American Studies
Knowledge:
Upon completion, the student should:
- have knowledge of the social life, history, and a wide variety of cultural expressions in English-speaking countries, especially central works in the American literary tradition
- have knowledge of textual structure and linguistic devices and of critical and analytical approaches to both literary and non-literary texts
- have knowledge of textual genres and their characteristics, as well as norms for the production of academic texts and the responsible use of sources
- have knowledge of some English linguistic variants
Skills:
Upon completion, the student can:
- use English confidently and functionally, both orally and in writing, appropriate to the audience in different situations
- use English confidently and functionally, orally and in writing, in various situations and genres with precision, fluency, and coherence
- adapt, select, and facilitate the work on English-language texts for children and young adults, as well as employing relevant and precise terminology while working with texts
- facilitate student creation of oral, written, and multimodal texts with fluency, precision, and coherency
- explore the social, historical, and cultural history of English-speaking countries
General competence:
Upon completion, the student can:
- maintain and develop his or her own linguistic competence
- work independently with various topical problems
- work independently and together with others to solve identified problems in relation to the student's learning and development in the subject of English
Compulsory participation (OD): Attendance (85%): comprises 0/100 grading scale Approved / Not Approved
Assessment task (AK): Online Seminar 1-3: comprises 0/100 of the grade, grading scale Approved / Not Approved, comprises 0/100 of the grade, grading scale
Take-home examination (HJ) Essay: comprises 33/100 of the grade, grading scale A - F
Oral Examination (MU), comprises 67/100 of the grade, grading scale A - F
All aids allowed
Generating an answer using ChatGPT or similar artificial intelligence and submitting it wholly or partially as one's own answer is considered cheating
Overlap refers to a similarity between courses with the same content. Therefore, you will receive the following reduction in credits if you have taken the courses listed below:
SP109L-003 - American Studies, oral exam - 10 credits
SP121L - Young Adult Fiction - 5 credits
SP109L - American Studies, essay 1 - 10 credits