French Studies (Secondary Major) BA

Program Purpose


This document describes the French Secondary Major, which is specifically for students doing a double major. 

 

The French Studies major provides liberal arts training that sharpens communicative, analytical and interpretive skills. It is designed to help students appreciate the language, literature and culture of France and the Francophone world. It also aims to form general habits of thought and expression that allow students to interpret complex symbolic systems and gain insights into aesthetic experience. Students learn to use diverse texts as a means for understanding culturally specific as well as universal problems, and they do so in ways that stimulate their curiosity and learning beyond their time at the university.

Learning Outcomes


Communication and Language Competence

Graduates in French communicate meaningfully, effectively, and ethically in spoken and written French at the advanced level according to ACTFL guidelines. Using a vocabulary that allows them to discuss issues of local, national, and global interest, they are able to communicate in a range of real-world and academic contexts. They adapt their language to audience, context, and communicative goals, thus demonstrating skills that enable them to serve in a broader range of capacities and communities and that facilitate their becoming life-long learners.

Courses that Contribute: None
Linked to BYU Aims: Intellectually Enlarging
Information Literacy and Critical Thinking

Graduates in French accurately and insightfully analyze the language, literature, and other cultural products of the French-speaking world by recognizing, evaluating, and synthesizing relevant primary and critical sources in their research and other scholarly products. In so doing, they demonstrate the learned abilities to think critically and to "seek out and share only credible, reliable, and factual sources of information" (General Handbook, 38.8.41). Their moral character is reflected in the ethical practices they uphold in their research, including the appropriate use of artificial intelligence tools.

Courses that Contribute: BUS M 596R FREN 201 FREN 202 FREN 317 FREN 490R
Linked to BYU Aims: Intellectually Enlarging
Cultural Navigation and Interpretation

Graduates in French adeptly negotiate cultural values and practices transmitted through literature, film, and other media, as well as engage with complexities of the French-speaking world to create meaningful connections with people of other cultures and perspectives. Their careful study of these cultural products promotes the lifelong cultivation of humility, empathy, and Christlike charity toward their fellow beings.

Courses that Contribute: BUS M 596R FREN 201
Linked to BYU Aims: Intellectually Enlarging, Lifelong Learning and Service

Evidence of Learning


Expected Learning Outcomes

Evidence of Learning

Language Competence:

Demonstrate "Advanced" proficiency in French speaking, listening, writing, and reading.

Standardized language tests (ex. Reading tests when available, standardized proficiency evaluations, OPI) Random samples at entry and exit points of the program.

Research:

Analyze the literature, language, and cultures of the French-speaking world drawing upon an ability to evaluate and synthesize relevant primary, critical, and theoretical sources.

Representative writing samples collected from senior portfolios and from each major course will be analyzed yearly by committee.

Critical Thinking:

Demonstrate the ability to articulate and defend in speech and writing clear and orderly thought on literary, cultural, and linguistic topics.

Representative writing samples collected from senior portfolios and from each major course will be analyzed yearly by committee.

Transferable Skills:

Connect academic experience to personal and professional goals.

Surveys of new (entry) and graduating (exit) majors, and exit interviews by the department chair or other designated faculty member. Alumni surveys.

Coursework

A core set of courses devoted to fundamentals in language, civilization, and literature (18 hours; also the Minor) offers equal instruction across three areas: formative language development in reading, writing, listening, and speaking; a survey of French political, historical, and cultural thought; an introduction to French literature with a sampling of movements and historical periods.

The core:

- Fren 321 Advanced Grammar

- Fren 322 Advanced Composition

- Fren 340 Introduction to Literary Analysis

Complete one course from the following:

- Fren 452R Studies in Period, Movement, and Theme

- Fren 453R Studies in Genre

- Fren 454R Studies in Author

- Fren 455R Studies in Literary Theory

- Fren 456R Francophone Studies

Complete two of the following:

- Fren 361 French Civ., Beginning to 1715

- Fren 362 French Civ., 1715 to Present

-Fren 363 Contemporary French Civilization

Electives (12 hours)from the following:

1. Linguistics (0-6 hours)

- Fren 431 Introduction to French Linguistics

- Fren 432 History of French

- Fren 433 French Linguistics

2. Literature and Culture (3-12 hours)

- Fren 445 Advanced Francophone Culture

- Fren 452R Studies in Period, Movement, and Theme

- Fren 453R Studies in Genre

- Fren 454R Studies in Author

- Fren 455R Studies in Literary Theory

- Fren 456R Francophone Studies

- Fren 495R Senior Seminar in French

- BUS M 596R Business French

NOTE

1. Core courses may fulfill GE requirements:

2. French Studies majors can select Fren 445, BUS M 596R or Fren 490R as ONE of the five required 400-level courses.

3. Minor required for French Studies Major: Option 1: a minored defined by another department (after consultation with an advisor in French and Italian Department). Option 2: 15 hrs of course work in different but related fields (after consultation with advisor in French and Italian Department).

Catalog Information

Major Academic Plan (MAP)

Co-Curricular Activities

Various organizations, activities and programs afford an opportunity to reinforce departmental values and interest, as well as provide specific language or cultural training and practice.

Immersive environment Some co-curricular activities help establish and maintain an on-campus French-speaking community, which nourishes the immersive language environment necessary for foreign language study

 

Incentives for excellence

  • Pi Delta Phi French Honor Society. Provides incentive to students to perform at their best and participate in a larger French community by recognizing excellence in the discipline.
  • Annual Essay Contest
    Annual event with cash rewards and ceremony for 6-9 recipients. Provides incentive to students to perfect their written expression and share their creativity.
  • Teaching, grading, and research assistantships
  • Department Symposia

Other

Regular lectures by invited/guest speakers to stimulate humanistic inquiry and help faculty and students stay abreast of developments in the discipline

Learning and Teaching Assessment and Improvement


1. The French Section meets several times per semester to discuss student learning, curricular improvements, enrollment, and other matters pertinent to the French programs.

2. The French Undergraduate Program Coordinator, French Graduate Program Coordinator, French Teaching Program Coordinator, and the Chair meet as needed to coordinate the programs, and prior to section meetings to discuss new proposals and agenda items.

3. The Chair verifies patterns of grade distribution by semester, faculty member performance, and student evaluations. The chair conducts yearly stewardship interviews with each faculty member (bi-annual interviews for pre-CFS faculty).

4. Every fifth year (i.e., 2005, 2010, etc.), the Chair will establish the Periodic Curriculum Committee to assess long-term trends and to evaluate the work of the standing CC. The idea for this committee arose when we implemented major changes to the curriculum in 2003, after not seeing significant structural change to the curriculum for over 2 decades. The Periodic CC is designed to keep changes on track or to recommend reforms.

5. Student feedback is essential to our student learning improvement plan. We collect and evaluate student feedback in the following ways: Entry- and exit-level surveys, Alumni surveys, student evaluations, mentoring programs.

6. Beginning in fall 2007, each major will be assigned a faculty mentor. Mentors will answer students' questions/concerns about the program and their progress. Mentors will receive program-level feedback from majors (as opposed to the course-level feedback gathered in student evaluations).

7. A French program student liaison works 10 hrs/week for the department and maintains a French Studies blog. BYU French Studies

College Assessment Summary

Full program information, including detailed descriptions of measures of student learning and current data generated by those measures is available on the College of Humanities assessment summary