General Information
The Undergraduate Catalog is the official resource for course requirements for the Spanish Teaching Minor. See the link at the top of this page for more information.
Requirements
Prerequisite Courses
Students must complete any 100- or 200-level Spanish courses they need to prepare for SPAN 321 according to their Spanish experience and proficiency. SPAN 321 is the first language course that counts toward the Spanish teaching minor, but this does not mean all incoming students will be ready for SPAN 321 during their first semester.
For more information, see below.
Declare the Spanish Teaching Minor
Students must be accepted into a teaching major program before they can declare a teaching minor. In order to declare the Spanish teaching minor, simply reach out to the liberal arts advisement center of your teaching major and let them know you would like to minor in Spanish teaching.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Toggle ItemQ: Are there courses that I need to take in a particular sequence?
Yes. You need to plan backward from when you want to graduate, noting that most of the courses listed below are only offered during Fall and Winter semesters:
- Last semester - Decide whether you will do:
- Span 478R: Secondary Minor Student Teaching (Fall, Winter, Spring)
- Semester immediately prior to student teaching:
- Span 378: Spanish Teaching Methods 2 (Fall or Winter only)
- Two semesters before student teaching:
- Span 377: Spanish Teaching Methods 1 (Fall or Winter only, the semester right before Span 378)
- Last semester - Decide whether you will do:
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Toggle ItemQ: I’m close to graduating and am just beginning the Spanish Teaching minor. In order to save time and graduate sooner, can I take SPAN 377 before being admitted to the minor, or take SPAN 377 and 378 the same semester?
No. If you begin the minor late in your academic career, you may not be able to graduate when you had originally intended.
- SPAN 377, 378 and 380 are open only to Spanish Teaching Majors officially admitted to the program, and to Spanish Teaching Minors.
- SPAN 377 is a prerequisite for SPAN 378 and SPAN 380.
- SPAN 377 and 378/380 are generally offered during the same hour, so it is not possible to take them simultaneously.
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Toggle ItemQ: Under special circumstances, can I waive SPAN 377 and/or 378 or substitute another class?
Generally, no.
- SPAN 377 and 378 are the core courses for the Spanish Teaching Major and cannot be waived.
- Students minoring in teaching another foreign language may petition to substitute the 377 methods class in that language for SPAN 377.
- Please contact Dr. Cherice Montgomery, the program coordinator of the Spanish Teaching Major for more information.
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Toggle ItemQ: I’ve already taken SPAN 376. Can I substitute it for 377 or 378?
No. SPAN 376 is a different course with a different textbook and different content geared toward non-teaching majors. Unlike Span 377 and Span 378, it is not designed to prepare students for working in a public school teaching context.
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Toggle ItemQ: Can I request a student teaching placement at a specific school?
No.
- You can state whether you prefer to teach high school or middle/junior high school when you submit your student teaching application in Educator Plus.
- You can rank the five school districts in the BYU-Public School Partnership (Jordan, Alpine, Provo, Nebo, Wasatch) in order of preference.
- The department will do its best to accommodate your preferences, but it may not be possible to place you in the school, district, or at the level you prefer due to limitations in the number of placements available and competition from other universities in placing student teachers.
- Students should NOT contact individual mentors or school administrators in an attempt to arrange their own placements.
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Toggle ItemQ: What’s the difference between student teaching and an internship?
This information is most relevant to your teaching major but may impact your placement as a Spanish teaching minor.
- Span 476: Secondary Spanish Student Teaching (12 credits) is a full-time, semester-long placement in the classroom of a mentor teacher.
- Student teachers are expected to be at their school during contract hours (which tend to fall between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m.).
- Students are strongly discouraged from taking other classes or working at another job while student teaching.
- Scholarships are available to students during the semester they student teach (see http://hac.byu.edu/teacher-education-scholarship.html).
- Span 496: Secondary Spanish Teaching Internship (12 credits) is a full-year internship during which a student intern is hired by a high school or middle/junior high school as a full-time teacher.
- Interns generally have their own classroom, are expected to independently fulfill all of the contract hours and responsibilities of a full-time classroom teacher, and are assigned an experienced teacher as a mentor with whom they can consult when they have questions or problems.
- Interns are paid a salary equal to half that of a licensed teacher.
- Internships are relatively uncommon, as they are contingent on the needs of local schools.
- Span 476: Secondary Spanish Student Teaching (12 credits) is a full-time, semester-long placement in the classroom of a mentor teacher.
For more information, email Dr. Cherice Montgomery or call (801) 422-3465.
Alternatively, email the Department Office or call (801) 422-2837.