Spanish 409. Advanced Spanish Syntax

        Fall Quarter 2005

Instructor: Dr. Teresa Fernández-Ulloa Language Lab:  DDH/E-102
Office: DDH/110B Language Lab Technician:  Joe McFaddin      Office Phone:    664-2354 Language Lab Phone:  665-6028
Office hours:    E-mail: tfernandez_ulloa@csub.edu
                                                              Website: http://www.csub.edu/~tfernandez_ulloa
Classroom: DDH 104K Dept. phone:  665-2359
Classroom meetings: M/W/F,  Dept. Adm. Asst.: Diana Torres
               2:00-3:25 pm Dept. office:  DDH/B-115
 

Libro de texto:
Guillermo Hernández: Análisis gramatical, Madrid, SGEL, 2000.
Estrella Montolío: Manual de escritura académica, Barcelona, Ariel, 2004.
(Also see Course reserves or course web site).

DESCRIPTION
A course in written and verbal stylistics, with emphasis on Spanish Syntax.
Prerequisite: competency in Spanish at the 202 level or the equivalent, or permission of the instructor.

OBJECTIVES
Al final del curso el alumno tendrá un conocimiento avanzado de la lengua española (acentuación, puntuación, léxico, morfología y sintaxis, planificación y redacción de textos académicos).

GOAL 1
-Conocer las estructuras morfológicas y sintácticas de la lengua española.

OBJECTIVE 1
Conocimientos de análisis morfológico y sintáctico, que se lograrán a través del estudio de la gramática de cada sección y de los ejercicios realizados en clase y en casa.

ASSESMENT 1
Durante el curso habrá dos exámenes, que valdrán un 25% de la nota final cada uno. En dichos exámenes el alumno debe conocer la teoría expuesta en el libro de texto. Los ejercicios que aparecen en dicho libro, y que el alumno debe hacer en clase y en su casa, son fundamentales para el aprendizaje y serán el modelo que el profesor seguirá en el examen. El alumno es responsable de revisar las respuestas en la sección de soluciones, si es que no puede venir a clase algún día.

El examen final valdrá un 25% de la nota total.

GOAL 2
-Mejorar la escritura académica, con especial atención a los siguientes elementos:
 I. Cuestiones oracionales: reglas de acentuación, normativa morfosintáctica, precisión, adecuación, selección y riqueza léxica
 II. Estrategias fundamentales: Planificación, redacción y revisión de un texto académico
 III. Mecanismos lingüísticos propios de un texto planificado: puntuación, uso de conectores y marcadores discursivos, mecanismos de objetivación.

OBJECTIVE 2
Ser capaz de escribir un texto académico al nivel requerido en los cursos superiores de nuestro departamento; ello se logrará mediante las explicaciones del profesor, seguidas de lecturas y ejercicios prácticos, además de algunas composiciones.

ASSESMENT 2
Nos ocuparemos de reglas de acentuación, puntuación y cómo escribir textos expositivos y argumentativos. Habrá varias composiciones en las que se pondrá en práctica lo aprendido en la sección de escritura académica. Las composiciones estarán relacionadas con el tema que se trata en los documentales y películas vistas en clase. Las composiciones deberán traerse el día del examen.

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Se valorará una asistencia participativa y respetuosa con el profesor y los demás alumnos. El alumno que falte 4 días sin justificar (sólo por motivos médicos) tendrá una F en el curso. Esta nota supondrá un 10% de la nota final.

Program
September
10. Lección 1. La oración gramatical y las partes de la oración. La interjección
12. Lección 1. La oración gramatical y las partes de la oración. La interjección
14. Escritura académica: las expresiones referenciales.

17. Documentary: Caminantes, by Fernando León de Aranoa. 60 minutes.
19. Lección 2. El nombre, núcleo del sintagma nominal
21. Lección 2. El nombre, núcleo del sintagma nominal

24. Escritura académica: La puntuación
26. Lección 3. El pronombre
28. Lección 3. El pronombre

October
1. Film: Las tortugas también vuelan, by Bahman Ghobadi. 95 minutes. (“Caminantes” and  “Las tortugas también vuelan”, compositions are due October 26)
3. Lección 4. (And end of the documentary)
5. Lección 4.

8. Escritura académica: La puntuación
10. Lección 5.
12. Lección 5
15. Escritura académica: objetividad e implicación
17. Lección 5
19. Lección 5

22. Repaso examen. Escritura académica: tipos de texto (exposición, argumentación…)
24. Exam 1: lessons 1-5
26. Lección 7 (compositions)

29 Film: Bordertown, by Gregory Nava. 112 minutes.
31. Review first lessons. (And end of film).

November
2. Lección 6

5. Lección 6
7. Film: Bread and Roses, by Ken Loach. 110 minutes.

9. Lección 7. (And end of the film)
9. Lección 7.

12. Holiday.
14. Lección 8
16. Lección 9 (plus a handout about compound sentences)

19. Last day of classes. Exam 2: lessons 6-to the last material we cover

(Students with a D+ or less in Exam 1 should repeat that exam the day of the second exam).

During the lesson, the student will have to prepare exercises. They will be corrected in class.
After each lesson, students have to prepare, for the next day of class, the exercises called “Ejercicios de recapitulación y autoevaluación”, at the end of the lesson.

FINAL EXAM: Compositions: “Bordertown” and “Bread and roses”)
November 26, 2:00-4:30 p.m.

EXTRA CREDIT: activities related to the film El laberinto del fauno. The film will be screened on Monday 19 from 6 to 8, and Wednesday 21 from 2 to 4. (5%)

This syllabus is subject to change to meet the needs of the class. Any such change will be announced.  Students are invited and encouraged to contact the instructor for assistance during regular office hours whenever they feel it desirable or necessary. If you cannot come at those hours, send me an e-mail and we will do it by appointment.
 

NOTES:
NO COMPOSITIONS ACCEPTED AFTER THE DUE DATE.
NO BEPERS OR CELL PHONES ARE TO BE TURNED ON DURING CLASS.

NO STUDENT MAY CHANGE THE SCHEDULED DATE AND TIME OF HIS OR HER QUIZZES, COMPOSITIONS OR FINAL EXAM WITHOUT AN URGENT EXCUSE (medical, etc.).
 

GRADING PROCEDURE:  The grading system in all Spanish courses is identical to the one described on page 70 of the 2005-2007 CSUB Catalog.  Students will be given letter grades on all their tests; on their written assignments, such as compositions, and on their final exam.

A student's grade will depend on the following factors:

  2 Quizzes    25% each
  Classroom participation and behavior 10%
  Compositions   15%
  Final exam    25%

The letter grades given will be as follows: A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, F

GRADING SCALE
A 100-94
A- 93-90
B+ 89-87
B 86-84
B- 83-80
C+ 79-77
C 76-74
C- 73-70
D+ 69-67
D 66-64
D-  63-60
F 59-0
 

INTEGRITY OF SCHOLARSHIP AND GRADES/ACADEMIC DISHONESTY

The CSUB rules regarding the integrity of scholarship will be strictly enforced.  For your information, the rules, as they appear on page 80 of the 2005-2007 CSUB Catalog are as follows:

The principles of truth and honesty are recognized as fundamental to a community of teachers and scholars.  The University expects that both faculty and students will honor these principles and in so doing protect the validity of University grades.  This means that all academic work will be done by the student to whom it is assigned, without unauthorized aid of any kind.  Instructors, for their part, will exercise care in the planning and supervision of academic work so that honest effort will be positively encouraged.

Plagiarism, the practice of taking ideas and writings from another and offering them as one's own, is a form of cheating and is unacceptable.  It may consist of handing in someone else's work, copying a composition, using ideas, paragraphs, sentences, or phrases written by another or using ideas, data, and statistics compiled by another.  This includes rearrangement of phrases from the original into a new pattern.
When using ideas, interpretations, or material written or compiled by another, acknowledgement of indebtedness to the original author or source must be made by the use of quotation marks, footnotes or similar references.

A student may not submit a paper (or two papers which are substantially the same) for credit in two different courses unless a prior agreement to accept such work has been made between the instructors involved.

If any instance of academic dishonesty is discovered by an instructor, it is the instructor's responsibility to give a failing grade to the student for the course.  In every case, the instructor should notify in writing the Dean of Students and the dean of the school in which the student is enrolled of the circumstances of the case.  In all cases of academic dishonesty, the first offense will result in the student's receiving an "F" in the course and the second offense will result in termination of the student's enrollment at the University.

A student may appeal any sanction employed by the instructor and the University based upon an allegation of academic dishonesty by initiating grievance procedures within no more than fifteen (15) school days (academic year) after notification of the grade is mailed or personally given to the student.  Procedures are available in the School deans' offices.

Documentaries and films’ topics:
1. Caminantes (España)
This documentary begins in early 2001 as Mexican Zapatistas began a march to Mexico City to support the San Andres Accord and to protest the oppression of Mexico's rural indigenous population.

2. Bordertown (United States)
An impassioned American reporter for the Chicago Sentinel heads to Juarez, a Mexican bordertown, in order to investigate a series of mysterious slayings involving young factory women from all over Mexico. As she discovers hundreds of victims, she gains the trust of local factory workers but falls into danger.

3. Las tortugas también vuelan (Kurdistán iraquí)
This third feature from internationally acclaimed Iranian filmmaker Bahman Ghobadi is set in his native Kurdistan on the eve of the American invasion of Iraq. The devastation to this land and its inhabitants is revealed in the matter-of-fact perspective of the children and is equally displayed with every poignant detail of its unbearable nature. (IFC Films).
Set in Ghobadi's native Kurdistan, close to the Turkey-Iran border. Soran is a 13-year-old boy who orders other children around as he installs an antenna for villagers keen to hear of Saddam's fall. Eventually, he falls for Agrin but is disturbed by her brother Henkov, who was left armless after he stepped on a landmine and who can now seemingly predict the future.

4. Bread and Roses (Reino Unido, Francia, Alemania, España, Italia, Suiza)
The loftily titled Bread and Roses, Loach's first film made in the United States (with alternating Spanish and English subtitles), is set against the janitors' strike in L.A. in 1988. The Service Employees International Union was yet another union busted in the Reagan years. Janitors who had been paid up to $13 an hour with benefits were replaced by nonunion, usually immigrant, laborers making minimum wage.
A group called Justice for Janitors publicly embarrassed some high-profile companies--such as the William Morris Agency--with joke awards. In June 1990, the LAPD attacked a janitors' march, roughing up a pregnant woman who later miscarried.