| Chinese 1A |
5 |
Elementary Chinese |
Chinese 1A is for students who were not raised in a Chinese-speaking environment and who have had no exposure or merely minimum exposure to Chinese culture. The course helps students acquire fundamental communicative competence in listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills. It sensitizes students to the meaningful use of language and to the links between language and culture in intercultural communication. |
Integrated Chinese Vol. 1 (4th ed.) Textbook Integrated Chinese Vol. 1 (4th ed.) Workbook |
| Chinese 1B |
5 |
Elementary Chinese |
Chinese 1B is for students who were not raised in a Chinese-speaking environment and who have had minimum exposure to Chinese culture. The course continues to focus on training students in the four language skills--speaking, listening, reading, and writing with a gradually increasing emphasis on basic cultural readings and developing intercultural competence. Prerequisites: Chinese 1A or consent of instructor. |
Integrated Chinese Vol. 2 (4th ed.) Textbook Integrated Chinese Vol. 2 (4th ed.) Workbook |
| Chinese 10A |
5 |
Intermediate Chinese |
The course is designed for students who are of non-Chinese origin and were not raised in a Chinese-speaking environment, or who are of Chinese origin but do not speak Chinese and whose parents do not speak Chinese. The course deals with lengthy conversations as well as narrative and descriptive texts in both simplified and traditional characters. It helps students to express themselves in speaking and writing on a range of topics and raises their awareness of the connection between language and culture to foster the development of communicative competence. Prerequisites: Chinese 1 or Chinese 1B; or consent of instructor |
Integrated Chinese Vol. 3 (4th ed.) Textbook Integrated Chinese Vol. 3 (4th ed.) Workbook |
| Chinese 10B |
5 |
Intermediate Chinese |
This course further develops students’ linguistic and cultural competence. In dealing with texts, students are guided to interpret, narrate, describe, and discuss topics ranging from real-life experience to social issues. Intercultural competence is promoted through linguistic and cultural awareness and language use in culturally appropriate contexts. Prerequisites: Chinese 10A; or consent of instructor. |
Integrated Chinese Vol. 4 (4th ed.) Textbook Integrated Chinese Vol. 4 (4th ed.) Workbook |
| Chinese 100A |
5 |
Advanced Chinese |
Chinese 100A course elevates learners to advanced levels of Chinese linguistic and cultural competence. It enhances students' advanced listening and speaking abilities through engagement with authentic Chinese conversations. Course readings, presented in a more formal style, cover a wide range of topics, from daily life to complex socio-cultural debates and conflicts. Employing a multiliteracy framework, the course develops students’ ability to interpret aspects of Chinese society, its people, and their culture. Students learn to decipher and analyze contextual cues and strategies, to draw inferences, and to understand nuanced meanings within China's socio-cultural and historical context. This immersive experience deepens their understanding of the interplay between language forms, meanings, and functions, thereby enhancing their competence as multilingual communicators capable of navigating between Chinese and their own cultures. Prerequisite: Chinese 10 or Chinese 10B; or consent of instructor. |
Reading Into a New China. Deciphering a Changing Society. Volume 1. 2nd ed. |
| Chinese 100B |
5 |
Advanced Chinese |
Chinese 100B is a multimedia course for advanced students of Chinese. The curriculum encompasses a wide range of texts that showcase Chinese society from the perspectives of both insiders and outsiders. As students engage with materials they have heard, read, and viewed, they explore, discover, analyze, interpret, and critically reflect on textual meanings. This engagement enables students to deepen their understanding of the power of language in use, develop symbolic competence, and transformatively enhance their self-perception. Prerequisite: Chinese 100A; or consent of instructor. |
The Routledge Advanced Chinese Multimedia Course: Crossing Cultural Boundaries. 2nd ed. |
| Chinese 102 |
4 |
Fourth-Year Chinese Readings: Chinese Readings: Social Sciences and History |
This fourth year Chinese course is designed to help students develop their Chinese linguistic and cultural competence and critical thinking skills in Chinese by exploring and studying different topics including economy, politics, education, culture, technology in the forms of both traditional and new media, for example, published newspaper, blogs, BBS, Weibo (Chinese version Twitter), videos, etc., through which students will also be trained to analyze, compare and differentiate Chinese language styles and genres.Prerequisites: Chinese 100B, Chinese 100XB, Chinese101; or consent of instructor. |
Selected readings from online resources, such as Weibo, Wechat official accounts, BBC Chinese,etc. |
| Chinese 101 |
4 |
Fourth-Year Chinese Readings: Literature |
This course is designed to assist students to reach the advanced-mid level on language skills and to enhance their intercultural competence. Students read the works of famous Chinese writers. Movie adaptations of these writings are also used. In addition to reading and seeking out information, students experience readings by interpreting and constructing meanings and evaluate the effect of the language form choice. Prerequisites: Chinese 100B, Chinese 100XB, Chinese101; or consent of instructor. |
Selected Chinese literary works |
| Chinese 111 |
4 |
Fifth-Year Readings: Reading and Analysis of Advanced Chinese Texts |
Chinese 111 is a fast-paced reading course. It improves students’ abilities with advanced Chinese forms to read, discuss, and write in a wide range of subjects. Students learn to identify and explain the classical Chinese expressions used in the texts and compare them to their modern counterparts. The texts cover multiple areas of Chinese culture, including history, society, economics, politics, law and traditional orders, literature and language, and so on. Students are given plenty of room to relate issues learned from the texts to current real situations in China. Prerequisites: Chinese 101 or Chinese 102; or consent of the instructor. |
"Literature and Society”, Princeton University Press and Selected Chinese Articles. |