Course Calendar 2011-2012 - Champlain College Saint-Lambert
Course Calendar 2011-2012 - Champlain College Saint-Lambert
Course Calendar 2011-2012 - Champlain College Saint-Lambert
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English (continued)<br />
603-103-MQ<br />
A Touch of Class: The 19th Century Novel of Manners<br />
(Literary Theme)<br />
This course will focus on novels dealing with the social<br />
conventions of the 19 th century. Conventions of courtship,<br />
marriage, social relations, death and money are among the<br />
topics covered.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.33<br />
603-103-MQ<br />
Literature of Scotland<br />
(Literary Theme)<br />
This course will study literature by writers of Scottish<br />
background. It will examine the ways in which Scots<br />
writers have used song, poetry, drama, the short story,<br />
the novel and/or non-fiction to explore different facets<br />
of their culture.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.33<br />
603-BMA-LA<br />
English for Science Programs<br />
(English for Science students only)<br />
The objective of this course is to enable students to<br />
communicate in forms appropriate to specific programs.<br />
To this end, students will learn to recognize appropriate<br />
forms, conventions of communications and organization<br />
of facts and arguments. Students will learn to develop<br />
their own ideas into arguments, to organize them and to<br />
edit their work. At the end of the course, successful<br />
students will produce a 1000-word analysis. This analysis<br />
will be developed clearly and correctly.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.00<br />
603-BMF-LA<br />
English for Arts Programs<br />
(English for Creative Arts and Graphic Communications<br />
Students only)<br />
The objective of this course is to enable students to<br />
communicate in forms appropriate to specific programs.<br />
To this end, students will learn to recognize appropriate<br />
forms, conventions of communications and organization<br />
of facts and arguments. Students will learn to develop<br />
their own ideas into arguments, to organize them and to<br />
edit their work. At the end of the course, successful<br />
students will produce a 1000 word analysis. This analysis<br />
will be developed clearly and correctly.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.00<br />
603-BMC-LA<br />
English for Professional Programs<br />
(English for Advertising Management, Computer<br />
Science, Sport Marketing & Management and Tourism<br />
students only)<br />
The objective of this course is to enable students to<br />
communicate in forms appropriate to specific programs.<br />
To this end, students will learn to recognize appropriate<br />
forms, conventions of communications and organization<br />
of facts and arguments. Students will learn to develop<br />
their own ideas into arguments, to organize them and to<br />
edit their work. At the end of the course, successful<br />
students will produce a 1000-word analysis. This analysis<br />
will be developed clearly and correctly.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.00<br />
603-BMD-LA<br />
Literature of the Twentieth Century (in-house course<br />
title)<br />
English for Liberal Arts (official ministerial course title)<br />
(English for Liberal Arts students only)<br />
This course studies a variety of works that reflect important<br />
aspects of twentieth-century literature. The reading list is<br />
international and involves the study of works in translation<br />
as well as works written originally in English. Students will<br />
consider the connection between history and literature by<br />
reading fiction, drama, and poetry that deal with important<br />
twentieth-century subjects such as social revolution, World<br />
War I, communism, and feminism. The course also<br />
considers aesthetic aspects of modern literature through<br />
the examination of developments in literary technique.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.00<br />
603-BME-LA<br />
IB Literary Genres (in-house course title)<br />
English for International Baccalaureate Programs<br />
(official ministerial course title)<br />
This course introduces the student to the narrative<br />
techniques of various novelists or dramatists from the<br />
nineteenth or twentieth centuries. Through the study of<br />
these techniques, the student will be prepared to write<br />
about the novel or play form in general as well as about<br />
specific works and authors.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.00<br />
603-BMH-LA<br />
Effective Communication for <strong>College</strong> Studies<br />
(English for Social Science (all options), Creative Arts,<br />
Modern Languages and Publication Design &<br />
Management students only)<br />
The objective of this course is to enable students to<br />
communicate in forms appropriate to specific programs.<br />
To this end, students will learn to recognize appropriate<br />
forms, conventions of communications and organization<br />
of facts and arguments. Students will learn to develop<br />
their own ideas into arguments, to organize them and to<br />
edit their work. At the end of the course, successful<br />
students will produce a 1000-word analysis. This analysis<br />
will be developed clearly and correctly.<br />
4 hours/week Units: 2.00