CCOG for RUS 203 archive revision 201403

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Effective Term:
Summer 2014

Course Number:
RUS 203
Course Title:
Second Year Russian
Credit Hours:
5
Lecture Hours:
50
Lecture/Lab Hours:
0
Lab Hours:
0

Course Description

Continuation of RUS 202. Continues to expand structure and vocabulary for the purpose of active communication. Includes practice in reading and writing. Recommended: Completion of RUS 202 or instructor permission. Audit available.

Intended Outcomes for the course

Upon successful completion students should be able to:

1. Manage most communicative tasks in a variety of social situations.
2. Communicate effectively with some rephrasing and circumlocution with most native speakers.
3. Narrate and describe with increased detail and length using a variety of time frames and modes and all six cases with consistent accuracy.
4. Understand the values underlying cultural behaviors and attitudes within the Russian-speaking world and how it relates to one’s own cultural perspective.
5. Compare and contrast historical and cultural movements through analysis of selected words of art, literature, music, film and/or performing arts
from the target culture.
6. Analyze and develop responses to hypothetical and increasingly complex ideas in a variety of authentic material in the target language.

Integrative Learning

Students completing an associate degree at Portland Community College will be able to reflect on one’s work or competencies to make connections between course content and lived experience.

Outcome Assessment Strategies

  1. Active participation in class
  2. Contextual written tasks (in or outside of class) to assess reading, writing, cultural and aural competencies
  3. Oral interviews with instructor
  4. In class, interactive student role-plays and other pair activities
  5. Individual and group presentations

Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)

Include all or most of the following:

  1. Uni-directional and multi-directional verbs of motion in past, present and future
  2. Usage of uni-directional and multi-directional verbs of motion
  3. Review of stating destination/location using accusative and prepositional cases
  4. Stating destination/location at person’s house using dative and genitive cases
  5. Stating откуда оrigin using genitive case
  6. Environmental/social impact of driving in Russia
  7. Travel and vacations
  8. Prefixed verbs of motion formation and usage in past, present, and future
  9. Prefixed verb of motion, prepositions and case governance
  10. Describing direction and routes
  11. Solutions to environmental/social issues of driving in Russia
  12. Relative clauses with который-singlular and plural all cases
  13. Formation and aspect usage of imperative verbs
  14. Russian superstitions and folk beliefs
  15. Making comparisons
  16. Formation of regular and irregular comparative adjectives
  17. Expansion of professions vocabulary
  18. Discussing professions and work
  19. Jobs/employment in Russia
  20. Real and hypothetical conditions and the conditional mood
  21. Subjunctive mood to state wishes
  22. Russian novella “Goluboe i zelyonoe”


Competencies and Skills:

  1. Manages increasingly detailed discussions about itinerary, travel and vacations, environmental issues related to driving, superstitions, school, work, career plans, unemployment, job skills, real and hypothetical situations
  2. Speaks in the present tense with high degree of accuracy and a greater range of verbs
  3. Correctly uses verbal aspect in both past and future tenses but not consistently
  4. Speaks about hypothetical situations with limited accuracy
  5. Speaks using the six cases with much greater accuracy
  6. Communicates effectively using some circumlocution and rephrasing with most native speakers.
  7. Comprehends normal rate native speech in contextual settings.
  8. Writes using detail and multiple paragraphs in a variety of time frames and modes and all six cases with consistent accuracy.
  9. Reads and understands the main ideas and details of more complex authentic texts including selected short stories and a short novella.
  10. Uses increased contextual and linguistic clues to consistently deduce the meaning of new vocabulary
  11. Begins to analyze and develop responses to hypothetical and increasingly complex ideas in a variety of authentic material in the target language
  12. Begins to understand the values underlying cultural behaviors and attitudes in regard to education, work, vacation, environmental issues, and superstitions within the Russian-speaking world in relation to one’s own cultural perspective
  13. Begins to compare and contrast historical and cultural movements through analysis of selected words of art, literature, music, film and/or performing arts from the target culture.