Non-Native Speakers - College of Liberal Arts, CSULB

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MINOR in Spanish (Code RGR_UM05):
RGRLL Department Chair
Dr. Markus Muller
Administrative Support Coordinator II
Cerise Dragicevich
AS-312
(562) 985-4318
Students are required to complete a minimum of eighteen (18)
units of which fifteen (15) must be upper-division. Spanish 300)
(6 units) is required of all students. If your secondary education
was done in a Spanish-speaking country, please see an advisor.
COURSE WORK required for:
Heritage Speakers
Administrative Support Coordinator I
Kim Glick
AS-309
(562) 985-4317
SPANISH PROGRAM FACULTY
María Carreira
PhD, University of Illinois/Urbana
Alicia del Campo
PhD, UC Irvine
Bonnie Gasior
PhD, Purdue University
Undergraduate Advisor
Claire Emilie Martin,
PhD, Yale University
Undergraduate Advisor
Leslie Nord
PhD, Yale University
Rita Palacios
PhD, University of Toronto
Alexander Rainof
PhD, University of Michigan
RGRLL Language Coordinator
Markus Muller
PhD, University of California, Los Angeles
Lower Division Units: AP Exam with a score of 4 or 5 or Spanish
250 or equivalent
Upper Division Units:
Spanish 300 for heritage speakers (code 139)
The remaining 9 units can be taken from the program’s 300-400
level course offerings.
Non-Native Speakers
Lower Division Units:
AP Exam with a score of 4 or 5
or Spanish 201B or equivalent
Upper Division Units: Code 138)
Spanish 300 for non-native speakers
The remaining 9 units can be taken from the program’s 300-400
level course offerings.
For information regarding the Master of Arts degree in Spanish,
please see the Graduate Advisor.
For information regarding the Single Subject Teaching
Credential in Spanish, see the Single Subject Credential Advisor,
Dr. Jean-Jacques Jura: jean.jura@csulb.edu.
Advisor Contact Information:
spadvise@csulb.edu
or
http://www.csulb.edu/colleges/cla/departments/
rgrll/spanish/
BACHELOR OF ARTS
IN
SPANISH
Dr. Bonnie Gasior
bonnie.gasior@csulb.edu
Dr. Claire Martin
claire.martin@csulb.edu
Romance, German, Russian
Languages & Literatures
California State University,
Long Beach
(*P upper division in Spanish)
The program offers courses leading to the B.A. degree
in Spanish, the Minor in Spanish and the Concentration
in Bilingual Spanish and English for the B.A. in Liberal
Studies, the Single Subject Teaching Credential in
Spanish, and the minor and certificate programs in Latin
American Studies in addition to several other programs
and degrees.
The requirements for the B.A. Degree in Spanish
include a Basic Core of 21 units (required of all degree
students) and an additional 18 upper division units. In
addition, students must also complete two years of
university-level study of a second foreign language,
or
demonstrate the equivalent level of proficiency in
another language. This requirement can be
fulfilled at a junior college, accredited university or by
an equivalency exam.
THE B.A. IN SPANISH (Code RGR_BA03)
The following requirements for the B.A. also satisfy the
requirements for the Single Subject Teaching Credential
in Spanish, as long as the courses are taught in Spanish.
It is highly recommended that students interested in
the Single Subject Credential consult with the
undergraduate advisors:
Dr. Bonnie Gasior – bonnie.gasior@csulb.edu
Dr. Claire Martin – Claire.martin@csulb.edu
BASIC CORE (21 upper-division units, required of all
Spanish majors)
300 Advanced Grammar & Composition
(*P 201B, 250, or equivalent)
310 Intro to Literary Analysis (*P 300)
330 Literary Masterpieces: Spain (*P 310)
341 Literary Masterpieces: Spanish America (*P 310)
423 Intro to Spanish Linguistics
(*P 300 or instructor’s consent)
430 Spanish Civilization (*P upper-division in Spanish)
OR 445 Latin American Civilization
*P (Prerequisite)
** Spanish 300 has sections for non-native speakers and sections for
heritage speakers. Students should note the difference in code
numbers (138 & 139 respectively) in the schedule of classes.
ELECTIVES (18 units of student’s choice)
314 Oral Communication
335A/B Business Spanish I and II
322 Bilingual Teacher
350 Hispanic Short Narrative
351 Survey of Hispanic Theater
400 Don Quijote and the Critics
420 History of the Spanish Language
426 Morphology and Syntax
427 Contrastive Analysis
428 Spanish Cinema
429 Studies in 19 and 20 Century Spanish Poetry
430 Spanish Civilization
438 Studies in Golden Age Literature
439 Modern Spanish Narrative
441 Studies in 19 and 20 Century Spanish American
Narrative
442 Nation Building and Women’s Writing in 19
Century Spanish America
443 Studies in 19 and 20 Century Spanish American
Poetry
444 19th Spanish America and the
National Family Romance
445 Latin American Civilization
446 Studies in Spanish Culture [Repeatable]
447 The Invention of Spain
448 Romanticism and Realism
449 Dictatorship to Democracy
450 Studies in Colonial Spanish American Literature
455 Cinema of the Americas
460 Studies in Spanish American Culture [Repeatable]
461 Introduction to Translation and Interpretation
(*P 300 with a grade of B or better)
462 Written and Sight Translation I: English/Spanish
463 Written and Sight Translation: Spanish/English
464 Consecutive Interpretation I
465 Consecutive Interpretation II
466 Simultaneous Interpretation English/Spanish
th
th
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467 Simultaneous Interpretation Spanish/English
490 Special Topics [Repeatable]
491 Nobel Poets and Others
492 Studies Hispanic Theater
493 Special Topics
494 Internship in Spanish
499 Independent Study
RGR 100A Uptown, Downtown: The City as Text (*Fall 2013)
RGR 346I European Cinema of Communism, Fascism and
Resistance
RGR 400I Crime & Punishment
RGR 424 Second Language Acquisition
RGR 425 Romance Linguistics
RGR 450I 1492 to present
RGR 470 Technology in the FL classroom
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AS-309
Phone: 562-985-4317
Fax: 562-985-4259
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