Spanish 2001—Intermediate Spanish
Dr. K. Guffey If you are in Learning Support Reading
Phone: 770-358-5232 Spanish until you have completed that/
k_guffey@gdn.edu those course(s).
Office hours: TR 10:45-12:30; 2:50-3:30; 4:45-6:20
Textbook: Arriba (not required; search for a used copy if you’d like to have a hardcopy for reference)
Objectives: The student will be able to conjugate verbs in all indicative and subjunctive tenses. He will be able to read and comprehend articles of interest to him and communicate effectively on a simple level. He will be able to write about his ideas, not just his needs.
Absences: THREE absences, excused or unexcused, are
allowed. That is, the student's first
three absences need not be explained to the instructor. Every absence after the first three,
however, must be excused. That means
that if, for example, you are in the hospital and miss three classes, your
fourth absence, as well as all subsequent absences, must be excused. In case of illness, the student must present
a doctor's excuse. Besides illness, only
emergency situations, such as a death in the family, will be considered excused
absences, and the student must present written proof of the emergency. An absence due to your job is NOT an excused
absence. An absence due to a lack of a
ride to school/a need to leave early to catch a ride is NOT an excused
absence. If you are a parent, only an
excuse from your child’s doctor will be accepted for an absence involving your
child. Inability to find a babysitter is
NOT an acceptable excuse. Any absence
due to participation in any official
Every unexcused absence after the third absence will
result in a 5% lowering of the student's final grade. That is, a fourth absence will lower the
grade 5%, a fifth will lower it an additional 5%, etc. If, for example, a student with a 93% average
has six absences, the last three of which were unexcused, his grade will drop
from 93% to 78%. IT IS THE STUDENT’S RESPONSIBILITY
TO PRESENT A WRITTEN EXCUSE. If the
instructor is required to return the excuse to the student, he must watch her
record the excuse before taking the excuse back. Absences count from the day that the
student’s name appears on the instructor’s roll.
Tardiness: Three tardies count as one absence. If a student arrives 15 minutes late, he is considered absent. Students may not leave class early without the instructor’s permission. If you do leave class without the instructor’s permission, even if it is only a few seconds early, you will be marked absent.
Failure to attend class: Any student who ceases to attend class should go to the registrar’s office to take the appropriate steps to withdraw. If he fails to officially drop the class, he will receive a WF in the course. THE FINAL DATE TO DROP A COURSE WITHOUT A PENALTY IS October 8. If you drop the course after that date, you will receive a WF in the course.
Tests and Quizzes: The student may miss one quiz and one test. Because you are allowed to miss them, NO MAKE-UP TESTS or QUIZZES WILL BE GIVEN, even if your absence is excused. If you miss one quiz and/or one test, you will not have any zeros recorded. However, any additional tests or quizzes missed FOR ANY REASON will be recorded as zeros. If the student does not miss any tests or quizzes, the lowest quiz and the lowest test will be dropped. THE SCHEDULE MAY CHANGE AT ANY MOMENT, AND YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR FINDING OUT ANY CHANGES IN THE SCHEDULE. If you are absent on Monday, for example, and a quiz or test not on the schedule is assigned for Wednesday, you will be required to take it on Wednesday. It is YOUR responsibility to find out what you miss in class.
The interviews and the show-and-tell presentations are exceptions to the “no make-ups” rule. However, they must be made up by Nov. 24. It is your responsibility to arrange a time for the make-up and then remind the instructor the day of the presentation if it is done in class. The instructor will not remind you that you have missed something. Also, if you are hospitalized or diagnosed with a contagious ailment, you may receive special consideration. All such illnesses must be well documented, however.
Following is the makeup of the oral exam grades:
Interviews:
10 points for each of the following categories: how well you understand the question, how well I understand your response, grammar, variety of vocabulary
36-40 points A
31-35 points B
26-30 points C
21-25 points D
Fewer than 21 points F
Show and tell:
10 points for each of the following categories: comprehensibility, pronunciation, grammar, variety of vocabulary. Up to 20 points will be deducted if you read or partially read your presentation. You may have a 3” x 5” card with five key words at which you may GLANCE. You will lose a minimum of 25 points if you read it your presentation.
36-40 points A
31-35 points B
26-30 points C
21-25 points D
Fewer than 21 points F
Sports: If you
are absent due to participation in an official
Quizzes: You will be required to use a sheet of your
own paper for each quiz. You may have
only one sheet of paper on your desk. If
you have more than one, even if they are blank, they will be confiscated during
the quiz.
Cheating: If you copy an answer onto your test or quiz from another student, a cheat sheet, a book, a cell phone, the palm of your hand, or anywhere else, you will receive a 0 on that quiz or test. If there is any object with any material on the test or quiz within your reach during the test, you will receive a 0 on that test or quiz. For example, if you are sitting on a paper with test/quiz material on it, you will receive a 0 even if you protest that you did not know that it was there and certainly were not using it. If you commit any other action that constitutes cheating, you will receive a 0, and that grade cannot be dropped. You may also be expelled from the course or receive an F in the course, actions that are at the discretion of the instructor and the division head. If you cheat on a mid-term or final exam, you will receive an F in the course.
Math Section: If the instructor ever refers you to the math section on the syllabus, this is it: Rarely are there 100 points on any test. Therefore, the number at the top of your test is your PERCENTAGE, not the actual number that are correct. If you have -6 at the top of your paper but a 90%, don’t go to the instructor and say, “Shouldn’t this be a 94, since I only missed 6?” You missed 6 out of 60, not 6 out of 100. That’s 10%. To find percentages, you multiply the number missed by 100 and divide by the number of total points on the test. That is, if you missed six out of 60 points, you multiply 6 by 100 (=600) and then divide 600 by 60 (=10) and deduct that from 100 (=90%) to get your score.
Homework: Homework will be checked periodically throughout the semester, not every day. If you do not have the homework completed on a day that it is checked, you will not be allowed to make it up for credit. You receive credit for having it done, not for the percentage correct. When you are absent, it is YOUR responsibility to find out if homework was checked that day. If you fail to show it to the instructor, you will lose points.
Besides losing points if he does not have his homework on a day it is collected, the student will find that he is unable to master the material if he waits until the night before a test to do his homework rather than doing it on a DAILY BASIS.
All homework is found on the instructor’s website (www.gdn.edu/faculty/k_guffey). These exercises are interactive. Students must do the exercises assigned, check and correct them, print them out, and bring them to class. “My computer/printer/mouse/electricity isn’t working” is not an acceptable excuse for not having homework. Students MUST type their answers in and then check them. Students will receive no credit for handwritten work.
Group assignments: At least once in each chapter, you will be told to converse with another person in Spanish. If you fail to do so, you will have a 0 averaged into your homework grade that day.
Classroom behavior: You may not eat in class. This includes sandwiches, chips, candy, and all other types of food. Failure to schedule a lunch period is not an excuse for eating in class.
You are not allowed to use the classroom printer without permission from the instructor.
If you are caught defacing/destroying property (e.g., writing on desks), you will be sent IMMEDIATELY to the Student Affairs office. You will be marked absent for that day, and if you are working on a test or quiz, you will not be allowed to finish it.
Turn your cell phone off before entering class. The instructor may confiscate your phone and hold it until the next class day if it rings in class, and she may answer it. Do not answer your cell phone. If you answer it, check your messages, or do text messaging, you will lose FIVE points off your final average.
Students are not allowed to use offensive language in class. This includes “four-letter words” as well as words that may offend others because of religious beliefs.
Special assignments: The instructor may assign you exercises while she is out of town. “I couldn’t figure it out” is not an acceptable excuse; figure it out ahead of time. If you are assigned an exercise—an exercise on the computer or any other type--to turn in the day that the instructor is absent, that assignment is considered classwork. Therefore, if you fail to turn it in, YOU WILL BE COUNTED ABSENT FOR THAT CLASS.
Computer Exercises: Frequently in class we will do computer exercises. Your user name is the following:
First initial last initial DAY of birth (2 digits) MONTH of birth (2 digits) 6th & 7th digits of SS#
123-45-6789
Your password is the last six digits on the BACK of your student ID. At some point you will be prompted to change your password. Change it to a word you can remember, because after that, only YOU will know what your password is.
Any day that we do work on the computer and you can’t get logged in, YOU WILL HAVE A ZERO AVERAGED INTO YOUR HOMEWORK GRADE. The reason for your failure to do so doesn’t matter; if you can’t get logged into a computer and the instructor CAN get logged into the computer, you get a zero.
Warning: Students may open only applications assigned by the teacher. If work on the internet is assigned, they may go only to internet sites assigned by the instructor. If the instructor finds other applications open or finds the student opening a web page not assigned, that student will lose 5 points off his final average in the class. He will lose five points each time he is caught opening non-assigned applications or web sites on the computer.
Contact information: Contact normally takes place via GORDON e-mail. You are responsible for checking your Gordon account regularly. If there is a sudden change in the schedule, you will be notified through that account.
Grade notification: Students always receive their graded tests back the class day after they take them, so do not e-mail or call the instructor asking for the grade any earlier. Going to her office to ask for the information is fine. Instructors are not permitted to e-mail final exam grades or final grades, to give out that information over the phone, or to post the grades, so please do not ask. Grades are posted on Banner very soon after exams are over.
DO NOT CALL THE INSTRUCTOR AT HOME. If you have a problem or question about the class, please see the instructor on campus. You may come by during office hours, make an appointment, send an e-mail message, or leave a message on the office door.
Grading: Scale:
Homework 10% A 90-100
Quizzes / compositions 20% B 80-89.99
Oral presentations / exam 10% C 70-79.99
Tests 20% D 60-69.99
Mid-term exam 20% F below 60
Final exam
20%
Final Exam:
Friday, Dec. 11, 10:15 am – 12:15 pm
Spanish 2001 -- Fall 2009
Homework is DUE on the day on which it appears on the schedule.
Tuesday, August 18
Thurs., Aug. 20
reg. verbs, stem-changing, forming subj.
Tues., Aug. 25
Test over all reviewed material (present, subj., prêt.)
Thurs., Aug. 27
Ud./Uds. commands; quiz 1
Tues., Sept. 1
subj. in adverb clauses
Thurs., Sept. 3
pres. perf.; quiz 2
Tues., Sept. 8
future
Thurs., Sept. 10
quiz 3; conditional
Tues., Sept. 15
Test 11/12
Thurs., Sept. 17
Yes, we do have class
Tues., Sept. 22
quiz 4; imperfect subjunctive
Thurs., Sept. 24
quiz 4b; long-form possessives/pronouns; if clauses
Tues., Sept. 29
future and conditional perfect
Thurs., Oct. 1
Test 13
Tues., Oct. 6
Mid-term
Thurs., Oct. 8
Interviews
Thurs., Oct. 15
pluperfect indicative
Thurs., Oct. 22
pluperfect subjunctive; quiz 5
Tues., Oct. 27
tu commands
Thurs., Oct. 29
Test. 14
Tues., Nov. 3
Show and Tell
Thurs., Nov. 5
for unplanned occurrences; quiz 6
Tues., Nov. 10
subj. in adj. clauses; quiz 7
Thurs., Nov. 12
passive voice; pero/sino; quiz 8a
Tues., Nov. 17
Test 15
Thurs., Nov. 19
Show and Tell
Tues., Nov. 24
Quiz 8b
Tues., Dec. 1
Review
Thurs., Dec. 3
Review