Scott Grant
6 points
* 5 hours per week
* First semester
*
Peninsula
Objectives This subject introduces students to a variety of themes and language functions in Mandarin through both textbook materials and situational discourse. Students will develop a practical knowledge of simple grammatical structures; oral and aural skills necessary for basic communication in a range of everyday practical situations; skills to read short simple text in Chinese; the ability to write short notes and compositions in Chinese characters; an initial understanding of the necessity to translate contextually rather than literally; a knowledge of the cultural context that surrounds the language skills learned.
Synopsis Introduction to spoken and written modern standard Chinese.
AssessmentWeekly assignments and three short written
tests: 20%
* Verbal skills (including classroom participation and two oral
presentations: 20%
* Regular character dictation tests: 10%
* Written
examination: 30%
* Oral tests: 20%
Prescribed texts
Practical Chinese reader I The Commercial Press, 1989
Practical Chinese reader I: Patterns and exercises Cheng and Tsui,
1991
Chinese character exercise book for practical Chinese reader I The
Commercial Press, 1989
Recommended texts
Concise English- Chinese Chinese- English dictionary
OUP/Commercial Press (latest edn)
Beijing Foreign Languages Institute A Chinese- English dictionary The
Commercial Press, 1990
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