To provide the ability to read and understand the French written scripts with the usage of the dictionary when necessary. To make sure, shopping, road description and daily conversations can be done.
Prerequisite(s)
French II
Corequisite(s)
Course Code Course Name…
Special Requisite(s)
The minimum qualifications that are expected from the students who want to attend the course.(Examples: Foreign language level, attendance, known theoretical pre-qualifications, etc.)
Short repeating on subjects including French 1. Examples from second and third present tense conjugations.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
2. Week
Studies on the effects of accord on participial verbs caused by personal pronouns in simple past tense use, explanations on all verbs’ “simple future tense” conjugation. Distribution of new copies that include new vocabulary information and sentence exercises with future tense verbs. Reading exercise and question-answer practice. Assignments.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
3. Week
Explanations about time and place adverbs, indefinite pronouns, using them in a sentence, examples of how to use time and place adverbs in future and past tense sentences.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
4. Week
Explanation of story tense and examples about using it with simple past tense. Remembering signal adjectives, explanation possessive pronouns and signal pronouns. Assignments about all subjects.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
5. Week
Practices on signal adjectives and pronouns, time and place adverbs and possessive pronouns. Reading pieces and question-answer exercises.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
6. Week
Midterm week.
7. Week
Explaining midterm questions. Distributing new vocabulary copies. Sentence making exercises. Reading exercises and question-answer exercises. Assignments on all subjects.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
8. Week
Explaining indirect speech, techniques on making a sentence in indirect speech structure. Showing inflection and formation of conditional mood-conditional present. Entering to conditional sentences. Related reading and question-answer exercises.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
9. Week
Practicing on conditional sentences. Explaining conditional mood making table. Indirect sentences exercise. Distribution of copies including new vocabulary and translation exercises.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
10. Week
Exercise on relative pronouns. Repetition and practices on conditional mood. Reading pieces and question-answer exercises.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
11. Week
Exercises on possessive pronouns, signal pronouns, indefinite pronouns and relative pronouns. Translation exercises. Distribution of the papers including new vocabulary information and practicing translation exercises on them. Assignments about all subjects.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
12. Week
Translation exercises. Repetition before the final exam. Reading exercises. Question-answer exercises.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
13. Week
Distribution of the papers including new vocabulary information and translation exercises on them. Reading exercises and question-answer exercises. Repetition before the final exam depending on the general wishes.
Oral presentation, Written examples, Recitations.
14. Week
Cheering up concert before the final exam.
15. Week
Final exam
16. Week
17. Week
Assessments
Evaluation tools
Quantity
Weight(%)
Midterm(s)
1
40
Attendance
1
10
Final Exam
1
50
Program Outcomes
PO-1
Critical Thinking: Ability to inquire, use abstract ideas to interpret information, consider diverse points of view, reach well-reasoned conclusions.
PO-2
Communication: Ability to use appropriate representational media to transmit essential formal elements at design process.
PO-3
Investigation: Ability to gather, record, apply, and comparatively evaluate relevant information within design processes.
PO-4
Design: Ability to reproduce the design information in the creative thinking process, to reach new and original results through universal design principles such as sustainability and accessibility.
PO-5
World Architecture: Understanding world architecture in terms of their historical, geographical and global factors.
PO-6
Local Architecture / Cultural Diversity: Understanding the architectural formations and samples of a geography through its historical and cultural context. Understanding the divergent canons of cultural values, behavioral, social and spatial patterns.
PO-7
Cultural Heritage and Conservation: Understanding of conservation discourses and methods, and the subjects of cultural heritage, conservation awareness, environmental concerns and ethical responsibility.
PO-8
Sustainability: Ability to design projects by using the information regarding the natural and built environment to reduce the undesirable environmental impacts on future generations through means.
PO-9
Social Responsibility: Understanding of the architect’s responsibility about protecting the commonweal, having respect for historical/cultural and natural resources and improving the life quality.
PO-10
Nature and Human: Understanding of the relationship between human, the natural environment and the design of the built environment.
PO-11
Geographical Conditions: Understanding the relationships of site selection, settlement and building design by considering the cultural, economical and social properties as well as the natural characteristics such as soil, topography, vegetation and watershed.
PO-12
Life Safety: Understanding the basic principles of security and life-safety systems in the conditions of natural disasters, fire, etc. through building and environment scales.
PO-13
Structural Systems: Understanding of the basic principles of structural behavior in withstanding gravity and lateral forces and the evolution, range, and appropriate application of contemporary structural systems.
PO-14
Environmental Systems: Understanding the principles of physical environmental systems’ design such as lighting, acoustics, climatization and the use of appropriate performance assessment tools.
PO-15
Building Envelope Systems: Understanding of the basic principles involved in the appropriate application of building envelope systems and associated assemblies.
PO-16
Building Service Systems: Understanding of the basic design principles of building service systems such as plumbing, electrical, vertical transportation, security, and fire protection systems.
PO-17
Building Materials and Assemblies: Understanding of the basic principles utilized in the appropriate selection of construction materials, products, components and assemblies, based on their inherent characteristics and performance, including their environmental impact and reuse.
PO-18
Integration of Building Service Systems: The ability of assessing, selecting and integrating the structural, environmental, security, envelope and service systems of the buildings for building design.
PO-19
Programming and Evaluation: Ability to prepare and evaluate an architectural project program by considering the public benefits in regards of client and user needs, appropriate examplers, space and equipment requirements, financial limitations, site conditions, relevant codes, laws and design principles.
PO-20
Comprehensive Project Development: Ability to produce a comprehensive architectural project that demonstrates to make design decisions across various scales.
PO-21
Considering Building Costs: Understanding the fundamentals of building construction and use costs.
PO-22
Architect-Client Relationship: Understanding of the responsibility of the architect to elicit, understand, and reconcile the needs of the client, owner, user groups, and the public and community domains.
PO-23
Collaboration: Ability to work in collaboration with others and in multidisciplinary teams to successfully complete design projects.
PO-24
Project Management: Understanding of the methods for competing for commissions, selecting consultants and assembling teams, and recommending project delivery methods.
PO-25
Practice Management: Understanding the basic principles in the architectural practice processes like financial management, business planning, quality management, risk management, discussion and reconciliation.
PO-26
Leadership: Understanding of the techniques and skills architects use to work collaboratively in the building design and construction process and on environmental, social, and aesthetic issues in their communities.
PO-27
Legal Rights and Responsibilities:
Understanding of the architect’s responsibility to the public and the client as determined by regulations and legal considerations involving the practice of architecture.
PO-28
Professional Practice: Understanding and fulfillment of employer and intern rights and responsibilities for development of profession.
PO-29
Ethics of Profession: Understanding of the ethical issues involved in profession regarding social, political and cultural issues in architectural design and practice.