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PARIS MORNING COURSES Elementary French 1002 Dr. Sabrina Wengier, Middle Georgia State College This study abroad course will provide you with the unique opportunity to continue learning French in France, to experience the language and the culture, and to be able to use your French inside and outside of the classroom. The streets of Paris, its museums, restaurants, and malls, will become your extended classroom. In class, we will focus on grammar, vocabulary acquisition, and conversation, and we will use our language skills during our various field trips. Prerequisites: A C or better in French 1001 or two years of high school French. Developing Individuals Across Cultures (LD) Dr. Tsu-Ming Chiang, Georgia College & State University This is an introductory course in child development. An overview of principles and theories of human growth and development will be examined with an emphasis on cultural application and analysis. Students are expected to read the theoretical perspectives on human development and observe cultural differences in relation to these perspectives. Field trips to museums, parks and the local schools in observing children and family interaction will be used for in-class discussion. This course will provide opportunities for students to contrast American and Irish family dynamics and education systems to understand cultural influences on human development. World Literature (LD) Dr. Laura Thomason, Middle Georgia State College Gertrude Stein’s famous statement “America is my country, but Paris is my hometown” suggests the ways in which people, languages, nations, and cultural movements are connected. This course will explore those connections by allowing students to experience world literature in a new context. From the Iliad and Odyssey through Beowulf, Dante, and Machiavelli, students will not only read and interpret literary works but see artifacts and visit historical sites. These hands-on experiences will contextualize a series of literary periods that can often seem remote. Students can then synthesize connections among literary themes, historical moments, and social movements. NO Prerequisites The Photographic Journal Rick Pukis, Georgia Regents University The camera can record our world with dramatic results if we know how to properly operate the tool and compose the frame. Students will study the principles of photography, form, balance, symmetry, mise-en-scene (light, blocking, and composition), depth of field, contrast, color and more. The class will examine and deconstruct the work of renowned French photographers such as Robert Doisneau and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Students will become photographic “flaneurs” using the sidewalks of the city as their stage to compose images for a photographic journal of their experiences in Paris. Additional academic rigor is infused by including focus on multimedia journalistic storytelling. No prerequisites Introduction to Political Science (LD) Dr. Jamie Scalera, Georgia Southern University Intro to America Government is recommended but not required Political science is incredibly dynamic, drawing on a number of disciplines to explore the distribution of power and authority across a diversity of political systems around the world. In this course, we will explore the foundations of political science, paying particular attention to the structural and procedural elements of politics. Along the way, we will survey the four main subfields of political science: American politics, comparative politics, international relations, and political theory. We will also examine a number of contemporary political issues, including the polarization of partisan politics, efforts to control political violence, and the struggle for economic equality. No prerequisite ART 1107 - Visual Art in Paris (observed, experienced, created) (LD) Ed Akins, Southern Polytechnick University This course provides an observational and experiential survey of contemporary art within Paris. Students will visit active artists ateliers to learn from visual artists practicing within the city and region. Atelier visits will support lecture topics, readings, and artistic exploration within the studio/classroom setting. Documentation and analysis of observed art will prioritize themes, elements, and principles of artistic expression that will be used in student work. Students will be asked to document and analyze their own work and position it within the context of contemporary artistic practice or a chosen period of artistic expression. The end of the course will result in an exhibition of work / installations and the documentation of processes that lead to a final work of art by each student. Arts in Society: Theatre and Performance (LD) Dr. Ming Chen, Kennesaw State University Arts in Society: Theatre and Performance studies the value of the arts as vital and relevant forces in the lives of human beings, with particular focus on the arts of theatre and performance. Through a variety of aesthetic experiences, students examine elements of theatre, performance, music and visual arts and investigate the ways in which they reflect our experiences, express and arouse emotion, foster community and deepen our understanding of humanity. This course will satisfy the arts core requirement on all University of Georgia campuses. AFTERNOON COURSES La France Diverse: Grammaire et composition Dr. Sabrina Wengier, Middle Georgia State College What does it mean to be French today? France has always prided itself on its model of integration and its motto of “liberté, égalité, fraternité.” However, this model and motto are being challenged by France’s diverse and multicultural population, a population that is redefining the concept of “Frenchness.” While strengthening grammatical, written, and oral skills, we will discuss this evolving French identity. Through various media (cultural readings, movies, articles, songs,…), we will examine the topics of education, immigration and integration, the French language in movement, and France’s modèle social. As a class, we will create an online magazine, where each student will blog about his/her study abroad experience, and his/her personal reflections on France and French culture. The class is conducted in French. Prerequisites: A grade of C or better in French 2002. Cultures and Interpersonal Relationships (UD) Dr. Tsu-Ming Chiang, Georgia College & State University Interpersonal relationships are profoundly influenced by cultural contexts and ethnic heritages. Such influences are difficult to detect without contrasting relationships across cultures. Through readings and field trips, this course examines how individuals’ personalities, family interaction and larger economic and cultural contexts affect interpersonal behaviors from parent-child, family, friendship to romantic relationships. Students will be challenged to analyze individual relationships and learn to appreciate cultural construction of perceiving principles and norm behaviors. It will provide a valuable cross-cultural perspective in understanding how cultural contexts contribute to social interaction and relationship formation in the increasingly globally connected world. Prerequisites: Intro to Psych and upperclassmen status Documentary Film Rick Pukis, Georgia Regents University Cinema is a medium of experiencing. In the field of film, the documentary is a remarkable tool because it can share the inner lives of those it records. Documentary filmmaking emphasizes production as a process of discovery, experimentation and collaboration between subject and filmmaker. This class will introduce students to the documentary format. Students will explore developing methodologies, shooting styles, and editorial strategies. Students will watch, discuss, and analyze to gain further appreciation of French and American documentary films. No prerequisites Introduction to the European Union (UD) Dr. Jamie Scalera, Georgia Southern University No prerequisites The European Union (EU) is one of the most complex and unique actors in the world today. In this course, we will examine a number of questions about the EU that have puzzled scholars and policy-makers alike. We will explore the EU’s history, political institutions, major policies, and foreign policy relationships with the rest of the world. At the end of the semester, we will apply our knowledge of the EU by participating in a simulation of a European Council summit. Ecological Urbanism: Learning from Ile Seguin-Rives de Seine (UD/grad) Dr. Ed Akins, Southern Polytechnic State Unversity This course is offered to strengthen student knowledge of ecological urbanism. The course is particularly interested in the analysis of contemporary ecological practices operating in this field. The class will use the Ile Seguin-Rives de Seine redevelopment project as our “learning lab” wherein we will witness ecological urbanism in progress! Design principles will be studied at multiple scales (from land planning to facades) to engage those who have diverse knowledge within the topics presented. Trips to other redevelopment sites throughout Paris will allow students to see, first-hand, areas in the city that underwent similar transformations during the late twentieth century. Intro to Theatrical Design (UD) Dr. Ming Chen, Kennesaw State University This course introduces students to the fundamental elements and principles of design and how they apply to the creation of scenery, costume and lighting for theatre. Through lectures, class discussions, projects, reviews of realized productions and text analysis, student will develop an understanding of the contribution of designers to the experience of a theatrical productions. Topics covered include design elements, principles, process, styles, scenery, costume and lighting. It culminates in a collaborative project in which students design costumes, scenery and lighting for a designated play text. This course will satisfy a theatre major requirement and an elective requirement for non-majors. Music Appreciation Dr. Ken Kirk (Valdosta State University) An introduction to music. Students will learn to use fundamental concepts of music history and theory as they encounter masterworks of western music. Fieldtrips will include concerts and recitals in such beautiful and historic venues as the church of St. Julien Le Pauvre, the Sainte Chapelle, and the Caveau de la Huchette jazz club. Fulfills Area C Humanities/Fine Arts requirement.