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UVA-Lyon
2 Semester and Academic Year
The French Department and the The
International Studies Office are pleased to share with you some basic
information concerning the UVA-Université Lyon 2 Undergraduate Exchange
& Study Abroad Programs. Questions may be addressed to Professors
Janet Horne or Mary
McKinley in the French Department, or Murielle Kervizic in the ISO.
Students from all departments and schools at the university with the requisite
level of French are invited to apply.
Below you will find a series of "Frequently Asked Questions"
as well as a description of the program and details about the specific
features of the exchange. Students may opt to participate in the exchange
for a single semester (Fall or Spring) or for a full academic year.
Why
go to Lyon?
Why
the Université Lumière-Lyon 2?
Should
I apply for the Exchange Program, or the Study Abroad Program?
What
are the requirements?
What
costs are involved?
How
is the program structured?
How
do I choose courses?
What
is the academic calendar at Lyon 2?
OTHER STUDY ABROAD PROGRAMS
Choosing a Program
The department encourages students on the 300 level
and above to seek the linguistic, intellectual, and personal benefits
that can be obtained only from a well-planned period of study in France.
The department strongly recommends programs organized
by accredited American colleges. These, as a rule, surpass private agency
offerings in quality and diversity of course offerings, economy, and administrative
responsibility. Not all private programs qualify for transfer credits.
Accredited private agency programs are preferable to direct enrollment
in French universities, which offer minimal direction, and do not assist
the students through the formidable red tape of application for admissions
and visa or annual registration. Moreover, they usually presuppose near-native
fluency. Among the collegiate programs highly rated by University of Virginia
students are those of Hamilton, Sweet Briar, Middlebury, and Bryn Mawr
(summer only). For descriptions of numerous year and semester programs,
read the section on France in Peterson’s Study Abroad.
Students are urged to consult with Professor
Mary McKinley about factors entering into a choice of program, then
seek further details at the International Studies Library on the second
floor of Minor Hall. Student evaluations of programs are an excellent
resource, and program brochures provide very specific information concerning
entrance requirements, academic calendar, courses, language(s) of instruction,
housing arrangements, travel opportunities, costs, and availability of
scholarship aid. Since costs fluctuate in response to inflation as well
as the value of the dollar (and vary because of radically differing interpretations
of the term “comprehensive fee”), the student must exercise caution in
estimating expenses.
N.B. The International Studies Office is not
authorized to recommend programs or offer academic advice.
- Drawing Up a Course of Study
- The College of Arts and Sciences accepts transfer credit only from
approved and accredited programs. If you are considering a privately-run
program, please consult an advisor.
Once admitted to a program, the student will make a tentative selection
of courses as part of the University petitioning process (see Formalities
below). The following principles should guide the choice:
- For graduation or major credit, a course taken abroad may not duplicate
the coverage already completed at or accepted for transfer credit by
the University of Virginia. If for example, a student has already taken
FREN 343 or its equivalent, a foreign-program course designated “Survey
of 19th and 20th Century” would be avoided. However, a survey of either
19th or 20th Century Literature would be admissible.
- Credit should be awarded in units of at least three semester hours
to prevent a deficiency on application for the B.A.degree.
- In courses selected to satisfy departmental requirements, only three
areas are permitted: French language, literature, and civilization.
- Internships in France or a Francophone country are eligible for major
and minor credit (400T), within the hour limits already established
for the transfer of foreign study credit, provided that:
- students receive prior approval from a foreign study advisor in
the French Department;
- returning students submit and acceptable written report, or project
journal, in French (minimum fifteen pages) to their foreign study
advisor, indicating how the internship provided them with insights
into the institutional culture of the host country.
N.B. French civilization studies or “cultural studies” are construed
by the College of Arts & Sciences and the department as interdisciplinary;
that is, they involve two or more areas of the humanities or of the social
sciences or, a combination of humanities and social science. Thus a course
in a single field such as French political theory or the History of French
Art, does not normally count for major credit in French. With sufficient
evidence of interdisciplinarity (syllabi, reading lists, term papers, etc.),
a departmental foreign study advisor may apply such credit to the French
major or minor.
Formalities
The International Studies Office
requires prospective participants in a foreign study program to submit a
leave of absence form filled out with (and signed by) Professor McKinley.
The form is due before the end of the last semester in residence before
study abroad.
For more information on study abroad programs, see Study
and Work Abroad web sites.
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