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Departmental Exams

Placement Exam


Students with previous modern language experience in French or Spanish are strongly encouraged to take the placement exam to ensure proper enrollment in a Modern Language course. The exam has three assessments: Reading, Listening, and Grammar. Each assessment has a time limit of 50 minutes, multiple-choice questions, and is available on demand via Blackboard . No materials are available to study for the placement exam since the assessment is intended to measure your overall knowledge and skill set.

NOTE: Modern Languages Department placement exams are NOT CLEP or Advanced Placement (AP) exams.  Your exam results are applicable for course placement at Missouri Southern State University only and DO NOT give you credit.

Exam Policies:

  • Anyone may take the placement exam who has academic or life experience with French or Spanish.
  • No one is allowed to take the placement exam more than twice for the same language.
  • No one is allowed to take the placement exam again within a month of the first examination for the same language.
  • Placement exams do not establish credit or retroactive credit for any language.
  • Placement exam scores are valid for six months from the time of assessment.
  • The Department of Modern Languages reserves the right to release exam results for the purposes of accreditation, assessment, institutional research and departmental use.
  • The Department of Modern Languages reserves the right to appropriately enroll students whose results are considered borderline (i.e. a score within 5 points of a cut-off score) in a Modern Language course.
  • By taking the placement exam, examinees acknowledge that they have read, understood and agreed to the above policies.

 

To take the placement exam:

Contact Emily Boydston (boydston-e@mssu.edu) to be enrolled into the Blackboard site.

You will receive further instructions via email about how to access the Placement Exam and what to do after we have processed the results.

*Upon successful completion of a higher language course a student may petition to receive retro credit for lower-level courses. See Retroactive Credit Program below.

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Retroactive Credit Program


MSSU students may qualify for  retroactive credit for previous modern language experience upon completion of a language course higher than the entry level (101) course at MSSU with a grade of “C” or better.  A student may earn a maximum of twelve hours of retroactive credits for a modern language. The number of credits received by the student petitioner depends on the level of the language course taken by the student (102, 203, etc.) and on that student's successful fulfillment of each of the procedures described below.  The student should fill out a Retroactive Language Credit Request Form and follow the procedures described on that form in order to be considered for retroactive credit.  If a student earned retroactive credit at another campus, admissions will normally allow the credits to transfer.

To be eligible to earn modern language retroactive credits…

A.…the language course must be an in-house course of the same language at a higher level,

  • The course taken to establish eligibility for claiming retroactive credit for lower level courses must be a course at a level higher than 101 at MSSU.
  • If a student transfers college-level credit of a language course taken somewhere else, they cannot use the transferred course to claim retroactive credits for lower level courses at MSSU in that language.  A student must take a language course higher than the transferred course at MSSU to earn retroactive credits for lower level courses.
  • If a student drops a language course, they may take the same course again or a different level course to be eligible for claiming retroactive credits for lower level courses after the successful completion of the course.
B. …AND the course must be designated appropriate for earning retroactive credits,

  • The course taken to establish the eligibility for claiming retroactive credits for lower level courses must be designated appropriate for earning retroactive credits by the Department of Modern Languages.
  • Not all courses that offer retroactive credits are available each semester. The student should contact the appropriate language program for more details.

C.…AND the student must fulfill the stated requirements of the course and earn the appropriate grade ("C" or better).

  • However, the retroactive credits themselves do not receive letter grades, nor are they counted toward residence requirements. They DO NOT replace grades for any classes already taken.
  • Successfully earned retroactive credits do count toward the overall credit hours needed for graduation. They may also be used to satisfy other modern language requirements including courses in the General Education curriculum, the BA language requirement, certificate or major requirements. Consult the Department of Modern Languages for more details

D....AND the student must submit the properly completed Retroactive Language Credit Request Form (available from the Language & Literature Department ) in a timely fashion.

Complete List of Equivalencies:

Course Taken Eligible retroactive credits for lower level courses
102 completed with a C or beter = 3 hrs. credit
203 completed with a C or beter = up to 6 hrs. credit
204 completed with a C or beter = up to 9 hrs. credit
Upper Division courses completed with a C or beter = up to 12 hrs. credit

 

Retroactive Credit Cost:

Students must pay a cost equal to $60 per credit requested using the form available from the Department of Language & Literature. No credit will be awarded until the appropriate cost is paid to the Business Office and the receipt is presented to the Department of Language & Literature.

For example:

A student places into 203, completes that course and earns a “C” grade; the student has followed steps A through D above to earn credit for 101 and 102.

Depending on the student’s preference, they can pay $360 ($60.00 x 6 credit hours) for and receive sic (6) retroactive credits for 101 and 102, or they can pay $180 ($60.00 x 3 credit hours) and receive only three (3) retroactive credits for 102.

The student’s transcript will then reflect CR (no letter grade) for any retroactive credits and an academic credit (letter grade “C”) for 203.

Contact the department for any questions or concerns.

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Senior Assessment


In addition to required coursework, Modern Language students must also pass a Senior Assessment. Our program uses a combination of five assessments. Students must pass at least three (3) of the five (5) assessments to meet graduation requirements. The Reading, Listening, Speaking, and Writing assessments do not require any preparation or studying as they are indicative of your overall skill set and not of any particular content or curriculum.

Reading

This assessment gauges a student's ability to read at the Intermediate High level, the required level for graduates. This level meets benchmarks set by the American Council on the Teaching of Modern Languages (ACTFL). The Reading Assessment contains 35 questions about short passages and takes approximately 50 minutes to complete.

Listening

This assessment gauges a student's ability to listen at the Intermediate High level, the required level for graduates. This level meets benchmarks set by the American Council on the Teaching of Modern Languages (ACTFL). The Listening Assessment contains 35 questions about short audio excerpts and takes approximately 50 minutes to complete.

Speaking

The Oral Proficiency Interview-computer (OPIc) is a thirty-minute interview that gauges oral (speaking) proficiency. The OPIc is recorded and rated officially by Language Testing International (LTI) according to required benchmarks set by the American Council on the Teaching of Modern Languages (ACTFL). This is the only Senior Assessment with a cost since it is rated by a third-party. Contact the Department for current pricing.

Students may use their ratings for resumes, job interviews and portfolios. We encourage students to review this .pdf for more details and advice.

Writing

For the Writing Assessment you need to submit your best, original writing sample that uses multiple time frames (past, present, future) and is at least two pages in length and/or around 500 words. Students are encouraged to revise a writing sample from an academic course, but they may also write a new sample.

Cultural Competency

The Cultural Competency Assessment is based on the Missouri Content Area Exam for World Languages, Cultural Understanding Domains 7 & 8. It is a series of 25 multiple-choice questions, written in English. This assessment is not written in a modern language since it assesses your cultural knowledge as opposed to the other assessments which assess your linguistic skills.

 

When should students take the Modern Language Senior Assessments?

  • If you are within two semesters of graduation OR you are finished taking your language classes, it is highly recommended that you begin this process now.
  • If you are a December graduate, you must take all five assessments by December 1st. If you are a May or July graduate, you must take all five assessments by May 1st. Failure to complete your Senior Assessments by these deadlines may result in a delay of meeting graduation requirements and receiving your diploma.
  • Appointments for Senior Assessment testing will not be available during Finals Week, during Fall or Spring Break, or over the summer.
  • To schedule your Senior Assessments, contact the Modern Languages Program Director, Dr. Leslie Smith.