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Spanish courses to move to lecture hall format
Beginning Spanish classes will no longer be held in smaller classrooms so the department can 'become more efficient'
By: Mark Daniel
Posted: 3/20/07
A renewed focus on efficiency will send all Spanish 101 courses for the
fall semester into a larger, lecture hall-style format.
While all foreign language courses are in smaller classrooms, Ruth
Gross, head of the Foreign Languages and Literatures department, said
the decision to move some to lecture halls came after the consideration
of several factors.
"All departments are being encouraged to become more efficient and
every department has to set priorities, and in many ways, 101 courses
are the least important to us," Gross said.
According to Gross, every student who attends the University is
required to take two years of a foreign language while in high school,
and most of those students have taken Spanish.
"If they don't place out of 101, then that means they will be retaking
what they took in high school," Gross said. "We had been spending a lot
of money on what is essentially a catch-up class."
Gross said the fact that the majority of 101 students will not continue
their Spanish education deep into their time at the University was also
a factor in the decision.
"We did some research and found that only four percent of students in
101 will go on to take 300 level FLS courses. We tried to find a way
that we could become more efficient."
While the decision to move to a lecture hall format was made primarily
for budgetary reasons, Gross said that the department had come up with
a model that will help provide students in the lecture hall classes
with a lot of the personal attention and one-on-one instruction that
the smaller classes provided. They also addressed some of the drawbacks
of the bigger class.
"In a big class like this...the biggest challenge will be getting
students' attention," she said. "The teacher will have to be a very
engaging, very experienced instructor and we think we have found that
instructor. Also, we plan on having 4 TA's to interact with the
students."
Gross said the department plans on breaking up the class and doing a
lot of partner and group work like what students do in smaller sections.
Scott Despain, an associate professor of foreign languages and
literatures, said the lecture style classes have some advantages other
than those concerning finances.
"When we took a look at the instructional needs of our department and
the type of student that is usually in our 101 classes, it just made
sense to bring all of our sections together to utilize our new graduate
assistants who have no teaching experience, so they are able to work
with a master teacher to get action in the classroom," Despain said.
Despain echoed several of the concerns that Gross had about the challenges of the lecture style class.
"In the humanities, we love student contact and getting to know our
students. It will be a challenge for me to do this now," Despain said.
"I've visited the room where the class will be held and it's
dramatically different than I'm used to."
Teira Dadgar, a freshman in environmental sciences and a Spanish minor,
agreed and said she didn't think switching to large lecture halls was a
good idea.
"For foreign language classes, I think you need more one-on-one time
with the teacher that wouldn't be feasible in a lecture hall," she said.
Despain said the rows of desks in the lecture hall are arranged in a way that accommodates his movement throughout the room.
Overall, Despain said the new format will meet the needs of everyone involved with the Spanish department.
"It will meet the needs of our students and our faculty," he said. "It
will help our 101 students, our grad students who will be TA's, and I
hope that I will be able to enjoy it as much as I've enjoyed teaching
my other classes."
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