2025-2026 / LGER0219-2

German linguistics II and German language practice III, German language practice III

Duration

30h Th

Number of credits

 Extra courses intended for exchange students (Erasmus, ...) (Faculty of Philosophy and Letters)3 crédits 

Lecturer

Mélanie Cüpper

Language(s) of instruction

German language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the second semester

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

- Analysis of various German (and/or Austrian) films (by independent filmmakers) and various scientific articles.

- Practical exercises, reading comprehension, and oral presentation of scientific articles.

- Extensive text preparation, vocabulary research, practical reading comprehension exercises, etc. based on these different films.
- Listening comprehension exercises using authentic audio materials.

- Listening comprehension using authentic audio materials.

- In-depth study of German culture through the films and texts covered (history, politics, economics, socio-cultural overview, current events, etc.).

- An educational trip to Germany is planned as part of this course.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

- Putting knowledge into practice, improving comprehension and written and oral expression.

- By the end of the year, students will be able to:

- summarize, analyze, and comment on films, texts, and scientific articles

- define certain words from the text, find an explanation and paraphrase paragraphs

- understand authentic audio materials

- easily use the vocabulary from all the texts seen in class (including presentations and audiovisual materials)

- present a topic orally in clear and grammatically correct language

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

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Planned learning activities and teaching methods

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Further information:

Students will first work independently on exercises (text preparation, film viewing, listening comprehension (videos), etc.).

They will then discuss their work and difficulties with one or more classmates.

The class group, led by the teacher, will then provide feedback on the texts/exercises.

The course will be taught in person and could take the form of a Block seminar (5 days of 6 hours) (to be determined).

Course materials and recommended or required readings

Platform(s) used for course materials:
- eCampus


Further information:

Materials: The syllabus and audiovisual materials are available at the beginning of the year. Students should bring their prepared texts, homework, and exercises to each lesson. During the group correction session, students will take notes on the comments, corrections, and suggestions made by the group and the instructor. These collectively corrected exercises constitute the course material.

Bibliography:

-Recommended dictionaries: same as those for the grammar course.

-Syllabus/coursepack

Exam(s) in session

Any session

- In-person

written exam AND oral exam


Further information:

June assessment: Oral and written exam: Both exams account for half of the marks (50% each).

Open-book written exam (coursepack, documents, notes, etc.):

- An analysis of a film/text (not) seen and/or word definitions and paraphrasing and/or writing or reflection exercises similar to those done in class based on the material covered in class during the year
- Questions and/or an essay based on one or more texts/presentations/films seen in class or at home.

 

An open-book exam requires a very thorough understanding of the various topics covered in class.


Oral exam: For the oral exam in June, students must be able to present and discuss one of the films/texts/articles/presentations seen/heard in class during the year and answer questions. Students must know the vocabulary contained in the entire coursepack. They may be asked to explain part of one of the articles, etc., seen in German. Students must be able to analyze the texts/films and must also be able to express an opinion in clear, high-level language (fluency, accent, vocabulary, and grammar).



This course is part of a teaching unit ("Unité d'enseignement," or UE) is subject to the principle of the "note absorbante," which means that the student having obtained a mark below 8/20 for one of the learning activities ("activités d'apprentissage," or AA) will receive a failing grade for the entire unit and will have to retake the failed AA in the second session regardless of the mathematical average of the two AA grades

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

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Contacts

Melanie Cüpper mcupper@uliege.be

Association of one or more MOOCs