Artefacts 2014: Russian Elementary to Advanced

Post 1 Sem 2 Russian Cuisine

Post 2 Sem 2 Self-portrait Using a screen capture

Post 3 Sem 2 Bio

Post 4 Sem 5 Lit analysis

Post 5  Sem 4 Story retell

Post 6 Sem 5 Comparing 2 characters

 

Post 7

Post 8

Post 9

Post 10

Artefacts 2014: Spanish elem to Adv media compostitions

Topics include: Selfportraits, travelogues, colonial history & research, biographies, odes, creative compositions, film analyses

Post 1 Sem 4 Ode

Post 2 Sem 3 Travelogue

Post 3 Sem 3 Biography

Post 4 Sem 5 Creative composition

Post 5 Sem 4 Documentary

Post 6 Sem 5 Creative composition

Post 7 Sem 6 Lit Analysis

Post 8 Sem 7 Colonial Latin America

Post 9 Sem 3 Self-portrait

Artefacts: Elementary to IntermediateChinese

The following topics are samples of student work developed over 4 semesters at Lafayette. The classes meet 3 times a week for 50 minutes. Students work an additional hour per week with a Fulbright conversation partner.

Topics: Original poems, ads, self-portraits, transportation, weather

Post 1: Sem 2

Post 2.  Sem 3

Post 3. Sem 4

Post 4. Sem 4

Post 5 Ind Study

Post 6 Lesson

Post 7 Sem 4

Post 8 Sem 1 Poem

Culture in Independent Language Study

A GILS course is very labor intensive, but there is a concerted effort to also connect the student and the language to the culture where the language is used.  Of interest here is the poster about the Arabic spring (continued interest) from the 1st semester and then the student’s video about her family. Note the comments by evaluators.

View work.

Quixote

Matt wrote this reflection as part of a capstone experience while looking back on a course that he took in his  junior year. Of particular interest is his use of the CanDo self-efficacy terms found in the course surveys offered by  the Department each semester. These survey terms are designed to scaffold students’ metacognitive skills and reflection on their progress and help them set up goals.

Visit the site.

 

Teaching Internship in Arabic

This student is enrolled in  the FLL methods class as part of his preparation to be a GILS conversation partner. Of note are the course outcomes and and the evidence that he provides as he completes each one.  This is a team taught class, so he will have responses from several instructors.

Course outcomes and evidence provided by student.

Instructors: Hammouch, Toulouse, Qualtere, Geoffrion-Vinci,           Lafayette College

GILS in Arabic

We have a beta program where we are offering less commonly taught languages using the NASILP model.  Do take a look at this student’s course page.

We are very happy with the use of course objectives and students providing “evidence” of having met these objectives.
The digital pen has been a real find; students are writing the alphabet in the 1st semester and saying the letters as they write.  They tell me that this helps them hear their mistakes and forces them to read, not just draw.  These pens should also make it easier for our off-campus evaluator to see their work.
We are insisting on a proficiency approach where students speak the language, not just write it and take tests as may be the case at another institution. Moreover, our students taking this independent study, have formed a small support group of heritage speakers and Americans; they are working together on both  written and spoken proficiency –a true community of learners.

This sample site is the eportfolio of a  Freshman; we’re looking forward to seeing her document her learning over the semester and the next four years.

Instructors: M. Toulouse, N. Hamouch, M. Geoffrion-Vinci
Conversation partner: Y. Selum                                                          Lafayette College

Web research in Spanish Civilization

Course objectives:

  • to do research on selected topics using authentic Spanish web sites
  • to be able to reflect on this work
  • to develop the analytical skills to critique the work of others as well as learn from their critiques of one’s personal work
  • to  share this work within a community of learners.
  • Targeting reading and writen communicative proficiency as well as the connections and  community,

Go to sample: Spanish, 331 and Spanish 331, sec 2

Instructor: M. Geoffron-Vinci                      Lafayette College

Artifact: Composing a multimedia documentary

In this Spanish course on Pre-Colombian Latin America, students used images from a research data base created by the professor to “write” a documentary on a topic of their choice. This is a scaffolded project with a print draft and required practice pronunciation with a FLLRC native speaker proctor; most projects were collaborative with students learning from each other.

Communicative objectives: interpretive, presentational (speaking and “writing”).

Sp341_ColImages_t

Artifacts from French Stylistics and Translation

Objective: to add a new communicative competencies to a course curriculum that previously only required an reading and writing component.

Sample one : students were asked to professionally subtitle segments of a French film (listening)

Fr400_CarrieSubtitle

Sample two: students were asked to interview a French students on their opinion of the American elections and then subtitle the segment for the local American TV station. Quite serendipitously, one of the American students was in turn asked to be interviewed by his French counterpart, who was a communications major; the interview was run on Radio France and published on their website.  (listening,  interpersonal  modes of communication)

electionFr

Capstone Course in Spanish

Matt was an engineering major, Spanish minor. He is currently working for an international chemical firm in Pennsylvania. He has exported his original ePortfolio from Lafayette’s servers and is continuing to build it in his current job.

Please see here his self-reflections on his work in Spanish while at Lafayette.

Instructor: M. Geoffrion-Vinci                       Lafayette College