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Slovak Level 3 (A & B) (with Czech)
COURSE DESCRIPTION
Introduction
This is a course for students who have passed Slovak Level 2. Students who successfully
complete this course should be able to function effectively and with confidence in an
extensive range of academic, professional and social situations, and also to have gained a
metalinguistic perspective on translation issues, including issues in literary translation. At this
level students consolidate their passive knowledge of Czech.
The course consists of two components, comprehension and production, each of which has
the value of 0.5 of a course-unit (see Course Details below). Students doing EELC degrees
must take both components. Students registered for other degrees may take just the
comprehension component, but may not take the production component on its own.
Course Details
Title
Slovak Language Level 3A (with Czech) (Comprehension)
Slovak Language Level 3B (with Czech) (Production)
Course Code
3A: SEEES401
3B: SEEES402
Course Value
3A: ½ course unit
3B: ½ course unit
Duration
Taught in Autumn and Spring Terms
Prerequisites
Open to students who can satisfy one of the following criteria:
who have successfully completed Slovak Level 2
who can demonstrate equivalent competence in Slovak
who, being native speakers of Slovak, can demonstrate the level of
metalinguistic competence required as an outcome of Czech Level 2
Course Leader
David Short
Aims
The course aims to:
enable students to extend and refine the knowledge of Slovak and Czech acquired at
Level 2 and to attain (in all language skills) their highest possible levels of competence in
Slovak and a high level of passive skills in Czech
provide students with a high degree of awareness of key issues relating to Slovakia and
the Czech Republic and transferable skills (IT with special reference to Slovak and
Czech, management of time and workload, translation) which will contribute to their
success in pursuing their future careers in the academic and/or professional spheres,
whether in relation to Slovakia, the Czech Republic or in the wider context
extend awareness of problems of translation.
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Outcomes
By the end of the course students who have successfully fulfilled all the course requirements
(attendance, assignment completion, assessments, coursework and examinations) should be
able to:
understand authentic spoken Slovak (including relatively complex broadcast and recorded
material and discussions) from unpredictable topic areas presented at normal or varied
pace/speed; extract required information and record it accurately and coherently in
English
manipulate spoken Slovak in any situation with appropriate, accurate and elaborate use of
lexis and grammatical structures in a wide variety of contexts and registers; seek, provide
and refine opinions and information in sustained spoken interchanges, including
discussions, in Slovak; speak confidently and accurately about key issues relating to
Slovakia or the Czech Republic, their life and culture
understand a wide variety of authentic unadapted written texts in Slovak and Czech;
extract required information and record it accurately and coherently in English
manipulate Slovak in extended writing, presenting information, analysing and evaluating
ideas, organising and presenting arguments, in relation to both literary and non-literary
topics and texts
demonstrate knowledge and active use of more complex grammatical structures and a
wide range of vocabulary, register and styles in Slovak
demonstrate knowledge of key problems of translation by discussion of these and by
successful translation of a wide variety of texts.
Teaching
Slovak and Czech grammar, vocabulary and language skills are taught by means of
presentation, whole-class discussion, small-group, pair and individual exercises, as
appropriate, using recommended literature and tutor-prepared texts, and computer and
internet resources. A wide range of authentic texts is used in the course. Work done in class is
consolidated by means of regular assignments, as well as self-access tasks, where relevant.
The course consists of 80 hours of contact time (4 hours per week) and, in addition, students
are expected to complete 2½-3 hours’ independent study for each hour of work in class.
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Assessment
Monitoring of progress
The regular, punctual and satisfactory completion of weekly assignments is a prerequisite for
completion of the course, but does not contribute to the final assessment. Students’ progress
will be monitored by means of regular tests, exercises and home assignments. Progress is
carefully monitored, in particular in the early stages of the course.
Coursework
Slovak Language Level 3A (with Czech)
A portfolio of coursework assignments on translation issues with reference to Slovak and/or
Czech, 5,000 words in total, submitted at specified deadlines during the Autumn and/or
Spring Terms (30% of the mark for 3A).
Examination
Slovak Language Level 3A (with Czech) :
The course is examined by:
an aural test of. 45-50 minutes (20% of the mark for 3A).
a two-hour written paper, normally held in May (50% of the mark for 3A).
The written examination consists of two tasks:
a passage in Czech of approx. 250 words in length, for translation into English
a passage in Slovak of approx. 250 words in length, for translation into English.
The use of dictionaries is not permitted.
Slovak Language Level 3B (with Czech) :
The course is examined by:
an oral test of approx. 20 minutes (40% of the mark for 3B).
a three-hour written paper, normally held in May (60% of the mark for 2B).
The written examination consists of three tasks:
translation into Slovak of an English passage of approx. 175 words
writing in Slovak: an essay of 150-200 words on a topic selected from a list of four or five
titles.
translation into Slovak of a Czech passage of about 200 words.
The use of dictionaries is not permitted.
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Key Reference Works
Course materials produced by the teacher will be provided.
In addition, students will find the following useful:
David Short: ‘Slovak’, in Bernard Comrie & Greville G. Corbett (eds): The Slavonic
Languages . London etc.: Routledge, 1993, pp.533-92
David Short: ‘Czech’, in Bernard Comrie & Greville G. Corbett (eds): The Slavonic
Languages . London etc.: Routledge, 1993, pp.455-532
Miroslav Grepl et al .: Příruční mluvnice češtiny (Prague: NLN, 1995)
Jozef Mistrík: Moderná slovenčina (Bratislava: SPN- latest available edition)
Materials for the translation studies component:
Susan Bassnett-McGuire: Translation Studies , London, New York: Methuen, 1980 (or
later edition)
Anton Popovič (ed.): Originál – preklad: Interpretačná terminológia , Bratislava: Tatran,
1983
Ján Vilikovský (ed.): Preklad včera a dnes , Bratislava: Slovenský spisovateľ, 1985
Jiří Levý: Umění překladu , Prague: Panorama, 1983 (or later edition; also exists in
German translation)
David Short: ‘The translation of a Czech experimental novel: Vladimír Páral’s Veletrh
splněných přání as a case-study in problems in translation’, in Peter Fawcett & Owen
Heathcote (eds): Translation in Performance: Papers on the Theory and Practice of
Translation. Bradford: Dept. of Modern Languages, University of Bradford, 1990, pp.86-
103 ( Bradford Occasional Papers , 10)
A selection of English translations of Slovak and Czech works of literature and Slovak or
Czech translations of works of English literature will be made available as potentialworking
materials for the assessed essay(s) in the translation studies component.
A list of relevant websites and online reference materials will be provided at the start of the
course.
The following dictionaries are recommended – as for level 2, and
Slovník slovenského jazyka (copies in library)
Krátký slovník slovenského jazyka (latest edition; also available on CD)
Slovník spisovné češtiny pro školu a veřejnost (latest available edition)
Slovník spisovného jazyka českého (out of print, several copies of both editions in library)
The following bookshop stocks a wide range of Slovak and Czech grammars and dictionaries:
Bay Foreign Language Books: www.baylanguagebooks.co.uk (NB Early in the first term a
bulk order for dictionaries will be placed with this company, which offers us a discount).
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