Slovenian Language and Literature – Field of study catalogue MU
Slovenian Language and Literature“Slovenia and the Slovenian language – a unique blend of Central Europe, the Mediterranean region, and the Balkans.” |
After successfully completing his/her studies the graduate is able to:
- actively communicate in Slovene in a written and an oral form at the B2 level (CEFR)
- analyse and comment on current political, social, and cultural affairs in Slovenia
- characterize and appraise the development of Slovene literature and culture in the European context
- translate and interpret from/into Slovene
- work with academic texts of their study programme and independently create shorter academic texts which fulfil required formal and content criteria respecting the basic rules of writing academic texts
- apply the knowledge, skills, and methodological approaches obtained in the course of his/her study programme in practice or in further studies
Students in the double-subject study programme are obliged to earn at least 180 credits in both their subjects together. Students have to earn 79 credits for type A/required courses, 15 (5) credits for the Bachelor’s thesis seminar (Bachelor’s minor thesis seminar), 2 credits for an exam in a world language (language for academic purposes), 2 credits for an exam in philosophy (for students of non-philosophical fields of study), and 1 credit for physical education.
The Bachelor’s degree study programme is concluded by the Bachelor’s thesis defence (or by submitting the Bachelor’s minor thesis if Slovene Language and Literature is the secondary field of study) and passing the final state examination.
During the course of their studies, students should follow the study catalogue valid for their year of matriculation. The study catalogues for the individual years of matriculation are available at the Faculty of Arts website.
The Bachelor’s final state examination tests the knowledge obtained during the study programme, in four basic fields: 1) language competence (a written part of the exam – translation and an essay; an oral part of the exam – a dialogue with the examiner on various topics); 2) linguistic competence (the knowledge of phonetics, phonology, morphology, and syntax of the Slovene language); 3) literary theoretical competence (the knowledge of the history of Slovenian literature, the ability to interpret and analyse works of literature); and 4) cultural-historical competence (the knowledge of Slovene history, culture, and national characteristics).
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