Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Camden Undergraduate
 
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Undergraduate Education in Camden
Degree Requirements
Liberal Arts Colleges
Camden College of Arts and Sciences
University College-Camden
Programs, Faculty, and Courses
Course Notation Information
Availability of Majors
Accounting 010
Africana Studies 014
American History 512
American Literature 352
Anthropology 070
Art 080
Art History 082
Arts and Sciences 090 (Interdisciplinary Courses)
Astronomy 100
Biochemistry 115
Biology 120
Biology, Computational and Integrative 121
Business Administration 135
Business Law 140
Chemistry (Biochemistry 115, Chemistry 160)
Childhood Studies 163
Computer Science 198
Criminal Justice 202
Dance 203
Digital Studies 209
Economics 220
Engineering Transfer 005
English and Communication (Communication 192, English Literature 350, American Literature 352, Film 354, Journalism 570, Linguistics 615, Rhetoric 842, Writing 989)
Finance 390
Forensic Science 412
French 420
Gender Studies 443
Geology 460
German 470
Global Studies 480
Health Sciences 499
History (Historical Methods and Research 509; European History 510; American History 512; African, Asian, Latin American, and Comparative History 516)
Honors College 525
Human Resource Management 533
Individualized Majors and Minors 555
Journalism 570
Latin American and Latino Studies (LALS) Minor
Law
Learning Abroad
Liberal Studies 606
Linguistics 615
Management 620
Management Science and Information Systems 623
Marketing 630
Mathematical Sciences (Mathematics 640, Statistics 960)
Medicine, Dentistry, and Veterinary Medicine
Museum Studies 698
Music 700, 701
Pharmacy 720
Philosophy and Religion 730, 840
Physics 750
Political Science 790
Psychology 830
Religion 840
Reserve Officer Training Programs
Social Work 910
Sociology (920), Anthropology (070), and Criminal Justice (202)
Spanish 940
Statistics 960
Teacher Education 964
Theater Arts (Dance 203, Theater Arts 965)
World Languages and Cultures (French 420, German 470, Global Studies 480, Spanish 940)
World Languages 415
French 420
French Major Requirements
French Minor Requirements
French Honors Program
Teacher Certification in French
French Study Abroad
Courses in the French Language
Courses in French Literature and Civilization
French Courses Taught in English
German 470
German Major Requirements
German Minor Requirements
German Honors Program
Teacher Certification in German
German Study Abroad
German Courses
Global Studies 480
Global Studies Major Requirements
Global Studies Courses
Global Studies Associated Courses
Spanish 940
Spanish Major Requirements
Spanish Minor Requirements
Spanish Honors Program
Spanish Independent Study
Teacher Certification in Spanish
Spanish Study Abroad
Spanish Courses
Urban Studies 975
Visual, Media, and Performing Arts (Art 080; Art History 082; Museum Studies 698; Music 700, 701; Theater Arts 965)
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Academic Policies and Procedures
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Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
  Camden Undergraduate Catalog 2021-2023 Liberal Arts Colleges Programs, Faculty, and Courses World Languages and Cultures (French 420, German 470, Global Studies 480, Spanish 940) Spanish Courses  

Spanish Courses

50:940:101 Elementary Spanish I (R) (4) Training designed to lay a foundation for speaking, writing, reading, and understanding the language. For students with no knowledge of Spanish or with no more than two years of high school Spanish. Entering students with previous Spanish study will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with three or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 50:940:101 for credit.
50:940:102 Elementary Spanish II (R) (4) Continuation of 50:940:101. Prerequisite: 50:940:101 or equivalent. For students with little knowledge of Spanish or with no more than three years of high school Spanish. Entering students will be placed according to the results of a proficiency exam. Students with four or more years of Spanish in high school may not take 50:940:102 for credit. Note that 50:940:102 is the minimum level for fulfilling the college general degree requirement in foreign languages.
50:940:121 Intermediate Spanish I (G) (R) (4) Oral and written practice, emphasizing grammar review, and reading of selected materials. Prerequisite: 50:940:102 or equivalent, or sufficient score on proficiency examination.
50:940:122 Intermediate Spanish II (G) (R) (4) A continuation of 50:940:121. Grammar review with reading and oral practice. Spanish 122 is a prerequisite for courses at the 200 level. Prerequisite: 50:940:121 or equivalent.
50:940:151 Civilization of Spanish Peoples (G) (3) A study of the principal characteristics of Spain or Spanish-American countries as manifested in their history, literature, arts, and daily life. This course, taught in English, may be used for the college's global requirement, but not for the foreign language requirement, and not for the Spanish major or minor requirements.
50:940:181-182 Spanish for Spanish-Speaking People (G) (R) (3,3) Designed for heritage Spanish-speaking students. Grammar, reading, and writing exercises with emphasis on the special language habits common to these students. Formerly 50:940:211-212. Prerequisite: 50:940:102 or equivalent.
50:940:200 Spanish Language through Literature (G) (3) A course for intending Spanish majors that uses representative Hispanic literary texts to help students' transition from the study of language to that of literature. Introduces basic literary concepts as it provides a review of pertinent grammatical structures and allows for broadening of vocabulary. Formerly 50:940:131. Prerequisite: 50:940:122 or equivalent.
50:940:201 Advanced Spanish Grammar and Stylistics (G) (3) An advanced course in the structure of Spanish with a view to guiding students toward writing with a sense of correctness and style. Examples of different writing styles taken from contemporary literature, journalism, advertising, and the like. Prerequisite: 50:940:122 or equivalent.
50:940:203 Spanish Composition and Conversation (G) (3) Practice in speaking and writing, stressing the development of an adequate vocabulary in the discussion of everyday subjects. Prerequisite: 50:940:122 or equivalent.
50:940:204 Advanced Spanish Composition and Conversation (G) (3) Practice in speaking and writing, stressing the development of an adequate vocabulary in the discussion of everyday subjects. Special emphasis on the use of idiomatic expressions in everyday life.
50:940:207 Spanish Culture and Civilization (G) (3) A study of the principal characteristics of Spain as manifested in its history, art, and daily life. Formerly 50:940:301. Prerequisite: 50:940:122 or equivalent.
50:940:208 Spanish-American Culture and Civilization (G) (3) A study of the principal characteristics of the Spanish-American countries as manifested in their history, art, and daily life. Emphasis will be placed on mestizaje (racial mixing) and geography as primary factors in distinguishing Spain's former colonies from the madre patria. Prerequisite: 50:940:121 or equivalent.
50:940:225 Spanish for Business (G) (3) An intermediate-level course designed for students with some previous formal study of Spanish. Open to professionals already working in the field or career-oriented trainees in an occupational program. Students are given the vocabulary and cultural references required for most vocational contexts. Skill-building and skill-chaining exercises are organized by themes ranging from job interviews to completing insurance forms and dealing with the tax systems. Real-life materials (photographs, articles, video clips, artifacts, etc.) activate a practical vocabulary and grammatical explanations. The course's ultimate goal is to develop an understanding of the relationships among language, cultural mores, and professional ethics. Prerequisite: 50:940:102 or equivalent.
50:940:226 Spanish for the Legal Professions (G) (3) An intermediate-level course designed for students with some previous formal study of Spanish. Open to professionals already working in the field or career-oriented trainees in an occupational program. Students are given the vocabulary and cultural references required for most vocational contexts. Skill-building and skill-chaining exercises are practiced within a framework of law enforcement, with themes ranging from parole violations to criminal procedures in cases of domestic violence or child abuse. Real-life materials activate a practical vocabulary and grammatical explanations. The course's ultimate goal is to develop a legal understanding of the relationships among language, cultural mores, and reinforcement practices. Prerequisite: 50:940:102 or equivalent.
50:940:227 Spanish for the Health Professions II (3) This intermediate course in medical Spanish is geared toward students with prior knowledge of Spanish interested in developing and improving their interpersonal speaking proficiency in order to communicate effectively with Spanish-speaking patients, coworkers, and professionals. It entails a basic review of elementary grammatical structures for effective communication, expanding on explanations with detail, in all major tenses, and comprehensive vocabulary acquisition on topics such as detailed patient health history, symptoms for multiple conditions and diseases, maternity, pediatrics, diabetes, mental health, and addiction. Students will be able to give advice to patients and respond to more complex questions and scenarios in a clinic or hospital setting in all major tenses. Prerequisite: 50:940:102 or 50:940:127.
50:940:291,292 Special Topics (G) (3,3) A course on a selected topic at an intermediate level and not offered in the regular curriculum. Formerly 50:940:266. Prerequisite: 50:940:122 or equivalent.
50:940:300 Introduction to Spanish Literature (G) (3) An introduction to the study of Spanish literature. Acquaints the student with the main classical writers and the principal literary movements and tendencies from the origins of Spanish literature. Attention given to the relationship of the literary movements to social and historical movements, and the development of the arts. Prerequisite: 50:940:203.
50:940:301 Introduction to Spanish-American Literature (G) (3) Introduces the student to the outstanding writers of Spanish-American literature from the conquest and colonial periods, through independence from Spain, to contemporary times. Attention paid to the relationship of literary and intellectual movements, to social and historic events, and to the development of the arts. Formerly 50:940:267. Prerequisite: 50:940:203.
50:940:338 Twentieth-Century Spanish Literature (G) (3) The evolution of Spanish literature from the modernismo and the Generacion del '98 to the post-Civil War period. Study of today's main writers. Formerly 50:940:438. Prerequisite: 50:940:300.
50:940:339 Twentieth-Century Spanish-American Literature (G) (3) Covers literary, cultural, and intellectual developments in Spanish America from modernismo to the present. High points include vanguardismo, Afro-Caribbean literature, indigenismo, criollismo, and the "Boom." Authors include Darío, Quiroga, Neruda, Borges, Paz, Mistral, and García Márquez, among others. Prerequisite: 50:940:301.
50:940:353 Individual Studies in Spanish (BA) Guided independent reading and writing on a specific topic for advanced intermediate to advanced students by arrangements with faculty. Prerequisites: 50:940:203 and permission of instructor.
50:940:354 Individual Studies in Spanish (BA) Guided independent reading and writing on a specific topic for advanced intermediate to advanced students by arrangements with faculty.
Prerequisites: 50:940:203 and permission of instructor.
50:940:387,388 Learning Abroad Spanish (3) A course focusing on a literary, cultural, or language-oriented theme, including regular class meetings and appropriate assignments, as well as a short-term learning experience outside the United States.
50:940:390 Special Topics in Spanish (3) Courses in a selected topic not offered in the regular curriculum. May be taught in English.
50:940:391,392 Special Topics (G) (3,3) Courses in a selected topic of an advanced intermediate-level nature and not offered in the regular curriculum. Prerequisite: 50:940:203.
50:940:393,394 Individual Studies in Spanish (G) (BA, BA) Guided independent reading and writing on a specific topic for advanced intermediate-level students under exceptional conditions.  See entry under heading Independent Study. Prerequisites: 50:940:203 and permission of instructor.
50:940:396,397,398 Honors Program in Spanish (G) (3,3,3) Prerequisites: 50:940:300, 301, and permission of the instructor and the department chair.
50:940:415 Medieval Spanish Literature (G) (3) Study of selected works, with some introduction to old Spanish texts as well as analysis of works in modern Spanish adaptation.
50:940:421 Dramatic Literature of the Golden Age (G) (3) Spanish drama of the Siglo de Oro. Extensive analysis of the major works and themes of dramatists such as Lope de Vega, Tirso de Molina, and Calderon de la Barca.
50:940:424 The Inquisitorial Mind (G) (3) This course explores the way in which societies learn to demonize its "others" by using criteria based on gender, race, religion, or a suitable combination of all three. Besides providing a working definition of a "legitimate" witch, an authentic demon, and a believable ghost, the course elucidates why certain periods are more preoccupied than others with such enemies and why certain states are ready and willing to organize institutionalized responses to eradicate them. Prerequisite: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:426 Cervantes (G) (3) Life and works of Cervantes; careful reading of Don Quijote, the Novelas Ejemplares, and his theater; emphasis on their significance to contemporary life. Prerequisites: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:435 Nineteenth-Century Spanish Literature (G) (3) Major literary current of 19th-century Spanish literature through the works of leading authors. Begins with a brief study of 18th-century literature.
50:940:436 The Picaresque Novel (G) (3) A study of the picaresque genre in Spain, with detailed study of such works as Lazarillo de Tormes, Guzman de Alfarache, La Picara Justina, and others. Special study of the Mexican Periquillo Sarniento.
50:940:455 Early Spanish-American Literature (G) (3) A study of the literature of Spanish America from the colonial period to the end of the 19th century.
50:940:456 Twentieth-Century Mexican Literature (G) (3) Includes such outstanding contemporary authors from Mexico and Central America as Azuela, Darío, Paz, Rulfo, Fuentes, Reyes, Ramírez, Esquivel, Poniatowska, and Mastretta, among others. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
50:940:457 Twentieth-Century Literature from the Southern Cone (G) (3) Includes such outstanding authors from Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay as Borges, Quiroga, Arlt, Cortázar, Sábato, Puig, Giardinelli, Valenzuela, Benedetti, Peri Rossi, Onetti, Rodó, and Roa Bastos, among others. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
50:940:458 Twentieth-Century Caribbean Literature (G) (3) Outstanding works and authors from the Spanish-speaking islands of the Caribbean--Cuba, Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico. Includes such writers as Martí, Lezama Lima, Carpentier, Cabrera Infante, Arenas, Soto, Marqués, Sánchez, Vega, Alvarez, and Bosch, among others. Prerequisites: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:459 Twentieth-Century Andean Literature (G) (3) Includes outstanding contemporary works from Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela. Authors include Neruda, Donoso, Mistral, Mariátegui, Vallejo, Vargas Llosa, Icaza, Silva, García Márquez, Parra, and Gallegos, among others. Prerequisites: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:461 Spanish-American Literature (G) (3) This course presents a general overview of the historical evolution of Spanish-American literature through literary movements, authors, and their most representative works, in relation to the historical reality in which they were produced. Prerequisites: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:463 Contemporary Spanish-American Novel (G) (3) Reading and interpretation of Spanish-American novelists of the modernist period to the present. Prerequisites: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:464 Contemporary Spanish-American Theater (G) (3) Latest currents in today's Spanish-American theater. Reading and study/discussion of several plays by prominent Spanish-American playwrights.
50:940:465 Twentieth-Century Spanish-American Poetry (G) (3) Includes Nobel Prize-winning poets Mistral, Neruda, and Paz as well as poets from different schools of poetry (Lugones: modernismo; Borges: dadaísmo; Huidobro: futurismo; Palés Matos: negrismo) and different regions of Spanish America. Prerequisite: 50:940:301.
50:940:467 Ecological Criticism and Hispanic Fiction (G) (3) A multidisciplinary course that applies principles of environmental studies to Hispanic narrative fiction. Teaches a technique called "reading for the setting" in which the earth, the biosphere, and nature emerge from the background and take center stage as they interact with a text's characters and narrators. Fictional readings taken from Spanish, Spanish-American, and U.S. Latino literatures. Prerequisites: 50:940:203, 204, or equivalent.
50:940:471 Technology in the Spanish Classroom (3) This course focuses on the most prominent theoretical frameworks, research, technologies, and concepts of Technology Enhanced Language Learning (TELL), Second Language Learning theories and its research, and Foreign Language pedagogy with a focus on Spanish. TELL is an area that is critical for the professional development of prospective foreign and second language educators, and would also be of interest to students of applied linguistics and education. Students in this course will develop a basic knowledge of the key concepts, problems, and hopes associated with TELL and Second Language Acquisition (SLA). This course will also explore the tools, classroom applications, and digital pedagogy of TELL applied to the Spanish language classroom. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
50:940:473 Assessment and Evaluation in the Spanish Classroom (3) This course explores the assessment of foreign/second languages both at a theoretical and at a practical level with a focus on the Spanish classroom. It conceptualizes the dichotomy teaching-assessment of the Spanish language as a fundamental pedagogical enterprise. Specifically, this course explores some of the latest issues that have come of key importance over the last few years among the foreign/second language educators in the field of assessment and evaluation. Throughout the semester students will engage in a range of theoretical, pedagogical, and reflective activities that will enable them to not only understand the material at hand, but also apply it to their Spanish language teaching and assessment practices. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
50:940:476 Introduction to Hispanic Applied Linguisitics (3) This course intends to provide students with a panoramic view of the field of Hispanic applied linguistics. Students will be introduced to general notions of communication and language, Spanish linguistics (language and communication, Spanish phonetics, phonology, syntax, and semantics), language in context (sociolinguistics, languages in contact, and Spanish dialectology), evaluation and assessment (dynamic assessment, standardized testing, ACTFL's OPI), and technology in the Spanish classroom. Upon completion of this course students will have developed a basic knowledge of the key concepts, problems, and hopes associated with the field of Hispanic applied linguistics, as well as a general understanding of its practical applications in the Spanish classroom. This course is taught entirely in Spanish. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
50:940:478 Spanish Grammar and Linguistics I (3) This course is intended to provide the student with a panoramic view of the linguistic patterns present in the Spanish language and their functions within the system. There are two main objectives: 1) a contrastive study of the Spanish and English grammatical systems; and 2) practical applications to Spanish language teaching, learning, and research. Students in this course will gain a more accurate perspective on the complexity of the internal and external factors that shape the Spanish language, be able to use and understand basic terminology, and develop the ability to do independent research. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
50:940:479 Special Topics in Spanish (3) A course in a selected topic at an advanced level and not offered in the regular curriculum.
Prerequisites: 50:950:300,301, and permission of instructor.
50:940:491,492 Special Topics (G) (3,3) A course in a selected topic at an advanced level and not offered in the regular curriculum. Prerequisites: 50:940:300,301, and permission of instructor.
50:940:493,494 Individual Studies in Spanish (G) (3,3) Guided independent reading and writing on a specific topic for advanced students under exceptional conditions. See entry under the heading Independent Study. Prerequisites: 50:940:300, 301, and permission of instructor.
50:940:495,496 Honors Program in Spanish (3,3) Course for students working toward departmental honors in Spanish. Prerequisites: 50:940:300,301, and permission of the instructor and the department chair.
50:940:497,498 Honors Program in Spanish (G) (3,3) Course for students working toward departmental honors in Spanish.
Prerequisites: 50:940:300,301, and permission of the instructor and the department chair.
50:940:591 Independent Study Spanish (BA) This course allows students to work closely with a professor in the graduate program on specific themes and issues. Prerequisite: 50:940:204 or equivalent.
 
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