AIFS Abroad

AIFS Study Abroad in Salzburg, Austria
Fall Semester 2010 and Spring Semester 2011
Course Descriptions

   

Courses with titles in German are taught in German.

Courses at the 100 level are introductory courses. Two hundred and 300 level courses are semi-specialized courses for students with ability and background in the subject. Four hundred level courses are designed for students majoring in the discipline. The number in parentheses indicates both recommended credits and number of class hours per week. Courses with German titles are taught in German. Ten students are required to confirm a course. Courses are held Monday through Friday.

German language courses
Course Code and Credits: German 102 (3)
Course Title: Elementary German II
Course Description:
Starting with review of material covered in German 101, this course covers grammar suitable for students who have already covered the fundamentals. Communication techniques, writing letters, present tense, present perfect tense and future tense, use of cases, pronouns, sentence structure, questions, prepositions, irregular verbs.
Course Code and Credits: German 202 (3)
Course Title: Intermediate German II
Course Description:
Basic grammar covered in Intermediate German I is a prerequisite, although a brief review is given at the start of fall semester. Students entering spring semester are expected to be familiar with basic grammar up to and including auxiliary verbs.
Course Code and Credits: German 302 (3)
Course Title: Intermediate German III
Course Description:
Students must be able to write a German text demonstrating familiarity with main aspects of text production and grammar. Readings from modern literature and newspaper articles. Oral communication, discussion, short reports, text analysis; development and usage of extended vocabulary.
Course Code and Credits: German 402 (3)
Course Title: Advanced German
Course Description:
Designed to prepare students to attend regular courses at the University and to complete the required written work in German. Students entering this course should be reasonably able to understand and write a scholarly text in German using complex structures and vocabulary; listening and reading comprehension. Students are strongly encouraged to audit a second level German language course at the university to intensify their learning.
Course Code and Credits: German 343570 (2)
Course Title: German-English Translation (Deutsch-Englische Übersetzung)
Course Description:
To improve translation skills, the University offers these two courses suggested for Intermediate I, II and Advanced level students. Students wishing to attend the translation courses must stay an extra month and pay a supplement. Courses are offered at the discretion of the University of Salzburg.
Course Code and Credits: German 305 (fall only) (3)
Course Title: Living Grammar (Grammatik in der Praktischen Anwendung)
Course Description:
Students gain expertise and confidence in speaking by using their grammar knowledge in conversation. Small classes provide the opportunity for intensive practice.
Course Code and Credits: German 306 (spring only) (3)
Course Title: Creative Writing (Kreatives Schreiben)
Course Description:
Students write in German. Attention is paid to style appropriate to the nature of a subject and use of suitable, specialized vocabulary. Prerequisite: Students must be attending Intermediate German II.

Courses taught in English by the University for AIFS students

Students with no German background may take all courses in English. Three subject areas are taught by the University exclusively for AIFS students: international relations, business and economics, and arts and humanities.

Fall Semester

International Relations
Course Code and Credits: Politics 305 (3) NEW!
Course Title: What are those European socialist ideas about? A History of European socialist thinking.
Course Description:
International references about "European socialist ideas" are often used to support or discredit ideas. But what is progressive thought in Europe nowadays? This course draws on the history of progressive thought in Europe focussing on the debates, the revisions and the renewal from 1850 till 2010, from Marx, Bernstein, Crosland to Hobsbawm and the ideas of the European post-industrial left.
Course Code and Credits: Politics 307 (3)
Course Title: Protection of Human Rights
Course Description:
Legal aspects and achievements regarding human rights. The role of international organizations such as the United Nations and Amnesty International. Current examples of human rights violations are addressed through oral presentations, group projects and discussion.
Course Code and Credits: Politics 308 (3)
Course Title: International Conflicts and Conflict Resolution
Course Description:
Types of political conflict and violence on individual, group, state and interstate levels; general theoretical understanding of conflict and violence; the ethics of conflict and methods of conflict resolution.
Course Code and Credits: Politics/Economics 320 (3)
Course Title: International Political Economy
Course Description:
The link between economics and politics in international affairs. Different competing economic orders (East versus West and North versus South). Insight into the management of international economic relations since 1945 and the role of international institutions such as the IMF, World Bank and GATT.

Business and Economics
Course Code and Credits: Business/Economics 313 (3)
Course Title: International Management Strategies
Course Description:
Features of strategic management and planning and their application in an international field. Scenario-technique and portfolio analysis are practiced. Students learn to create their own strategies. Prerequisite: One college level business or economics class.
Course Code and Credits: Business/Economics 321 (3)
Course Title: Megatrends in World Economic Development
Course Description:
Fundamental changes affecting long-term economic prospects of both industrialized and developing countries. New technologies for developing products and services which will change production organization. Emerging competitors in world markets and deepening global economic integration. Ecological limits to doing business will become more urgent.

Humanities
Course Code and Credits: Art 303 (3)
Course Title: European Art and Architecture I: Renaissance and Baroque
Course Description:
Trends in European painting, sculpture and architecture from the 14th to 18th centuries. Influence of Italian artists on Austria and the development of Baroque art and architecture in Italy and Austria.
Course Code and Credits: Literature 310 (3)
Course Title: Atrocity and Modernism: The Literature and History of 20th Century Europe
Course Description:
The relationship of material change, literary form and ideas. Writers include Kafka, Sartre, Brecht and Anna Akhmatova. Imaginative writing in periods of war and oppression, notably Stalinism, Nazism and the Holocaust.
Course Code and Credits: Music 302 (3)
Course Title: Music from the Romantics to the Present Day
Course Description:
A survey of the great composers and their works from the origins of Romantic composition in Schubert to modern twelve-tone. Emphasis is placed on the contribution of Austrian and German composers -Schumann, Wagner, Liszt, Bruckner, Mahler, Richard Strauss and Schoenberg.
Course Code and Credits: Philosophy 301 (3)
Course Title: The Modern European Mind
Course Description:
Formative political, social and philosophical ideas of thinkers of past centuries. Writers who originated or popularized them include Kant, Mill, Bentham, Hegel, Marx, Engels and Popper.
Course Code and Credits: Sociology/History 312(3)
Course Title: Contemporary Austrian Culture
Course Description:
Insight into contemporary Austrian culture. Focus on education, family, ethnicity, political culture, media, Roman Catholic Church, attitudes to welfare and business, leisure trends. Independent field research and the presentation and discussion of course topics is required.

Spring Semester

International Relations
Course Code and Credits: Politics 309 (3)
Course Title: European Integration
Course Description:
Historical development and theoretical implications, European Union institutions and their decision-making processes and recent political developments.
Course Code and Credits: Politics 311 (3)
Course Title: The Rise of the Right: A History of Fascism
Course Description:
A comparative study of European and non-European fascism from the end of WWI to the present. Focus on a variety of fascist movements in Europe, South Africa, Argentina and Iraq. The return of fascism, neo-Nazi violence, immigration issues, ethnic cleansing and the growth of the radical right in the former communist countries.

Business and Economics
Course Code and Credits: Business/Economics 301 (3)
Course Title: Europe and the Global Economy
Course Description:
Specific economic goals and achievements of the one time eastern bloc countries as they strive to establish functioning market economies. The effects of these developments on the economy of Europe and the world. Changed roles of international institutions (EC, IMF, World Bank), their consequences and multinational business opportunities.
Course Code and Credits: Business 315 (3)
Course Title: Communication Skills for Management
Course Description:
Planning for effective communication and working visually using various media. How to make effective presentations. Students are expected to present ideas to the class and accept constructive criticism from the group.

Humanities
Course Code and Credits: Art/Anthropology 304 (3)
Course Title: Austrian Folk Art and Folk Customs
Course Description:
Folk art and customs of Austria, concentrating on Salzburg and Tyrol provinces. Visits to the Tyrolean Folk Art Museum in Innsbruck, National Costume Museum and Open Air Museum.
Course Code and Credits: Art 307 (3)
Course Title: European Art and Architecture II: Post-Baroque to the Present
Course Description:
The development of European art and architecture since the Baroque era. Major works of this period reflect the complex and wide ranging changes, developments in thought, attitudes and major social and political upheavals of the time.
Course Code and Credits: History 301 (3)
Course Title: World War II and Central Europe
Course Description:
The causes, course and consequences of World War II. How the conflict and its aftermath affected Central Europe in general and Austria in particular. Eyewitnesses are invited to class meetings to discuss their experiences with students.
Course Code and Credits: Literature 302 (3)
Course Title: Concepts of Heroism in Western Culture
Course Description:
Concepts of heroism in the literature of six epochs or cultures: Classical/ Mythological, Medieval/Christian, Renaissance, Age of Reason, Romantic and Modern. Examples vary but these are typical archetypes studied: Hercules, Achilles, Beowulf, Siegfried (Medieval), Mark Anthony (Shakespeare), Robinson Crusoe (Daniel Defoe), Werther (Goethe), Siegmund and Siegfried (Richard Wagner).
Course Code and Credits: Music 301 (3)
Course Title: Music in the Age of Mozart
Course Description:
A survey of the great composers and their works from the origins of Romantic composition in Schubert to modern twelve-tone. Emphasis is placed on the contribution of Austrian and German composers -Schumann, Wagner, Liszt, Bruckner, Mahler, Richard Strauss and Schoenberg.
Course Code and Credits: Sociology/History 312 (3)
Course Title: Contemporary Austrian Culture
Course Description:
Insight into contemporary Austrian culture. Focus on education, family, ethnicity, political culture, media, Roman Catholic Church, attitudes to welfare and business, leisure trends. Independent field research and the presentation and discussion of course topics is required.

Courses taught in German by the University for AIFS students

AIFS students receive help with language requirements. Basic, uncomplicated German is used to introduce the art and music of the students’ new cultural environment.

Courses in German
Course Code and Credits: German/History 307 (3)
Course Title: Hitler und das Dritte Reich (Hitler and the Third Reich)
Course Description:
Adolf Hitler is analyzed as a psychological phenomenon and a study in tyranny. His personality is set against the complex historical situation that facilitated his rise to power: the political, economic and social climate that provided a fertile basis for the use of political terror and the first effective employment of mass propaganda as a political weapon.
Course Code and Credits: German/Music 308 fall only (3)
Course Title: Mozart und Seine Welt (Mozart and His World)
Course Description:
Appreciation of Mozart’s music through a heightened understanding of his life, the world in which he lived and worked and of the works of contemporary composers. Visits to relevant sites in Salzburg.
Course Code and Credits: German/Music 312 spring only (3)
Course Title: Musik: Hören und Verstehen (Music: Listening and Appreciation)
Course Description:
Appreciation of classical music, focusing on Austria as the center of European music. Development of musical instruments, music of the Renaissance and the Baroque, the Vienna Classical Cycle (Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven), the Romantic Movement (Schubert, Brahms and Bruckner) and the 20th century (Mahler and Webern). Excursions to a master class at the Mozarteum University of Music, a rehearsal of Salzburg’s Mozarteum Orchestra and to a violin maker.

University courses open to all students/electives

As members of the University, AIFS students may, with exceptions, attend any of the regular courses offered. Students must check for a full listing upon arrival, as the catalog detailing courses does not appear until two to three weeks before a semester begins. If a student would like to take University courses for credit, a fall semester student must stay until January 31 and a spring semester student must stay until June 30. Students pay a fee of $850 for the extra month for accommodations, meals and administration.

The payment fee deadline for the $850 supplement is November 15 for the fall semester and April 15 for the spring semester. Students can pay this supplement to AIFS in the U.S. prior to departure.

Special Programs

International Relations

The University’s interdisciplinary Department of International Relations and Political Science offers international relations courses in English for AIFS students in human rights, European integration and megatrends in international politics and economics.

University of Salzburg Courses

English Literature

The University offers a full range of English literature courses popular with AIFS students. Leading scholars from Britain and the U.S. often visit the University to offer lectures and courses.

Foreign Languages

For students interested in other languages, the Department of Romance Languages offers courses at all levels in French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese; the Department of Slavic Languages offers courses at all levels in Russian, Serbo-Croatian and Polish. Language of instruction is either German or the language being taught.