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Study Abroad - Programs
Spring 2006
Paris, France
February 7, 2006 - May 22, 2006



Program Overview

Please note: the final program fee has been reduced, due to the exclusion of the roundtrip airfare to Paris. Students will be responsible for purchasing their own tickets.

Study in Paris, one of the largest and most beautiful metropolitan centers in the world - for centuries the capital of European learning and art. With its historical roots, rich cultural diversity, magnificent monuments, romantic boulevards and cafés, and some of the most famous museums in the world, Paris offers an unequaled opportunity for an exciting, challenging, and educational semester abroad.

Study in Paris, where urban and suburban areas combine to form one of the largest and most beautiful cities in the world, where Romanesque, Gothic and Modern architecture create a skyline equally stunning by day and by night, where the basilica of Sacre-Coeur atop Montmartre overlooks 2000 years of history, and where the Seine meanders through the city highlighting the Ile de la Cite with its magnificent Cathedral of Notre Dame and the Ile des Cygnes with its smaller copy of the Statue of Liberty. Wander through the Latin Quarter and the Jardin du Luxembourg, and walk along the grand Boulevard St. Germain - all not far from the Sorbonne Nouvelle. Discover the major open-air market and bazaar, Marche aux Puces at Porte de Clignancourt, at the end of Metro #4. Stroll along the elegant Avenue Montaigne and Rue du Faubourg St. Honore, centers of French haute couture. Courses will be taught at Reid Hall, formerly a private residence and now a university facility with in-garden study areas. Reid Hall is located on the Rue de Chevreuse near the intersection of Boulevard du Montparnasse and Boulevard Raspail.

If you're interested in art, music, philosophy, and literature you will find the Paris Semester especially enriching. Classes will be taught by local French faculty , who will award grades according to the Delaware system.

The program's on-site resident director serves as the group's liaison to Delaware

Students will live singly or in pairs (if available) in private Parisian homes. Bedding and linens are provided as well as breakfast daily and five dinners per week.


Courses
Students must enroll in all courses for credit and a grade; pass/fail and audit registration is not permitted.

Honors credit may be available. Check with the faculty director and the Honors program for prior approval (before departure).

All students must enroll in 12 or more credits, as well as the 0-credit UNIV course. All students must take one level-appropriate French course. Only courses with the FREN prefix are taught in French. The rest are taught in English.

ART315 - Issues in Contemporary Art (3 cr.)
Examination of current issues of content and form; developments in technology; and social, political and cultural issues affecting modern and contemporary visual art, artists, and photographers.
Satisfies the following requirements:
Arts & Sciences Group A

ARTH402 - Undergraduate Seminar in the History of Art: Impressionism and Post Impressionism (3 cr.)
This course focuses on the work and career of Manet, Degas, Monet, Renoir, Cézanne, Van Gogh , Gauguin and their colleagues. With weekly visits to the great 19C art collections in Paris : Musée d'Orsay, Marmottan and Monet's house and gardens in Giverny.
Satisfies the following requirements:
Arts & Sciences Group B

ENGL321 - Medieval Literature and Culture (3 cr.)
Study of selected topics in medieval literature (romance, Chaucer's contemporaries, drama). Texts usually read in English translations. Emphasis on medieval culture as a European phenomenon. Variable content.
Prerequisite:ENGL 110
Satisfies the following requirements:
Arts & Sciences Group B

FLLT324 - French Literature in Translation (3 cr.)
Study of the works of one or more outstanding authors or of a special theme. Course taught in English. Topics vary and are announced in registration booklet.
Satisfies the following requirements:
Arts & Sciences Group A

FLLT367 - Literature and Culture of 19th-Century Paris (3 cr.)
Students in this course will study the capital of the nineteenth century, capital of modernity, capital of Europe, and capital of the world by using the city as a laboratory. A series of historical, artistic, and literary walking tours throughout the "quartiers" of Paris will supplement their study of the history, architecture, urban planning, novels, poetry, visual arts, photography, music, and film portrayals of the city of Paris in the nineteenth century. The course will be taught in English.

FREN107 - French III Intermediate (4 cr.)
Review of grammar, continued practice in speaking and writing, reading texts of average difficulty.
Prerequisite:FREN 106
Satisfies the following requirements:
      Arts & Sciences Foreign Language

FREN205 - French Conversation (3 cr.)
Practical use of French by means of oral reports and discussions. Emphasis on improvement of basic conversational skills with some written work required for reinforcement. Grammar review as necessary.
Prerequisite:FREN 107 or one 200-level course

FREN306 - Practical Oral/Written Expression (3 cr.)
This course will help students to increase their fluency and vocabulary. Grammar review will focus on special problems.

FREN406 - Advanced French Language (3 cr.)
An advanced course on grammatical structure and stylistics with special attention given to technical vocabulary and discourse.

FREN455 - Selected Authors, Works, and Themes (3 cr.)
Works of one or more outstanding authors or on a special theme. Specific topic to be determined.

HIST339 - Topics in Modern European History (3 cr.)
A reflection of developments in modern European history from the First World War to the present. Emphasis on political, social, cultural and economic patterns of the period, complemented by visits to museums and appropriate historic sites.
Satisfies the following requirements:
Arts & Sciences Group B

MUSC213 - French Musical Culture (3 cr.)
Explores the contributions of French culture to the history of Western Music. Special focus on major trends in music written and performed in Paris from the Middle Ages through the 20th century, and on the musical institutions that made Paris a world capital of music.
Satisfies the following requirements:
Arts & Sciences Group A
Requirements
The Semester in Paris is designed for undergraduate students regardless of major. Students must have had four years of high school French or French 106 (or equivalent). Full-time enrollment status (at least 12 credits) during the program is required. A minimum 2.5 grade point average (on a 4.00 scale) is preferred. For all participants, a formal application is necessary, including a deposit, one transcript (non-University of Delaware students only), and one recommendation. An interview may be conducted in person or by telephone.

Study abroad at the University of Delaware is highly competitive. See here for an overview of the acceptance process. If you are not selected for your first choice program, we recommend moving your application and deposit to another program (by emailing your request to studyabroad@udel.edu).


Paris, France Program Costs
Participants in the Paris, France program will be charged University of Delaware tuition for one Spring Semester and the program fee. The program fee usually covers round-trip airfare, housing, and all excursions but does not include transportation to/from the group's initial departure airport. Your specific program fee may or may not include these and other items, check with the
faculty director for details.

A $200 deposit towards the program fee must be paid by no later than October 14, 2005 , although we recommend that you pay your deposit within three working days of submitting your application. The deposit is non-refundable if you are admitted into the program. The program acceptance list will be available approximately two weeks later. See below for additional program fee and tuition payment deadlines.

UD students pay all program fee deposits by direct bank transfer via this website: http://www.udel.edu/studyabroadpayments. Non-UD students should send a check, payable to the University of Delaware, to CFIS, Elliott Hall, 26 East Main Street, Newark, DE 19716. Credit card payments are not accepted.

  DE Resident Non-DE Resident
Final Tuition based on current year 3307 8385
Final Program Fee 5100 5100
UD Registration & Activities Fee 0 0
Final Total 8407 13485

Please note that final program fees are subject to change until the group's departure date. Final program fees may be increased due to airline taxes, fuel surcharges, exchange rates, or changes in the group size.


Scholarships
Need- and merit-based scholarships are available to UD undergraduates on a competitive basis. For more details and to apply for a scholarship, go to our
scholarships page (and be sure to submit scholarship materials by the deadlines).
Deadlines
All payments and application materials are due by 5:00pm on the dates listed below:
  • Application and $200 deposit deadline: October 14, 2005
  • $800 deposit deadline: October 28, 2005
  • Final program fee balance due: January 6, 2006
  • Tuition and Registration Fee due: January 6, 2006

Contact Information
Lisa Chieffo
Assoc. Director, International Student Programs
Center for International Studies
186 S. College Ave.
Phone:(302) 831-2852
Fax:(302) 831-6042
Email:
lchieffo@udel.edu