Curriculum & Pedagogy

Conference organizers and Cal PhD candidates Jon Cho-Polizzi, Alicia Roy, Cara Tovey, and Stephanie Peltner

Curriculum

Program Requirements

All students fulfill the following course requirements:

  • Methods
  • Language Pedagogy I and II
  • Students are required, in addition to the above, to complete a minimum of eight seminars in the German department. 2-unit Compact Seminars count toward the eight-seminar requirement. These seminars must include at least one course dealing primarily with early German literature (pre-1700) and one course dealing primarily with classical German literature (1700-1900).
  • Students are required to pass a reading exam in at least one language apart from German and English.
  • The remainder of the student’s course of study consists of electives in and outside the Department of German. These often include courses that count toward Designated Emphases or concurrent degrees.

Designated Emphasis and Concurrent Degrees

Graduate students may add a Designated Emphasis (DE) to their plans of study to gain a particular area of specialization, which is easily accomplished during the standard course of study:

Designated Emphasis in Dutch Studies

Designated Emphasis in Critical Theory

Designated Emphasis in European Studies

Designated Emphasis in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies

Designated Emphasis in Film & Media Studies

Designated Emphasis in Folklore

Designated Emphasis in New Media

Designated Emphasis in Women, Gender and Sexuality

Concurrent PhD in Medieval Studies

Program Milestones

  • Students are required to pass a review in the second year.
    • The student composes a committee of three faculty members in the Department of German
    • The second-year review includes a written response to a question(s) posed by the student’s review committee, and a conversation with the committee about the student’s written response and their progress in the program.
  • Students are expected to pass their Qualifying Exam (QE) in their fourth year.
    • The student composes a committee of four faculty members, including one from outside the Department of German
    • QE preparation involves several components: a reading list, a QE prospectus, and revised seminar papers.
    • All QEs conclude with a 2-3-hour oral examination.
  • Most students spend 2-3 years in candidacy, i.e., writing their dissertations.
  • Many students spend at least one year in a German-speaking country.

Department and Campus Life

Graduate students participate in the life of the department and the campus—e.g., attending talks; participating in reading groups; sharing in outreach efforts; taking on organizational and student-leadership responsibilities—in ways that enhance and respond to their intellectual curiosity and particular strengths and interests, and that contribute to the shared experience of our community of scholars.

Research and Study Abroad

Students are highly encouraged to spend time, do research, and participate in seminars and conferences in Germany, Austria, or Switzerland. In order to do so, they often apply for external support (DAAD grants, Fulbright fellowships, FLAS fellowships, etc.) or use the Dissertation Completion Fellowship.

The Department of German and UC Berkeley maintain exchange networks with a number of universities in Germany, among them the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Universität Konstanz, and LMU-München.

The following universities have cooperation agreements with UC Berkeley, including some funds earmarked for UC Berkeley students:

Universität Köln

Europa-Universität Viadrina

Universität Regensburg

Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg

Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster

Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena

Universität Hamburg

Universität Greifswald

all Austrian universities with support of the Austrian Marshall Fund

University of Luxembourg

For detailed information about course requirements, program milestones, and review and examination procedures, please contact Graduate Student Affairs Officer Andrea Rapport at germanga@berkeley.edu.

Fully committed to promoting excellence in teaching, the German Department emphasizes the thorough pedagogical and professional development of Graduate Student Instructors (GSIs).

All of our graduate students have ample opportunity to teach in a vibrant and innovative language program while receiving extensive training in teaching language and culture at the beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels. The pedagogical issues raised reach beyond the language classroom to students’ future roles as professors of literature and linguistics. By reflecting on their own teaching practice and its relationship to current theory, our graduate students are prepared for a strong start on the job market and for continuous professional development throughout their teaching careers.

GSIs begin teaching one section per semester of a lower-division German course (first- through fourth-semester language instruction, usually beginning with German 1). Later in their careers they can also apply to teach courses in conversation, German for reading knowledge, and Reading and Composition. The latter courses (offered in English on German topics) are especially important after the QE, as they allow students to devise their own syllabi. These courses also let them test out their ideas—often derived from their dissertations—with a small group of freshmen and sophomores.

Distinguishing Features

Our core development sequence for professional development goes beyond that offered by most graduate programs and includes the following components:

  • A three-day, interactive pre-semester orientation and workshop for all new GSIs.

  • Refresher workshops for continuing GSIs.

  • A three-unit pedagogical seminar on Teaching College German (German 375), which focuses on the theory and practice of foreign language pedagogy.

  • Weekly practicum/coordination meetings in which issues related to syllabus development, lesson plans, assessment questions, etc., are discussed.

  • Peer, coordinator, and faculty observations on a regular basis.

  • A stimulating atmosphere of mentorship and collaboration through continuous professional development and innovation linked to a dynamic language program.

  • Unique opportunities for funded research and further professional development through the Berkeley Language Center and the university’s GSI Teaching and Resource Center.

  • The language pedagogy seminar (German 375) focuses on principles of teaching methodology, research in Second Language Acquisition, skill-specific techniques, assessment, roles and tasks in the classroom, teaching culture, and approaches to critical reflection. Additional emphasis is put on questions relating to Instructional technologies, teaching writing, teaching the literary text, and issues in curriculum design. In addition, the course includes a practical component in which graduate student instructors relate the seminar principles to current classroom activities, receive guidance, exchange materials, and generally coordinate their teaching efforts.

Gaining Experience: Teaching Opportunities

In the course of their studies, graduate students have the opportunity to teach a broad range of courses. Generally, all GSIs will teach at least the first two years of German (German 1-4). This experience alone covers a range from communicative teaching of the basics to content-based instruction with an emphasis on critical inquiry into the nature of language and culture.

Other teaching opportunities include conversation courses, leading discussion sections for larger lecture courses, and the freshman composition courses R5A and R5B. The latter are taught in English and include readings onGerman topics  developed by the individual instructor, which is a great opportunity for GSIs to design and teach their own syllabi.

Supporting Professional Development: Courses and Centers

The campus offers a rich and unique support system for the professional and intellectual development of teachers. The GSI Teaching and Resource Center (director: Linda von Hoene) and the Berkeley Language Center (director: Rick Kern) offer a range of pedagogical workshops and lecture series which regularly feature world-renowned researchers in the fields of Second Language Acquisition and Applied Linguistics, as well as stimulating panel discussions and seminars on issues directly relevant to language teaching and learning at Berkeley and in other institutional contexts. In addition, the BLC offers up to six graduate research fellowships each year to conduct research on ways to improve instruction in any of the languages taught on the Berkeley campus.