2023 Fall
FRENCH 137 001 - LEC 001
French for Professions
French for Economics, Politics, and Business
Claire Delphine Tourmen Perron, Richard Kern
Class #:30842
Units: 4
Instruction Mode:
In-Person Instruction
Offered through
French
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
13
Enrolled: 26
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 39
Waitlist Max: 9
No Reserved Seats
Hours & Workload
3 hours of instructor presentation of course materials per week, and 9 hours of outside work hours per week.
Final Exam
FRI, DECEMBER 15TH
11:30 am - 02:30 pm
Wheeler 20
Other classes by Claire Delphine Tourmen Perron
+ 1 Independent Study
Other classes by Richard Kern
- FRENCH 1 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 1 002 002LEC
- FRENCH 1 003 003LEC
- FRENCH 1 004 004LEC
- FRENCH 1 006 006LEC
- FRENCH 1 007 007LEC
- FRENCH 1 009 009LEC
- FRENCH 13 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 1R 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 2 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 2 002 002LEC
- FRENCH 2 003 003LEC
- FRENCH 2 006 006LEC
- FRENCH 206 001 001SEM
- FRENCH 3 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 3 003 003LEC
- FRENCH 3 004 004LEC
- FRENCH 3 005 005LEC
- FRENCH 4 001 001LEC
- FRENCH 4 002 002LEC
- FRENCH 4 004 004LEC
- FRENCH C26 001 001LEC
- FRENCH R1A 001 001LEC
- FRENCH R1B 001 001LEC
- ITALIAN C26 001 001LEC
- SPANISH C26 001 001LEC
Course Catalog Description
Introduction to the French vocabulary and syntax specific to fields (i.e., economics, politics, and business) and industries. Oral and written comprehension, written compositions (including correspondence), translations, training in oral expression. Conducted entirely in French.
Class Description
This class provides a solid introduction to French-speaking political, economic, and business cultures.
The course’s cultural objectives are coupled with 1) linguistic objectives to help you speak about political and economic issues in French and 2) intercultural objectives to prepare you for the workplace in francophone organizations, i.e. for an internships, especially if you follow the new professionalizing opportunity offered in “International Relations” within the French Minor and Major (for more details, contact Nina Cohen, ninarennertcohen@berkeley.edu, or Claire Tourmen, tourmen@berkeley.edu).
We will also train you to take an optional test (planned in the French Department in December 2023 – work in progress), recognized in francophone professional worlds, le Diplôme en Français Professionel, delivered by La Chambre de Commerce et d’Industrie de Paris, to boost your employability and certify your proficiency in French in certain professional domains.
This class will be an asset if you want to work in diplomacy or international affairs, politics, economics, international business, law, media, and NGOs. It is well suited for majors/minors in French and as a complement for majors in Political Science, Global Studies, Law, Economics, Business Administration, Sociology, Journalism, Media Studies, among others. This class is also a perfect introduction or complement for “Political Science 147F – Contemporary French politics in historical perspective: the republican model in transition,” taught by Professor Jonah Levy.
Each class will involve a mix of teacher and student presentations, discussions, role plays, and analysis of authentic documents (texts, audio, video etc.). The class will be conducted entirely in French. This will be an interactive class, aimed at maximizing your time interacting in French. Your grammar does not need to be perfect; we will focus on being understood and accurate (both linguistically and culturally). We will work on texts from famous francophone thinkers such as the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu, the economist Thomas Piketty, and others, and this class will help you learn techniques to do research in social sciences. We will welcome a few French-speaking guest lecturers from other departments/universities (e.g., in political science, in sociology, geography…) and from professional worlds (e.g., Unesco, Gastronomy and Food-Industry…) in class.
The class will be organized around 5 chapters:
• Introduction: we will reflect on the politic/economic/social state of France within Europe today;
• Chapter 1 (Political Life): you will learn about French political parties, public debates, and the chief politicians and institutions in France;
• Chapter 2 (Media): you will learn how to navigate French-speaking media worldwide;
• Chapter 3 (International Relations): you will learn how to understand French-speaking countries’ positions on the world stage;
• Chapter 4 (Business): you will learn about the main features of the French economy, its strengths and its challenges; we will dive into the institutional and spatial organization of commerce in France, as well as into several economic sectors representative of the country’s strengths and specificities (e.g., agro-food industry and gastronomy, tourism, engineering and technology);
• Chapter 5 (Workplace cultures): you will learn about workplace cultures in France and prepare yourself for a professional immersion (e.g., through an internship). You will also be trained to perform successful professional interactions in French.
Special features of the class: This class will be tied to the active participation in the Social Science Speaker Series in French, organized by the French Department and the Center of Excellence for French and Francophone Studies in Berkeley. It will also include an online exchange with students from Sciences Po Lyon on political/economic topics.
The course will be taught in French and all work for the class conducted in French - completion of FR102, placement exam or native language fluency required for enrollment.
Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
No Reserved Seats
Textbooks & Materials
See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.
Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials
Associated Sections
None