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Sachs, Murray – ADFL Bulletin, 1985
Considers some documentary evidence for the view that the U.S. is on the educational and cultural decline and contends that the principal symptoms of weakness have been with us for decades. Lays the responsibility for many of the problems in the present crisis in humanities education on the humanities faculty. (SED)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Enrollment Trends
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Marcus, Millicent – ADFL Bulletin, 1985
Suggests that the great attraction of film courses is also what makes them very difficult to teach. The expectations of entertainment, the passivity of viewing a film, and the intransigence of the Hollywood model are all potential problems which instructors must confront. (SED)
Descriptors: Course Content, Film Study, Foreign Language Films, Higher Education
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Gutierrez, John R. – ADFL Bulletin, 1990
The coordination, articulation, and implementation of informed teaching techniques and objectives will help to overcome the anarchy and confusion that characterize higher education advanced-level foreign language classes, and will begin to produce a pool of highly competent foreign language speakers and writers. (33 references) (CB)
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Communicative Competence (Languages), Course Content, Course Objectives
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Cipolla, William F. – ADFL Bulletin, 1987
The study and appreciation of literature should retain its traditional position at the center of foreign language study. A "problem-centered" model is described for teaching literature in the undergraduate foreign language classroom using texts organized around a series of complex critical problems. (CB)
Descriptors: College Second Language Programs, College Students, Course Content, Higher Education
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Silber, Ellen S. – ADFL Bulletin, 1987
A teacher reflects on the development, teaching, and subsequent modification of a course on French women writers, and makes a case for the teacher to take the role of learner and collaborator in learning. The need for such a course for those studying the French language and culture is discussed. (CB)
Descriptors: Authors, Course Content, Cultural Awareness, Females
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Patrikis, Peter C. – ADFL Bulletin, 1987
The integration of language and culture should be a priority for language teaching and learning in the coming decade. College-level second language instruction should include discussion (but not mastery of) such related aspects as dialects, heuristics, jargon, and social/class differences in pronunciation and language use. (CB)
Descriptors: College Second Language Programs, Course Content, Cultural Awareness, Futures (of Society)
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Jurasek, Richard – ADFL Bulletin, 1996
This article examines the problems of the intermediate-level foreign-language course as well as student attitudes and goals derived from survey data. (33 references) (CK)
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Class Activities, Cognitive Processes, College Students
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Azuma, Shoji – ADFL Bulletin, 1997
Presents a case study of the business Japanese program for intermediate and advanced students at the University of Utah. Notes that when offering courses in Japanese, colleges are challenged on how to cope with diversification for the purpose of study, specifically in business Japanese courses. Concludes that it is imperative that American…
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Business Communication, Case Studies, Change Strategies
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Gonzales-Berry, Erlinda – ADFL Bulletin, 1996
Argues that a gap exists in university-level foreign-language curriculum that requires a "bridge," that is, a course designed to take students from where they are to where they should be to study for a foreign-language major and describes the bridge course in Hispanic culture at the University of New Mexico. (four references) (CK)
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), College Students, Course Content, Cultural Enrichment
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Gutsche, George – ADFL Bulletin, 1996
Considers the metaphor of the "bridge" as it applies to Russian-language courses at the university level. The article examines broader curricular issues of technology, innovation, and outside pressures on language teaching. (22 references) (CK)
Descriptors: Articulation (Education), Change Agents, College Students, Course Content