Fall 2011

FALL QUARTER 2011 COURSES

 
Course Section Title Units CRN Days/Times Location Instructor
ITA 1 1 Elementary Italian 5 68781 M-F 9:00-9:50 129 Wellman G. Foscarini
ITA 1 2 Elementary Italian 5 68782 M-F 10:00-10:50 129 Wellman G. Foscarini
ITA 1 3 Elementary Italian 5 68783 M-F 11:00-11:50 129 Wellman G. Foscarini
ITA 1 4 Elementary Italian 5 68784 M-F 12:10-1:00 251 Olson A. Rudiak
ITA 1 5 Elementary Italian 5 68785 M-F 1:10-2:00 251 Olson J. Grossi
ITA 1 6 Elementary Italian 5 68786 M-F 9:00-9:50 1134 Bainer J. Grossi
ITA 3 1 Elementary Italian 5 68787 MWF 12:10-1:00 209 Wellman J. Grossi
ITA 4 1 Intermediate Italian 4 68788 MWF 10:00-10:50 209 Wellman A. Bassi
ITA 4 2 Intermediate Italian 4 68789 MWF 11:00-11:50 209 Wellman A. Bassi
ITA 101 1 Adv Convers, Comp, & Grammar 4 83452 MW 11:30-12:50 522 Sproul J. Cannon
ITA 108 1 Contemp Italian Culture 4 83453 TR 9:00-10:20 102 Hutchison A. Bassi
ITA 120B 1 Italian Lit of 20th-Cent: Poetry & Drama 4 83454 MW 10:00-11:20 522 Sproul J. Cannon

 

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LOWER DIVISION COURSES
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ITALIAN 1: Elementary Italian (5 Units)

Course Description: This course is an introduction to Italian language. Students attending these courses will learn the language with an emphasis on communicative, interactive classroom activities. Students will come into contact with the language not only through drills and exercise, but also via games, role-playing, and active class participation. The overall goal of these courses is to provide the students with "survival" skills in the target language and, at the same time, acquaint them with Italy and its culture. Also, these courses emphasize listing and speaking, and employ specific proficiency guidelines in determining the students' oral level during their coursework and at the end of the courses. 

The syllabus for Italian 1 comprises the Preliminary Chapter and Chapters 1 through 6 of the textbook, and the related chapters in the Workbook/Lab Manual. In this course you will learn pronunciation, and formal and familiar use of the language in introduction. You will also learn how to ask and answer questions and ask for simple directions. Definite and indefinite articles, nouns and adjectives, plural formation, indicative present of the verbs, numbers, days of the week, months, seasons, how to tell times, weather-related expression, use of the prepositions, and many idiomatic expressions will give you the ability to communicate at the basic level. Short dialogues, daily practice, conversation and use of videos make class attendance indispensable.

Attendance and participation: The study of a foreign language is different from the study of other disciplines and is based on some specific requirements of which the most important is students’ involvement. Students enrolled in Italian 1 need to come to class on a daily basis in order to benefit from the exposure to the language. They also need to come to class prepared, i.e., having done the assigned homework, but especially ready to participate in the daily activities, be they games, role-playing, conversation, drills, etc. For this reason, after three unjustified absences, any further unjustified absence will cause a student’s participation grade to drop, and his/her overall grade will suffer accordingly (see below for grading system and grading scale). Laboratory is required. Instructors will collect the lab work (i.e., Esercizi Orali) as scheduled in the Syllabus. Failure to comply with the lab requirements will result in a failing lab grade.

Course Placement: Students who have successfully completed, with a C- or better, Italian 2 or 3 in the 10th or higher grade in high school may receive unit credit for this course on a P/NP grading basis only. Although a passing grade will be charged to the student's P/NP option, no petition is required. All other students will receive a letter grade unless a P/NP petition is filed. For more information, please contact the instructor or the Italian staff adviser directly.

Format: Lecture/Discussion - 5 hours; Laboratory - 1 hour.

Texts:

  • Janice Aski & Diane Musumeci, Avanti: Beginning Italian - 2nd Edition (Textbook)
  • Janice Aski, Diane Musumeci, & Carla Wysokinski, Avanti: Beginning Italian - 2nd Edition(Workbook/Laboratory Manual)

 

 


ITALIAN 3: Elementary Italian (5 Units)

Course Description: The syllabus for Italian 3 comprises Chapters 13 to 18. More emphasis on moods and tenses of the verb will increase the students' linguistic awareness with contrastive study of past perfect and present perfect, future perfect, and "simple" future. The conditional (present and perfect), the present of the subjunctive, the passive form and the impersonal constructions of the verb, superlative and comparative structures, suffixes in nouns and adjectives, more uses of prepositions with nouns and verbs will complete the basic knowledge of Italian and increase the students' ability in reading, understanding, speaking and writing, short compositions. Daily class attendance is indispensable in this course.

Attendance and participation: The study of a foreign language is different from the study of other disciplines and is based on some specific requirements of which the most important is students' involvement. Students enrolled in Italian 2 need to come to class on a daily basis in order to benefit from the exposure to the language. They also need to come to class prepared, i.e., having done the assigned homework, but especially ready to participate in the daily activities, be they games, role-playing, conversation, drills, etc. For this reason, after three unjustified absences, any further unjustified absence will cause a student's participation grade to drop, and his/her overall grade will suffer accordingly (see below for grading system and grading scale). Laboratory is required. Instructors will collect the lab work (i.e., Esercizi Orali) as scheduled in the Syllabus. Failure to comply with the lab requirements will result in a failing lab grade.

Prerequisite: Italian 2 or Consent of Instructor.

Format: Lecture/Discussion - 5 hours; Laboratory - 1 hour.

Texts:

  • Janice Aski & Diane Musumeci, Avanti: Beginning Italian (Textbook)
  • Janice Aski, Diane Musumeci, & Carla Wysokinski, Avanti: Beginning Italian (Workbook/Laboratory Manual)

 


ITALIAN 4: Intermediate Italian (4 Units)

Course Description: This is the first course of 2nd year Italian. Student will review grammar and syntax through written exercises and short prose works. This course is intended to develop the linguistic foundations of students who have completed the first-year language classes. 

Prerequisite: course 3 or Consent of Instructor. 

Format: Lecture/Discussion - 3 hours; Term Paper.

Texts:

  • Francesca Italiano and Irene Marchegiani, Crescendo! (Textbook)
  • Francesca Italiano and Irene Marchegiani, Crescendo! (Workbook, Lab Manual)

 

 


 

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UPPER DIVISION COURSES
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ITALIAN 101: Advanced Conversation, Composition, and Grammar (4 Units)
Prof. JoAnn Cannon, &#106ccannon@ucdavis.edu

(MW 11:30-12:50, 522 Sproul) CRN 83452

Course Description: The goal of Italian 101 is to introduce students to Italian literature, while developing reading and comprehension skills. The textbook is a literary reader of contemporary Italian authors designed for intermediate and advanced courses in Italian. These authentic texts are an invaluable source of linguistic and cultural information. Grammar and syntax review will be functional to the development of conversational and reading skills.

Each student will be required to give an oral presentation on a subject related to the topics discussed during the course. Students will write four compositions (3 pages, type-written, double-spaced). There will be a mid-term and a final examination based on the cultural and grammatical topics covered in class. All oral and written work will be completed in Italian.

Grading:

  • Exercises and Class Participation (10%)
  • Translations (30%)
  • Mid-term translation exam (20%)
  • Final translation exam (20%)
  • Final paper (20%)

 

Prerequisite: Italian 9 or Consent of Instructor.

GE Credits (Old): None
GE Credits (New): ArtsHum, Oral Skills, World Cultures, and Wrt.

Texts:

  • E. Tognozzi and G. Cavatorta, Ponti: Italiano terzo millennio
  • Garzanti or Cassell, Italian-English, English-Italian Dictionary
  • A Course Reader

 

 


ITALIAN 108: Contemporary Issues in Italian Culture and Society(4 Units)
Prof. Antonella Bassi, &#97abassi@ucdavis.edu

(TR 9:00-10:20, 102 Hutchison) CRN 83453

Course Description: Italian 108 is a course designed to acquaint students with Italian society and culture, both past and present, with an emphasis on contemporary issues. Italian 108S intends to challenge stereotypes, foster cultural understanding, and strengthen the students' ability to analyze, criticize, and discuss (both orally and in writing) specific cultural topics. The course will encourage a comparative methodological perspective that at all times reflects the larger Italian social context, while contrasting Italian cultural issues with comparable issues in the USA and elsewhere. This course will also offer the students several modes of participation (cooperative, collaborative, and individual). 

While the core topics of ITA 108 will be addressed and discussed in class, peripheral topics will be assigned as extra readings, special projects, or personal research (e.g., a topic that relates specifically to a particular student's academic background).

The core topics of ITA 108 are: Myths and realities of imagined Italies (The geographies of Italy); Italian identities (political, religious, ethnic, social, gender identities); Immigration and race relations; The media and the images of Italy; Politics and parties, government and the people; Popular culture: Style, fashion, music, sports, food.

In order to maximize the course's benefits, it is imperative that students come to class prepared, and participate in class discussion. Failure to do so will negatively affect the course grade.

Prerequisite: NONE (The course will be taught in English).

GE Credits (Old): ArtHum, Div, and Wrt.
GE Credits (New): ArtHum or SocSci, Oral Skills, Visual Literacy, World Cultures, and Wrt.

Texts:

  • Beverly Allen and Mary Russo (eds.), Revisioning Italy: National Identity and Global Culture (Univ. of Minnesota Press, 1997)
  • David Forgacs and Robert Lumley (eds.), Italian Cultural Studies: An Introduction (Oxford, 1996)
  • Beppe Severgnini, La Bella Figura: A Field Guide to the Italian Mind (Broadway Books, 2006)
  • Antonella Bassi, Culture and Society in Italy: A Student Companion for Italian Culture Courses (Available on SmartSite)
  • RECOMMENDED: Harry Hearder, Italy: A Short History, 2nd Edition (Cambridge, 2001)

 

 


ITALIAN 120B: Italian Literature of the Twentieth Century - Poetry and Drama (4 Units)
Prof. JoAnn Cannon, &#106ccannon@ucdavis.edu

(MW 10:00-11:20, 522 Sproul) CRN 83454

Course Description: Italian poetry of the twentieth century, with emphasis on D'Annunzio, Gozzano and Crepuscolarismo, Marinetti and Futurism, Ungaretti, Montale, Hermeticism; the theater of Luigi Pirandello and its role in the development of contemporary Italian drama.

Prerequisite: Italian 9 or Consent of Instructor.

GE Credits (Old): ArtHum
GE Credits (New): ArtsHum, World Cultures, and Wrt.

Texts:

  • (TBA)