Spanish 90 Intermediate (B1.2)

Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona

Course Description

  • Course Name

    Spanish 90 Intermediate (B1.2)

  • Host University

    Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona

  • Location

    Barcelona, Spain

  • Area of Study

    Spanish

  • Language Level

    High Intermediate

    Hours & Credits

  • Contact Hours

    45
  • Recommended U.S. Semester Credits
    3
  • Recommended U.S. Quarter Units
    4
  • Overview

    LEVEL B1.2

     

    INTRODUCTION

    To succeed at this level student must demonstrate their capacity for linguistic activity that allows them to cover the following objectives in all the basic skills with a sufficient level of communicational effectiveness:

     

    Speaking
    — Communicate with a level of confidence on both habitual and less habitual matters related to their personal interests and specialist field.
    — Understand brief and clear public messages: announcements, signs, instructions, answering machines, most material recorded or broadcast in standard Spanish, etc.
    — Hold face to face or telephone conversations with known and unknown people on personal questions and understand the possible replies, ask for (if necessary) clarification, more detail or repetition of the explanation (standard and colloquial).
    — Describe a range of topics of interest, presenting them as a linear sequence of events.
    — Distinguish basic meaning from longer spoken information, presentations, interviews, documentaries, etc. (standard and colloquial).
    — Use strategies to promote communicative capacity using resources of a limited command of Spanish: paraphrase, ask for help, retrieve information for an interlocutor, etc. (standard and colloquial).

    Writing
    — Understand texts aimed at the general public: poster, notes, warnings, information leaflets, advertisements, programmes, institutional information, administrative forms, etc. (standard).
    — Understand and write message related to daily activities: note4s, postcards, personal letters, etc. (standard and colloquial).
    — Understand basic press news information, opinion articles or journalistic reports (standard).
    — Read specialised language texts related to professional activity, studies or personal interests: magazine articles, technical documents, etc. (standard).
    — Be able to argue a case in writing with a reasonable level of coherence.

    Speaking-writing activities
    — Takes notes from brief, clear and precise oral information, spoken in a standard register.
    — Summarise information taken from a written text or oral message (standard).

     

    LANGUAGE FUNCTIONS

    Social function
    — Use the most usual and conventional forms of courtesy and social behaviour.

    Informative function
    — Give information about things that they have seen, heard or read.
    — Transmit information, opinions or comments from other people.
    — Express hypothesis and supposition.
    — Announce proposals. Make plans.

    Expressive function
    — Express satisfaction or a lack of satisfaction, deception, happiness and boredom.
    — Express a desire.
    — Expressing surprise and disconcertment.
    — Express concern.
    — Express sorrow, pain or affliction.

    Evaluative function
    — Express interest, preferences, rejection, aversion and indifference.
    — Give, justify and defend an opinion. Show agreement and disagreement with respect to the opinions of others. Defend an opinion with arguments.
    Inductive function
    — Ask someone to do something or stop doing something directly (orders, requests, prohibitions) or indirectly (suggestions, advice, warnings).
    — Express a wish, desire or need to do something.
    — Make a complaint.
    — Requesting something, specifying the conditions. Requesting a service.

    Meta-linguistic function
    — Use of the necessary resources to maintain communication in the case of doubts or pauses.
    — Rectifying and correcting.
    — Emphasising part of the discourse.
    — Ask for explanations about grammatical content.

     

    GRAMMATICAL CONTENT

    Determinants
    — Indefinite pronouns: mismo, otro, cualquier…
    — Construction (preposition) + definite article + que: con la que, por el que.

    Nouns and adjectives
    — Relative sentences.

    Verbs
    — Past perfect tense.
    — Consolidation of the use of past tenses.
    — Conditional tense.
    — Present subjunctive of regular and irregular verbs.
    — Introduction to mperfect subjunctive of frequently used regular and irregular verbs (venir, hacer, salir…).
    — Consolidation of future verb forms.
    — Phrasal verbs: acabar de, dejar de, volver a + infinitive; llevar + gerund.
    — Impersonal verb forms: with the pronoun 'se'; with the third person plural; with the third person singular.
    — Verbal agreement in the expression of the first and second conditionals ("Si hace buen tiempo…") and improbable situations (“Si me tocara la lotería…”) using 'si'.

    Adverbs
    — Adverbs of state: extension.
    — Adverbs of time: extension.
    — Adverbs of doubt: extension.

    Pronouns
    — Relative pronouns: el/la/los/las que…, quien, cual, cuales.

    Prepositions
    — Extension of prepositions and prepositional phrases.

    Conjunctions
    — Revision and extension of conjunctions.
    — Introduction to conjunctions and conjunctional phrases of subordination

Course Disclaimer

Credits earned vary according to the policies of the students' home institutions. According to ISA policy and possible visa requirements, students must maintain full-time enrollment status, as determined by their home institutions, for the duration of the program.

ECTS (European Credit Transfer and Accumulation System) credits are converted to semester credits/quarter units differently among U.S. universities. Students should confirm the conversion scale used at their home university when determining credit transfer.

Please reference fall and spring course lists as not all courses are taught during both semesters.

Availability of courses is based on enrollment numbers. All students should seek pre-approval for alternate courses in the event of last minute class cancellations

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