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French Honours Modules

Students study the core language modules, including final-year Communication Skills, a module which, along with Translation Methodology, was designed and launched in St Andrews and has achieved international recognition. Students also choose from a wide range of modules in language and linguistics, literature, intellectual history and twentieth-century culture, politics and society, all taught by specialists of national and international standing. These modules are usually assessed with a mix of continuous assessment and examination but we also offer dissertation modules, allowing students to work on extended personal research with a tutor to advise them. Overall, therefore, students are able to put together a degree programme the content of which is adapted to their skills, interests and career intentions.

Please be aware that module details are only correct for the current academic session and may change from one year to the next.

Click on module code to skip directly to information below:

Semester 1

Semester 2

Whole year

Either semester

Please note that individual courses of study have to be approved by the relevant Faculty and your choice of modules may be restricted by the regulations. If in doubt, please ask for advice.

15 Credits

FR3001 French Language 1

The module aims to give a fundamental training at Honours level in written and aural comprehension skills, objective resume writing, oral and written fluency, and in translation from French to English... It is intended as the basic practical language unit for all categories of student.

Availability: All
Semester: 1
Time: 11.00 am, 12.00 noon, 2.00pm or 3.00pm Monday
Teaching method: 2 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3002 French Language 2

Building on FR3001, the module aims to complete foundational training at Honours level, taking in written and aural comprehension skills, analytical resume writing, oral and written fluency, and translation from English to French. It is intended as the basic practical language unit for all categories of student and may be a specific prerequisite for FR4105. It may be taken independently of FR3001 subject to Chair's approval.

Availability: All
Semester: 2
Time: 11.00 am, 12.00 noon, 2.00pm or 3.00pm Monday.
Teaching method: 2 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 3-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3021 An Introduction to the French Classical Period

This module aims to give a general introduction to the broader concerns of the literature of seventeenth-century France, looking at elements of development in the literary genres, while relating them to fundamental changes in the society of the time. Prescribed texts will be drawn from authors such as Corneille, Racine, Molihre, Madame de la Fayette and La Fontaine.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 or 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3028 Plays, Players and Playwrights: the Theatre in France, 1620-1715: (1 )

This module will cover the following areas with regard to the theatre from 1620 until 1660 in terms of texts, and until 1680 in terms of the physical aspects: (i) the theatre as a physical entity: the salles, developments in staging, spectacle; (ii) the theatre as theory: from baroque to classical; (iii) the theatre as text: developments in the three genres; (iv) the theatre and society; (v) the theatre and political control. Primary texts to be drawn from Rotrou, P. Corneille, Scarron, (Moli?re). Secondary texts from Quinault, Mairet, Tristan.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 or 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: none
Antirequsites: none
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR3047 Literature of Ideas from Descartes to Rousseau (1)

This module studies the literature and history of ideas in seventeenth-century France. It will focus on such issues as the threat to religious orthodoxy, optimism and pessimism, amour-propre and the beginnings of opposition to the political regime of Louis XIV. Three or four texts will be studied chosen from a range of authors including Descartes, Saint-Evremond, Pascal, La Rochefoucauld and La Bruyere. This module complements others available in the Department dealing with the literature and theatre of seventeenth-century France.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 or 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3053 History of the French Language

The module explores the development of French from its parent-language Latin. No prior knowledge of Latin will be required. It will look first at the social history of the language, before examining short extracts illustrating the different stages through which the language has passed. The module concludes with an examination of how the sounds of Latin have changed to give rise to the Modern French sound-system.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3063 De Gaulle and Since: Topics in the Politics, Culture and Society of the Fifth Republic (1)

Taught entirely in French, this module explores through literary texts, but also films, press extracts and video documents, the politics, culture and society of the Fifth Republic instituted by Charles de Gaulle. Major themes include: wartime France (collaboration and resistance); the Algerian War; de Gaulle's political thought; the Constitution of the Fifth Republic.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 or 1.5 hours
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment: None
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR3075 Antillean Literature from Cesaire to the Present

This module introduces students to the rich literary production of the French Antilles (Martinique and Guadeloupe) of the last 70 or so years. Lectures will provide historical, political and literary background, while the bulk of work will consist of seminar discussion centred on four to seven texts, principally novels but possibly also including plays, collections of poetry or polemical writings. Writers discussed may include Cisaire, Glissant, Condi, Maximin, Chamoiseau and Pineau. The module is taught and assessed entirely in French.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: none
Antirequsites: none
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR3076 Writing the Nineteenth Century (1); French Literature, History and Politics 1848 to 1871

This module explores the relationship between literature, politics and society during a crucial period of modern French history, from the Second Republic to the Paris Commune of 1871. Students will read literary texts by three major authors of the period. Discussion and analysis of these texts will allow us to consider issues such as urbanization, women's place and aspirations, war and insurrection and the poetics of visionary idealism. Students will thus achieve an informed understanding of essential elements in the cultural and political foundations of contemporary France.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites: FR3023
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR3077 Twenty-First-Century French Fiction

The aim of this module is to introduce students to representative works of contemporary French fiction, where 'contemporary' indicates a period of time no greater than fifteen years from the present day. At least two texts will be published in the 21st century. Set texts will be selected with a view to revealing emerging thematic and stylistic trends in French literature, which might currently include: literature post 9/11; representations of 'the Far East' (China and Japan); new perspectives on WWII; faith(s) today; influence of the visual (e.g. film) on the written text.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminars and fortnightly lectures.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR3078 Writing the Self in Twentieth-Century French Literature

This module explores theories relating to autobiography and ecriture de soi as well as a variety of autobiographical practices reflecting significant trends in twentieth-century French literature. Students will read texts by major authors (for example Sartre, Perec, Sarraute and Ernaux) and will reflect on their thematic and stylistic features, with an emphasis on notions such as childhood, memory, (life)-writing, language, education and identity. Students will be encouraged to adopt a comarative approach in order to study the use of photography, myths, fiction and imagination in autobiography and autofiction and to conceptualise potential links between genre and gender.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminars and fortnightly lectures.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR3079 From Text to Screen: Novels & their Film Adaptations

This module will focus on filmic adaptations of major French and Francophone literary works. Emphasis will be placed on the specificities and differences between film and literary text as well as their similarities. Whilst addressing questions about narrative and representation, this module will engage with the political dimensions of the process of appropriation at play in adaptation, in particular in the light of the development of postcolonial and feminist studies. It will lead to a discussion and analysis of the question of French and Francophone identity and its evolution both in literary and visual culture.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminars and fortnightly lectures.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR3080 Intellectuals in Modern France

This module explores the role of intellectuals in modern France (from the end of the 19th century until today). We will examine the 'birth' of the intellectual during the Dreyfus Affair and evaluate the impact that intellectuals have had in the political and socio-cultural history of twentieth-century France. The following aspects will be covered: the definition and role of the intellectual, conflicts which have emerged between intellectuals in the twentieth century, the involvement of intellectual figures in the political sphere, the structures of the cultural and intellectual life in France, the role played and to be played by intellectuals in contemporary France.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminars and fortnightly lectures.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%(2,000 word essay = 25%, assessed oral presentation (in French) = 15%), 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR3081 The Court of Louis XIV

different sources, including theatre, memoirs, history books, film, music and art. Particular attention will be paid to the tension between Louis the (great) king and Louis the (weak) man, to his official image and the reality behind it. Topics studied will include the notion of absolutism, Louis's mistresses, Louis the "most Christian king", the construction of the chateau at Versailles, the Tartuffe controversy and the Affair of the Poisons.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminars.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
Short loan supplementary reading list
60 Credits

FR3101 French Integrated Year Abroad

The objective of the module is language learning and cultural familiarisation through a work placement in a French-speaking country. Placements will be as Language Assistants in Schools or on other assignments approved by the department. Formal learning and assessment will be through a supervised project chosen in consultation with the module co-ordinator who will provide more detailed guidelines. The Project Essay will be 5000 words in French to be received in the department by a specified date in May.

Availability: May be subject to restrictions from receiving country.
Semester: Whole Year
Time: Please Contact Department
Teaching method: By correspondence throughout the year.
Prerequisites: Admission to Honours Programme with Integrated Year Abroad.
Antirequsites: FR3103 or Erasmus Exchange
Assessment: Project Essay = 100%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3103 Self-Access Residence Project in France

This module is designed to recognise and reward, on the basis of an approved project dissertation of 5,000-6,000 words, the benefit derived from an academically focussed period of six weeks' residence in the country of degree study. The residence project takes place in the summer vacation; the dissertation is written in French during the following semester. It is open to all students of single, dual, joint,triple language or three subject degrees who have neither taken FR3101 nor undertaken recognised study abroad such as a Erasmus year. Enrolment is subject to the Chairman's discretion: the project for residence and the project dissertation topic must be agreed in advance.

Availability: All
Semester: 1
Time: Please Contact Department
Teaching method: Please Contact Department
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: FR4198, FR4199 and as stated below.
Assessment: Dissertation = 100%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3805 Honours French 1 (Science)

This module offers an extension at Honours level to the skills of oral and written production of French developed by FR2015 and FR2016. It involves communication skills, oral classes and consolidation of core language elements. It forms part of the relevant B.Sc. and M.Chem. degrees with French.

Availability: All
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 3 practicals.
Prerequisites: A pass at 11 or better in FR2016
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 30%, Oral Examination = 30%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3806 Honours French 2 (Science)

This module offers a further extension of the skills developed by FR3805 or FR3809, involving communication skills in written and spoken French and further consolidation of core language elements. It forms part of the relevant B.Sc. and M.Chem. degrees with French.

Availability: All
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 3 practicals.
Prerequisites: FR3805 or FR3809
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 30%, Oral Examination = 30%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR3809 French Dissertation (Science)

This is a self-access module designed for students spending study periods or work placements away from St Andrews in connection with their Honours course in Science. Because such periods away may arise in any of the four semesters of the two Honours years, this module may be taken in place of either FR3805 or FR3806. It will be assessed by a dissertation in French (3,000 - 3,500 words) on an approved topic.

Availability: All
Semester: Either
Time: Please Contact Department
Teaching method: Please Contact Department
Prerequisites: A pass at 11 or better in FR2016.
Antirequsites: FR4809
Assessment: Dissertation = 100%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4078 Music in Nineteenth-Century French Poetry

In this module we will study the crucial role played by notions of music and musicality in the development of French poetry during an intense period of innovation. We will consider why, and how, throughout the nineteenth century, from the Romantic period (Lamartine, Hugo) to the Symbolists (Verlaine, Mallarme), as the definition of poetry evolves rapidly, it nevertheless remains closely bound to musical concepts such as melody, harmony and rhythm. Focusing primarily on important poetic texts by major authors, we will also consider the parallels between formal and theoretical developments in both poetry and music, and the ways in which both arts evolve through comparison with each other. No prior expertise in the practice or study is required for this module, which focuses on how poetry defines itself through musical ideas.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminar and occasional lectures.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR4103 Translation Methodology (1)

The module gives a progressive, intensive training in the method and practice of translating from French into English. Topics covered include: translation as process and product; cultural issues in translation; translation and the formal properties of texts. A wide range of material is used, from technical texts, through consumer-oriented texts to poetry and song.

Availability:
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 x 2-hour seminar.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR4104 Translation Methodology (2)

The module gives a progressive, intensive training in the method and practice of translating from French into English. Topics covered include: translation and language variety, translation and textual genres, technical translation, editing, aspects of contrastive linguistics. A wide range of material is used, from technical texts, through consumer-oriented texts to literary texts.

Availability: All
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 x 2-hour seminar.
Prerequisites: FR4103
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4105 Communication Skills in French (1)

The module aims to develop communicative skills, both written and spoken. It follows a text- and video-based method designed by the Department which enables students to present ideas and opinions clearly and persuasively, in appropriate registers of French.

Availability: All
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 2 hours.
Prerequisites: FR3002 if taken, otherwise FR3001 or Erasmus year/semester abroad.
Antirequsites: none
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment: None
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR4106 Communication Skills in French (2)

Building on FR4105, this module aims to further develop communicative skills, both written and spoken. Pursuing the text- and video-based method it enhances the ability of students to present ideas and opinions clearly and persuasively, in appropriate registers of French.

Availability: All
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 2 hours.
Prerequisites: FR4105
Antirequsites: none
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 30%, Oral Examination = 30%
Reassessment: None
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR4114 The Chivalric Romance and the World of Arthur

The module introduces students to both the verse and prose romance from the period c.1150-1250, together with shorter texts such as the breton lai and comic parodies of romance. The course will include consideration of concepts of literary form and originality, and of attitudes to women. Overall it will focus on the rise of the individual, and the possibility of success and failure through the process of the aventure.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1 or 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4122 Literature of the French Enlightenment

This module provides an introduction to the literature of eighteenth-century France. Texts are studied within the context of the literary and intellectual preoccupations of the period. Prescribed authors may include writers such as Marivaux, Diderot, Voltaire and Beaumarchais.

Availability:
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR4124 Twentieth-century French Literature

The module focuses on the twentieth-century novel and involves the study in depth of works by authors such as Gide, Sartre, Camus, Tournier, Duras, Darrieussecq and Marie Nimier. Topics for study will include the notion of narrative, its exploration and re-evaluation; ethics and morality; the place and status of the individual/writer in society; and themes such as the self, other, identity, gender, sexuality, the family, nature and urbanism.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4129 Plays, Players & Playwrights: the Theatre in France, 1620-1715: (2 )

This module will cover the following areas with regard to the theatre from 1660 until 1715 in terms of texts, and from 1680 until 1715 in terms of the physical aspects: (i) the theatre as a physical entity: the salles, developments in staging, opera; (ii) the theatre as theory: solidification and stasis; (iii) the theatre as text: generic polarisation; (iv) the theatre and society - l'effet Versailles; (v) the theatre and political control. Primary texts to be drawn from P. Corneille (Trois Discours), Molihre, Racine, Dancourt, Lesage. Secondary texts from La Fontaine, Cyrano.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: FR3028
Antirequsites: none
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 100%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR4149 Aspects of Gender in Seventeenth-Century Theatre

This module presents an exploration of key issues relating to sex and gender as they feature in seventeenth-century theatre. Topics will include male-female relations, marriage and widowhood, female education, homoeroticism, cross-dressing, cross-casting, gender stereotypes and female authorship. Our corpus will include a variety of theatrical genres, including comedy, tragedy, tragic-comedy and sacred drama by Benserade, Pierre Corneille, Thomas Corneille, Moliere, Villedieu and Racine. The reading list will include some critical articles and some short theoretical readings, notably excerpts from Foucault's Histoire de la sexualite.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR4160 From One War to Another: French Politics, Culture & Society 1914-1945 (2)

This module will look at the rise of Communism and Fascism, Vichy France, the Resistance and laipuration. Set texts include: Andri Malraux, La Condition humaine, Georges Bataille, Le Bleu du ciel, Ian Higgins (ed.), Anthology of Second World War Poetry.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: FR3059
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4164 De Gaulle & Since: Topics in Politics, Culture & Society of the Fifth Republic (2)

Taught entirely in French, this module continues to explore through literary texts, but also films, press extracts and video documents, the politics, culture and society of the Fifth Republic instituted by Charles de Gaulle. Major themes include: May 1968; the New Wave cinema; Mitterrand and the inheritance of the Left; the National Front and the politics of the Right.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites: none
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment: None
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR4180 Modern French Thought

This module will focus on French thought and its developments from the 1940s onwards. The main critical and intellectual currents will be studied, such as existentialism, structuralism, semiology, post-modernism in relation to modernism, and feminism. Texts by key authors of the second half of the twentieth century (for exampleSartre, Barthes, Kristeva, Foucault, Lyotard) will be analysed to show how the notions of language, knowledge and power as well as gender issues have evolved, how they are connected and how they are currently interpreted on the French contemporary literary and intellectual scene.

Availability: 2011-12
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 1.5 hours.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
Short loan supplementary reading list
15 Credits

FR4181 Contemporary French Crime Fiction

This module introduces students to contemporary (post-1985) French crime fiction. Via the analysis of texts by key contemporary crime writers (e.g. Pennac, Dantec, Aubert, Izzo) students will learn about: the historical background of the genre; how and where crime fiction is situated in the fields of 'popular culture' and literature in general; what different sub-genres of crime fiction exists. The module will focus on both the modalities of social / historical / political engagement of the set texts and the narrative and linguistic strategies deployed in the writing of crime fiction.

Availability: Not available 2011-12
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: Weekly seminars and fortnightly lectures.
Prerequisites:
Antirequsites:
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 60%
Reassessment:
15 Credits

FR4198 Dissertation on a French Topic

The dissertation offers students the possibility of personal advanced study on a topic on which they already have adequate basic knowledge and for which a suitable Supervisor can be found. Guidance will be offered on research methods and on presentation. The dissertation can be either a) a study of a given body of primary material in a given perspective, or b) a critical review of a range of secondary material on a given subject. It should be 5,000 - 6,000 words in length, be submitted in accordance with guidelines and deadlines, and normally be written in English. The topic must be agreed in advance by the Chairman of Department following a favourable report from the Supervisor, whom students should contact in the first instance.

Availability: Available only to students in the Final year of the Honours Programme.
Semester: Either
Time: Please Contact Department
Teaching method: Please Contact Department
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: FR3103, FR4199
Assessment: Dissertation = 100%
Reassessment: None
30 Credits

FR4199 Long Dissertation on a French Topic

The dissertation offers students the possibility of personal advanced study on a topic in French on which they already have adequate basic knowledge and for which a suitable Supervisor can be found. Guidance will be offered on research methods and on presentation. The dissertation will, as a rule, consist of a study of a given body of primary material in a given perspective. Its length should be 10,000 words maximum. It should be submitted in accordance with guidelines and deadlines, and normally be written in English. The topic must be agreed in advance by the Chairman of Department following a favourable report from the Supervisor, whom students should contact in the first instance.

Availability: Available only to students in the Final year of the Honours Programme.
Semester: Whole Year
Time: Please Contact Department
Teaching method: Please Contact Department
Prerequisites: None
Antirequsites: FR3103, FR4198, GM4099, IT4099, RU4199, SP4099
Assessment: Dissertation = 100%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4807 Honours French 3 (Science)

This module extends the skills of oral and written production of French into the final Honours year. It continues the communication skills programme using video and textual material. It forms part of the relevant B.Sc. and M.Chem. degrees with French.

Availability: All
Semester: 1
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 3 practicals.
Prerequisites: Two of FR3805, FR3806, FR3809
Antirequsites: None
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 2-hour Examination = 30%, Oral Examination = 30%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4808 Honours French 4 (Science)

This module completes the communication skills training in written and spoken French for the B.Sc. or M.Chem. student in the final year. Using video and textual material, it also requires the student to prepare, for the oral examination in French, the Science project required by the relevant Science department (or some equivalent topic).

Availability: All
Semester: 2
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method: 3 practicals.
Prerequisites: Three of FR3805, FR3806, FR3809, FR4807, FR4809
Antirequsites: none
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 40%, 3-hour Examination = 30%, Oral Examination = 30%
Reassessment: None
15 Credits

FR4809 Science French Dissertation

This is a self-access module designed for Senior Honours students spending study periods or work placements away from St Andrews in connection with their Honours course in Science, when it will replace either FR4807 or FR4808. It will be assessed by a dissertation in French (3,500 - 4,000 words) on an approved topic. For students in their final semester, the Oral Examination will also determine the award of Distinction in Spoken French.

Availability: all
Semester: Either
Time: To be arranged.
Teaching method:
Prerequisites: FR3805, FR3806
Antirequsites: FR3809
Assessment: Continuous Assessment = 80%, Oral Examination = 20%
Reassessment: