Bopha Lim
8 points
* 5 hours per week
* First semester
*
Clayton
* Prerequisites: CAM1120 or equivalent skills
Objectives A principal objective of this subject is to have students acquire social and cultural proficiency in Cambodian. The aim is to have the students develop the ability in speaking and listening to comprehend enough to handle most everyday social situations, such as asking and talking about educational background, describing their job, and asking and talking about everyday topics. In listening, in particular, they should begin to understand expressions of different registers. In reading and writing, in romanisation, they should be able to read and write anything they can say. In Cambodian script, they should be able to read simple texts and find words in a Cambodian- English dictionary. They should begin to understand, in reading and listening, the expressions that require the knowledge of cultural and social aspects of Cambodian society.
Synopsis The aim of this subject is to achieve a deeper understanding of the contemporary Cambodian (Khmer) language. Emphasis will be on active oral and writing skills and on sociocultural aspects of communication.
Assessment Examinations ( 3 hours): 60%
* Oral,
classwork, assignments: 40%
Prescribed texts
Huffman F E Modern spoken Cambodian Cornell University,
Southeast Asia Program, 1979
Huffman F E Cambodian system of writing and beginning reader Yale U P,
1970
Huffman F E Intermediate Cambodian reader Yale U P, 1972
Soeur Kethya Khmer language for foreigners Phnom Penh, 1996
Pen Setharin Learn to read Phnom Penh, 1995
Published by Monash University, Australia
Maintained by wwwdev@monash.edu.au
Approved by C Jordon, Faculty of Arts
Copyright © Monash University 1997 - All Rights Reserved -
Caution