The major prepares students to be life-long, autonomous learners and users of French, a fast-growing, global language spoken on five continents. Students develop linguistic, cultural, and communicative competence, allowing them not just to hold a conversation in French, but also to begin to think and to view the world through cultural references, attitudes, and traditions that are different from their own. Students complete the major prepared to join an engaged, digitally connected, global community of Francophones, having gained access to the rich traditions of the francophone world and to the challenges facing it today.
Students who enter the major at a higher level than FREN 206 are still required to complete nine full courses.
Any course dealing with the francophone world, taken at Oberlin or abroad, is eligible to count toward the major within the limits detailed in the requirements; two half courses may count as one full course. See French major elective courses.
Courses that dedicate at least 30% of the syllabus to French or francophone content may, with the chair’s approval, be counted as partial major credit.
Transferred credit for FREN 300 counts toward the major.
Four courses may be counted from approved study abroad programs or an accredited college/university.
One 400-level course must be taken in residence.
Five courses must be in residence, except in the case of a student who spends an entire year enrolled in a French-speaking university, in which case three courses must be in residence.
Course of Study
Students who are interested in French and francophone studies and are motivated to learn French can, with proper planning, complete a major in French even if they have no previous language preparation.
The Honors Program in French provides qualified majors with the opportunity to complete a special project during their senior year. An honors project entails independent study in French, in consultation with a faculty sponsor, completed over two semesters (FREN 505). Qualified students are invited to apply to the program during the second semester of their junior year. Admission is determined on the basis of faculty evaluation and approval of honors proposals and overall and major GPA.
FREN 301 is the recommended gateway course for most students, but another of the listed courses may be more appropriate for students entering with advanced prior experience.
Cross-referenced courses are courses offered by a department other than French and Italian with content that the department has determined pertains to the French major.