ELEMENTARY GERMAN I Course Outline & Materials High School Level 1A in progress revised: 10/16/06

An Interactive Online German Tutorial for the Academic Setting

josephlscott@hotmail.com

JOSEPH L. SCOTT, Ph.D.
DISTANCE LEARNING powered by MakeMeSmart®

COURSE DESIGN & OBJECTIVES

No one can "teach" you a language; it’s a gift you give yourself.  Because fluency has the limited shelf-life of a perishable commodity, your own desire and conscientious effort to keep learning are the keys to achieving, maintaining, and renewing it.  These interactive, online, tutorial self-teaching materials work best for the inquisitive, self-disciplined, emotionally mature student.  These qualities are prime requisites for learning anything, particularly a foreign language.  For such students, we provide the opportunity and the interactive, multimedia tools.

Beyond the language-teaching industry's abstract "Standards for Foreign Language Learning in the 21st Century" experienced teachers still must provide the concrete learning goals and tasks that set you on the path to language proficiency in its linguistic, "communicative", and cultural aspects.  You should expect that your German instructor-tutors define the content and form of your foreign language study, provide the tools to facilitate your learning, quantify your progress, and certify the high-water mark of your competency within this four-semester program!  The materials & tools on this website will help you achieve this "defined, limited mastery."

To date five German states have demanded that the most recent so-called "spelling reform" be abandoned.  Now several key  German publishers have abandoned this arrogant, ill-conceived piece of social engineering, something Germans in large numbers had already done informally.  Until German-speakers settle spelling & grammar issues among themselves, these materials will use pre-reform standards.

Lesson Plan Structure

  • Presentation:

    • Topical Setting: The computer first presents the lesson content (vocabulary, short expressions, questions, and answers).

    • Multimedia Dialog: The computer presents each previously encountered language lesson feature as text, image, and sound.

  • Dictation: The computer acoustically presents the student with a spoken expression, which he is asked to type and spell correctly.

  • Grammar: The student reads and studies a text representation of the central grammar topics featured in each lesson.

  • Exercises:

    • Written: The student is asked to print, fold, and complete a self-correcting hand-written exercise.

    • Composition: The student is directed to use the dictionary and idiomatic expression list to prepare a free composition to e-mail the instructor.

    • Interactive: The computer administers and scores an interactive multimedia exercise on the lesson material as a pre-test.

  • Readings in German Culture: Computer links take the student to a topical, real-time website, usually in a German-speaking country.

  • Interactive Tests: The computer administers and scores an interactive multimedia unit test on the lesson material.


LEARNING GOALS & EVALUATION

Learning Goals Evaluation 
Content Skills Internet Tools Demonstrated competency Level

Cumulative Vocab:

Listening: dialog; illustration contents

dialogs Exercises & Lesson quizzes; exam performance Novice low
Passive:  ca. 1000

Speaking: simple Q & A

dictations live interview (teacher's option)  
Active:  ca. 100

Reading: Short texts

exercises proctored Mid-Term & Final Exam (teacher's option)  
 

Writing: simple Q & A

quizzes, exams    
Grammar: in course outline

 

readings    

Responsibilities

Instructor-Tutor

Student

Present material; model spoken German; facilitate spoken practice in German; guide student acquisition of active & passive German language skills through sentence patterns, vocabulary, grammar, German idioms; accurately depict contemporary German life, history, & culture; encourage curiosity; answer questions. Participate in course activities in German; ask questions; contribute observations & insights.
Provide interactive learning materials over the Internet. Working from left to right on the Calendar of Assignments, access, use, and learn Internet materials as directed in course outline.
Evaluate & chronicle student progress through internet quizzes, dictations, readings, study questions, & exams. After study, perform interactive exercises, quizzes, and exams.

POLICIES

  1. ATTENDANCE: is STRONGLY ENCOURAGED.  Direct human interaction in German with the instructor/tutor and classmates can speed learning.   If you are within commuting distance of Tucson, Arizona and want this advantage, ask where and when tutorials meet.   Distance learners perform best when they are highly motivated and self-disciplined.  Students  have found that these tools lighten that burden.

  2. EVALUATION:  You can earn an "A" in this course!  See the table below to plan your final grade.  You may take and re-take a lesson exercise or randomized quiz at or near the scheduled date, and you may see your own current high scores anytime.  Interactive online Exams are proctored and time-delimited.

Remote Four-Skills Learning & Objective Testing via the Internet

Language Skill

Learning Modality

Testing

Dictation

sound discrimination; spelling

single, spoken (acoustic) utterances

Listening

word-phrase-utterance-meaning cognition

using spoken (acoustic) narrative or dialog

Speaking

grammatical (acoustic) speech production; pronunciation

live, real-time interview with spoken (acoustic) or visual cues

Reading

word-phrase-sentence-meaning cognition

based on reading texts

Writing

grammatical language production as composition

from spoken, text, or visual cues

GRADE

POINT %

GRADE COMPONENT

A = outstanding 90-100%
  • 30% of grade = average of highest scores on objective lesson quizzes
  • 20% of grade = proctored objective Mid-Term Exam
  • 30% of grade = proctored objective Final Exam
  • 10% of grade = free composition (subjective assessment)
  • 10% of grade = pronunciation (subjective assessment)
B = above average 80-89%
C = average 70-79%
D = below average 60-69%
F = inadequate 0-59%
I = incomplete

UNNECESSARY

"I" becomes "F" after 1 year


RESOURCES

     
  ScottNet's® On-Line Talking Pictorial Dictionary: German-English / English-German  
Learning Goals  Akustische Phonetik-Deutsch Deutsche Grammatik
German Keyboard Nützliche Ausdrücke Conversational Cliches
Lieder German Links Webcams
     

MATERIALS


CAUTIONS for doing computer-scored EXERCISES & QUIZZES !!

  1. Whenever a person asks a question, the respondent may answer in an almost infinite number of ways.

  2. It is impossible to anticipate all such answers, so to limit the number of acceptable responses, the teacher provides all the possible, reasonable answers he can think of.

  3. So, what's a "reasonable" answer?  Please remember that:

    • Drawings and photos seek to focus your attention on the action or factual content of the illustration.

    • Questions seek to ask very specifically about the illustrated (or strongly implied) action or factual content.

    • Your answers should always respond directly to, and within the scope of, this question-picture relationship, using the cue or phrase shown

    • The question / answer exercises provided should aid consensus on what the pictures illustrate.

Use these conventions:

  1. For special characters select the standard German Keyboard in your browser settings.

  2. Alternatively, you may use the "escape-sequences" displayed there, or "cut-and-paste" single characters.

  3. Start your answer as in the example or cue, and follow directions!

  4. Most questions require short answers in complete sentences.  A very few may be fill-in, multiple choice, etc.

  5. Keep your answers short, directly to-the-point, and within the scope of the question-picture relationship.

  6. Leave two(2) spaces between sentences, e.g., [Nein.[][]Es regnet nicht.], where the answer requires more than one sentence.

  7. Use correct punctuation.  A period should end most, if not all, sentences.

  8. Do not hit {Enter} at the end of your answer; just click the [Submit] button with your mouse.

  9. No extraneous keystrokes or unnecessary spaces!

Academic Calendars

Benson High School Cienega High School Empire High School Vail High School Pima Community College S.E.Learning Ctr.

Deutsch 1A: Tentative Calendar of Assignments and Quizzes, last revised: 11/12/06

You are responsible for blue, hot-link assignments.  Those with * are under construction.  Work from left-to-right, using each section of the lesson to prepare yourself for the interactive unit test in the right-hand column.

DDMM Plan  Presentations Dictation Grammar Exercises Readings in

Tests

  Day Topical Settings Multimedia Interactive

Written

Composition Interactive   Culture Interactive
Base Diagnostic 1*
8/21 Day 1 Performance goals On-Line Dictionary   Deutsche Grammatik     Deutsche Phonetik Nützliche Ausdrücke
8/22 Day 2 das Alphabet Conversational Cliches German Keyboard German Links Lieder
8/23 Day 3 Nützliche Ausdrücke Dialog Diktat 1   Schriftliches Diktat 1     Nützliche Ausdrücke

 

8/24 Day 4
8/28 Day 5 Kontaktaufnahme Dialog Diktat* das Substantiv Exercises   Kontaktaufnahme Nützliche Ausdrücke Kontaktaufnahme
8/29 Day 6
8/30 Day 7 Grüße Dialog Diktat* der bestimmte Artikel Exercises   Grüße Nützliche Ausdrücke Grüße
8/31 Day 8
9/4 Day 9 Abschiedsgrüße Dialog Diktat* der Plural des Substantivs Exercises   Abschiedsgrüße Conversational Cliches Abschiedsgrüße
9/5 Day 10                  
9/6 Day 11 Glückwünsche Dialog Diktat* das Personalpronomen Exercises   Glückwünsche Nützliche Ausdrücke Glückwünsche
9/7 Day 12 der Kasus Exercises Nützliche Ausdrücke
9/11 Day 13 der Indikativ Exercises Conversational Cliches
9/12 Day 14 Dankesbezeigung Dialog Diktat*       Dankesbezeigung Nützliche Ausdrücke Dankesbezeigung
9/13 Day 15
9/14 Day 16 Sprechen Sie...? Dialog Diktat* die Frage Exercises   Sprechen Sie...? Conversational Cliches Sprechen Sie...?
9/18 Day 17 das Subjekt im Hauptsatz
9/19 Day 18 Wie heißen Sie? Dialog Diktat* der Interrogativsatz Exercises   Wie heißen Sie? Vornamen Wie heißen Sie?
9/20 Day 19 Exercises
9/21 Day 20 Identität Dialog / Dialog Diktat* haben u. sein im Präsens Exercises     Nützliche Ausdrücke  
9/25 Day 21
9/26 Day 22 Sind Sie...? Dialog Diktat*       Sind Sie...? Conversational Cliches Sind Sie...?
9/27 Day 23
9/28 Day 24 Ist das...? Dialog Diktat* die Negation Exercises   Ist das...? Nützliche Ausdrücke Ist das...?
10/2 Day 25
10/3 Day 26 Wer ist das? Dialog Diktat* Interrogativpronomen Exercises   Wer ist das? Conversational Cliches Wer ist das?
10/4 Day 27
10/5 Day 28 Wohlsein - Seelenzustand Dialog           Conversational Cliches  
10/9 Day 29
10/10 Day 30 Wie geht´s? Dialog Diktat*       Wie geht´s? Conversational Cliches Wie geht´s?
10/11 Day 31
10/12 Day 32 Was für ein...? Dialog Diktat* der unbestimmte Artikel Exercises   Was für ein...?   Was für ein?
10/16 Day 33 4.00 bis 5.40 Uhr    

objective, time-delimited, proctored

HS 1a Mid-Term Exam
10/17 Day 34 Darf ich... vorstellen? Dialog Diktat*       Darf ich...vorstellen?   Darf ich...vorstellen?
10/18 Day 35
10/19 Day 36 Kennen Sie...? Dialog Diktat*       Kennen Sie...?   Kennen Sie...?
10/23 Day 37
10/24 Day 38 Was ist das? Dialog Diktat*       Was ist das?    Was ist das?
10/25 Day 39
10/26 Day 40 Was kostet das? Dialog* Diktat*     Market Was kostet das? Kräuter-Almanach Was kostet das?
10/30 Day 41   Kardinalzahlen 0-12 Diktat* Kardinalzahlen Exercises        
10/31 Day 42   Ordinalzahlen 1-12 Diktat* Ordinalzahlen Exercises Department Store   Einkaufen  
11/1 Day 43 Was lernen Sie? Dialog Diktat* Wortfolge im Hauptsatz Exercises Workshop Was lernen Sie? die Lehre Was lernen Sie?
11/2 Day 44
11/6 Day 45 Was studieren  Sie? Dialog Diktat*     University Was studieren  Sie? das Studium Was studieren Sie?
11/7 Day 46
11/8 Day 47 Was sind Sie von Beruf? Dialog Diktat*     Professions Was sind Sie von Beruf? Arbeitslosigkeit Was sind Sie von Beruf?
11/9 Day 48
11/13 Day 49

Welche Farbe hat...?

Dialog Diktat* die Farben Exercises  

Welche Farbe hat...?

  Welche Farbe hat?
11/14 Day 50

 

    das Possessivadjektiv Exercises  

 

   
11/15 Day 51 Was essen wir? Dialog Diktat* der Hauptsatz Exercises Holidays Was essen wir? Oktoberfest Was essen wir?
11/16 Day 52 das direkte Objekt im Hauptsatz Exercises
11/20 Day 53 Was trägst du? Dialog Diktat*   Exercises*   Was trägst du?   Was trägst du?
11/21 Day 54 Was frißt...? Dialog Diktat* das indirekte Objekt  Exercises Farm Was frißt...? der Bauernhof Was frißt...?
11/22 Day 55       Stellung der Objekte Exercises   Stellung der Objekte   Stellung der Objekte
11/27 Day 56             Stellung der Objekte I Denkmalschutz Stellung der Objekte I
11/28 Day 57 Wie finden Sie...? Dialog Diktat* prädikatives Adjektiv Exercises   Wie finden Sie...? das Berufsleben Wie finden Sie?
11/29 Day 58
11/30 Day 59 Wie bitte? Dialog Diktat* Interrogativadverb Exercises   Wie bitte?   Wie bitte?
12/4 Day 60       Steigerungsformen - Adjektiv u. Adverb Exercises Environment   die Umwelt  
12/5 Day 61

Wie fühlst du dich?

Dialog Diktat* Reflexive Verben Exercises Body parts & function

Wie fühlst du dich?

der menschliche Körper1 Wie fühlst du dich?
12/6 Day 62       das Reflexivpronomen Exercises     der menschliche Körper2  
12/7 Day 63 Woher kommen Sie? Dialog Diktat* Woher kommen Sie? Multi-Kulti Woher kommen Sie?
12/11 Day 64
12/12 Day 65 Kommen Sie aus...? Dialog Diktat*       Kommen Sie aus...? Einwanderungsland Kommen Sie aus...?
12/13 Day 66 Was macht[1]...? Dialog Diktat*

das Demonstrativadjektiv

Exercises   Was macht [1}...?   Was macht[1]...?
12/14 Day 67 Was machen Sie? Dialog Diktat*       Was machen Sie?   Was machen Sie?
12/18 Day 68 Was machen wir? Dialog Diktat*       Was machen wir?   Was machen wir?
12/19 Day 69 REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW REVIEW
12/20 Day 70 8.00 bis 9.00 Uhr    

objective, time-delimited, proctored

HS 1a Final Exam

Back to Student Section - Back to ScottNet Home Page
Copyright 2000 - 2001 - Scott Supply Service, Inc. - All rights reserved worldwide.