Portland-State-University 2014-2015 Bulletin

World Languages and Literatures M.A.

The M.A. in World Languages and Literatures is a graduate degree with concentration in a primary language, a secondary language, and in linguistics. The primary language may be French, German, Japanese, or Spanish; the secondary language may be Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Russian, or Spanish.

Requirements

A minimum of 60 credits, of which 40 must be earned in residence, distributed among the following areas:

Primary language

WLL 560Principles of Scholarly Research

4

Other adviser-approved 500-level courses

16

Two of the following:

551Poetry

4

552Drama

4

553Prose

4

Total Credit Hours:28

Secondary language

511Advanced Language

4

And

512Advanced Language

4

Or

Span 514Advanced Spanish Grammar

4

Twelve graduate credits chosen from:

500 -level literature

12

and/or

594Linguistics

4

595Linguistics

4

and/or

584Stylistics

12

Total Credit Hours:20

500-level literature: (not including Literature in Translation)

Note: If upper-division courses in fourth-year language have been successfully completed at the undergraduate level (with a GPA of 3.00 or above), they can be waived, reducing the total credits required by a maximum of 8.

Linguistics and methods

12 graduate credits chosen from:

WLL 593Language Proficiency Testing and Teaching

4

WLL 598Methods of Teaching Foreign Languages

4

Fr 594French Linguistics

4

Fr 597Applied French Linguistics

4

Ger 594German Linguistics

4

Ger 597Applied German Linguistics

4

Span 594Spanish Linguistics

4

Span 597Applied Spanish Linguistics

4

Other adviser-approved courses

Total Credit Hours:12

Total Credit Hours: 60

In addition to the required coursework, the candidate will have to:

  • Submit two research papers to the graduate committee, one dealing with the primary, the other with the secondary area. These may be written either in the primary or secondary languages, respectively, or in English.
  • Pass a final comprehensive written and oral examination over coursework taken in the primary and secondary areas and over the research papers.