The programme for the
Bachelor’s degree in Modern Languages and Literatures has two forms:
- German, Dutch and English (which combines two Germanic languages chosen from German, English and Dutch);
- General (which combines a Romance language with a Germanic one, chosen from either French, Spanish and Italian or German, English and Dutch).
By the end of the Bachelor’s degree course (German, Dutch and English), students will:
- have gained productive and receptive skills, both oral and written, at a more advanced level (Level B2+ of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages) in both languages studied;
- have mastered the grammar of the languages they have studied as well as the foundations of linguistics in these languages;
- have acquired literary skills, in literary history as well as the analysis and interpretation of literary texts;
- have gained an understanding of the cultural and contemporary environment of the countries where the languages they have studied are spoken;
- be familiar with producing academic work in linguistics and literature.