This course is a continuation of KORE 1010 and provides additional exposure to the Korean language and the cultures of Korean-speaking peoples. It is designed for students who have completed KORE 1010 with a C- or better, or for students with equivalent experience. During the course, students continue to develop basic oral and listening communication skills by participating in activities that require them to use Korean in a variety of situations. As a result of developing these skills, they also acquire the ability to read and write Korean at a basic level. Students learn to communicate about topics that are most familiar to them (e.g., self, family, home, school, daily and recent activities), and they learn to appreciate ways of life different from their own. This course is interactive with a focus on learner participation, basic conversation practice in Korean, and additional focus on reading and writing. Successful completion of this course fulfills the foreign language requirement for the Associate of Arts degree at Snow College.
This course satisfies the foreign language requirement for the Associate of Arts degree at Snow College. It is a prerequisite for intermediate and advanced study of the language. Students are introduced to the language, cultures, and values of Korean-speaking peoples, one of the larger linguistic groups in the world and a major contributor to Western thought and culture. Learning Korean, particularly in combination with studies in other fields, such as art, music, philosophy, history, business, medicine, political science, social science, and technology, can provide a valuable and employable life resource.
The topics covered in Korean 1020 include but are not limited to: Basic interactions like greetings, asking and answering questions, describing people and things, expressing preferences, inviting, accepting, refusing, making purchases, giving directions, requesting information, telling time, and recounting past events; interpretation of basic or simplified texts (e.g., calendars, biographical information, menus, cultural information, poems/songs, maps, advertisements, film reviews, instructions, schedules, websites, surveys); Basic expressions and vocabulary (e.g., greetings, school, home, family, possessions, numbers, days, months, public buildings, food, weather, sports); grammar tenses; cultural practices and products of Korea (e.g., food, music, transportation, film, housing, media); cultural perspectives in Korea and Asia; regional identities; and daily life in Korea and Asia. This content is delivered through interactive lecture, multimedia presentation, partner and group work, and instructor modeling of concepts.