy. Attention is given to building accuracy with grammatical structures introduced in IA 101 and focusing on the differences between the preterit and imperfect tenses along with pronoun use.

Intermediate Spanish I

This course is the first semester of second-year Spanish language. Students enrolled in this course should have taken IA 102 or its equivalent and be able to use the present, future, preterit, imperfect tenses and pronouns with some fluency and have a working knowledge of the present subjunctive. This course is designed to reinforce grammatical structures introduced in first-year Spanish through activities that practice all four skills: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Attention is given to using command forms and the subjunctive.

Intermediate Spanish II

This course is the second semester of second-year Spanish language. Students enrolled should have taken IA 201 or the equivalent and be able to use the present, future, preterit, imperfect tenses, command forms and present subjunctive with some fluency. This course will solidify grammatical structures of Spanish through activities that practice all four skill areas: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Attention will be given to more sophisticated use of the subjunctive and compound tenses. Attendance and classroom participation count for fifty percent, of the requirement for credit.

Metamorphoses: Ovid-Cronenberg

This advanced interdisciplinary course explores the concept of transformation in art, literature, and film, beginning with a study of Ovid's classical text, Metamorphosis and expanding to include modernist (Kafka) and contemporary versions of monstrosity, hybridity, and the grotesque. This course will be organized around independent student projects, but students should be prepared to engage philosophical, literary and theoretical texts in weekly seminars.
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