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undergraduate program
Major
| Minor | FLIE |
German & Engineering | Certificate
| Study Abroad | Placement
Learning German -- or any foreign language -- is different from the educational experience in
other academic disciplines. It's a rigorous and exciting plunge into a new culture, for which you
always need to know what you learned yesterday in order to advance today. The goals of foreign
language learning are to develop the ability to think in the language and to interact with others
who speak it. So even at the start of your first course, the German program emphasizes
mastering all your language skills -- speaking, listening, reading, writing -- within the context
of practical communication. For most people a communicative base can be established with
two years of college language learning.
Through upper division coursework, students' language skills are expanded as they
systematically learn to read and discuss literary works as well as texts from the cultural
tradition and on current affairs. They learn to understand more complicated conversations and
lectures as well as German language films and media presentations. And meanwhile they also
hone their writing skills by writing fairly complex essays, debating, describing, and explaining
ideas.
A period of study abroad in a German-speaking country will accelerate this process of
developing full spoken and written fluency. Nothing matches the excitement and adventure of
traveling and studying abroad, of making the first breakthrough in uninhibited communication,
of finding yourself suddenly able to say exactly what's on your mind in complex language, of
thinking and acting full time in German, of forming life-long friendships.
Learning a foreign language is like stepping through a looking-glass into another world that
can never really be seen by anybody who doesn't speak that language. The structural and
idiomatic patterns of a foreign language provide you with a greatly expanded ability to think,
communicate, relate and analyze. It is just as important that the new cultural awareness
provided by German or any other foreign language breaks down the barriers between people
that are often sustained by general unawareness or by governments (including our own). Living
abroad renders the classical "us vs. them" syndrome meaningless: you will probably discover
that you belong to and are part of people of all countries. Even if you learn a single foreign
language you will share this experience if you learn it well.
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ADVISING
Priority Registration for Spring Semester 2010 is TBA. Make an appointment
with your adviser today! Jeff Rogers
(Director of Undergraduate Studies)
FLIE???
Interested in learning a foreign language while receiving training in the international business world?
Then maybe the FLIE (Foreign Language and International Economics) major is a choice for you.
more information ...
Heidelberg? Regensburg? München?
So many places to go. Ever considered spending a semester or a year in Europe? Find out more about the
many Study Abroad options the German Studies Department has to offer.
Sprichst du Deutsch?
Then why don't come by the Kaffeestunde or Stammtisch to practice your German. You never know who you
are going to meet. For more information on those and other events, click here!
Who is Max?
Want to find out more about the Max Kade German House and Cultural Center? Click here!
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