| Students in both Spanish-section majors are strongly encouraged to spend at least one semester studying abroad. As a rule study abroad programs require students to take a language course selected according to the program's evaluation of the student's proficiency. Students receive university credit for such courses but they do not count toward the Spanish or Iberian Studies majors. In order to fulfill requirements for the Spanish-section majors (and a second major, if appropriate) on time, students should consider carefully both the number and kind of additional courses they will take while abroad. To this end majors should be sure to consult in advance with their Spanish-section advisors and advisors in other majors (if pertinent) about the courses they will take while studying abroad, especially if they have any doubts about which courses will count. Wesleyan runs programs in Madrid, Spain (the Vassar-Wesleyan Program) and
Puebla, Mexico. Wesleyan University and Vassar College co-sponsor a
program in Spain at the Universidad Carlos III in Madrid for up to 20
students from each college and without regard to their choice of major.
SPAN 112 or the equivalent of two years of college-level Spanish is the
prerequisite for participation in the fall term, SPAN 221 or the equivalent
of five semesters for the spring term. The program begins in August in
Santiago de Compostela with a two-week course (Intensive Language and
Civilization), which carries one Wesleyan credit, and it continues in Madrid
in the fall and spring terms. For students arriving in the spring
term, the two-week immersion course takes place in January in Granada.
Students with Spanish 221 or the equivalent may apply for either term or for
the entire year. Single-term applicants with only two years of Spanish
must enroll in the Santiago or fall term. A regular faculty member
from one of the sponsoring institutions administers the program in Spain.
All classes are taught by the regular faculty of the Universidad Carlos III.
Program participants have access to different types of courses: some are
taught for students from a wide range of countries, others for Spanish
students enrolled in the university's regular program of study. The
Carlos III curriculum includes a broad spectrum of courses in all fields,
especially the humanities and social sciences, language and literature,
history and government, sociology, anthropology, and art. The cost of
the program is approximately equivalent to that of staying on the home
campus for the same period, and it includes round-trip transportation
between New York and Spain.
Students may receive a total of four credits toward the
Spanish-section majors for course work taken on Wesleyan’s
Program in Spain or on another program pre-approved by Wesleyan.
At least one credit must be taken through direct enrollment.
Wesleyan's program at the Universidad de las Américas in Puebla, Mexico
is designed for students with the equivalent of one year of college Spanish.
The goal of the program is to provide an immersion experience that will
enable students to reach fluency as rapidly as possible. Innovative
methods inside and outside the classroom help students build their language
skills and cultural knowledge. Students move from a module on language
to modules on Mexico today, cultural history, and Mexican literature, and in
the final three weeks undertake a research project. Those
participating in the program take intermediate and advanced Spanish courses
equivalent to SPAN 111, 112, and 221 and, upon their return to Wesleyan, are
expected to take an upper-level Spanish course.
Students completing the Language Immersion Program in
Puebla, Mexico receive one credit toward both Spanish-section
majors (in lieu of Spanish 221) and may petition for an
additional credit (for a maximum of two).
For more information on study abroad programs run or approved by
Wesleyan, consult the Office of International Studies (OIS) website at
www.wesleyan.edu/ois
or visit the OIS at Fisk Hall 105. You may also call the OIS at
860-685-2550 or write the Assistant Director of the OIS, Gail Winter, at
gwinter@wesleyan.edu. A detailed website on the Vassar-Wesleyan Madrid
program can be found at
www.wesleyan.edu/madrid.
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