| A Report on the Program's Activities
-- Summer 2004 |
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from the Director, Antonella
D. Olson
[email protected]
Office: HRH 2.106B; (512) 471-5531
The Rome Study Program gives
students of all majors the opportunity to spend six weeks in
Rome, Italy, and to visit some of the most beautiful Italian
sites on weekends. Some field trips are included in the cost
of the program and others are optional.
Italian families host the students,
providing an in-depth experience of Italian life and language.
Students can earn three or six credit hours.
During the academic year preceding
departure for Rome, the program offers participants seven meetings
and a final orientation session on the U.T.-Austin campus.
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Program Director:
- Antonella D. Olson
Assistant on UT campus:
- Alberto Agosti
Assistant in Rome:
- Robert Olson
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Thirty-one students (twenty-nine
from UT-Austin, one from ACC, and one from Texas A&M) enrolled
in this year's program. Douglas Biow, Professor-French and Italian,
taught with Antonella Olson, Senior Lecturer-French and Italian.
Students were in class (1 1/2 hours for each class) from Monday
to Thursday.
The cost of the program was
$3,150. The fee did not cover airfare, UT tuition and fees, textbooks.
It covered all the rest: housing and three meals per day, classrooms
in the Palazzo Antici-Mattei, transportation from and to the
airport, bus tickets, a monthly bus-card, admissions to Tivoli's
Villa Adriana and Villa d' Este, one conference on the Sistine
Chapel (Prof. Maria-Cristina Paoluzzi), admissions and guided
visit to the Galleria Borghese (Prof. Alexandra Massini), a visit
to Cinecittà, a visit to an Italian high school, all the
guides on the field trips: ancient Rome and Tivoli (Prof. Dustin
Gish), Caravaggio's churches (Prof. Maria-Cristina Paoluzzi),
Bologna (Prof. Irene Eibenstein-Alvisi), Pompeii (Ms. Elena Tommasini).
Several social gatherings among students, host families and faculty
were also included.
This year we were happy to
see a remarkable increase in the scholarships assigned to deserving
students participating in the program: $12,600. Our warmest gratitude
to the College of Liberal Arts ($6,600), the Office of the Provost
($3,000), Prof. Daniela Bini ($1,000), the Italian Cultural Association
($1,500) and the Rome Study Program ($500).
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ITL 312K:
Second-Year Italian Language and Culture I.
3 credit hours, taught
by Antonella Olson.
(Enrollment: 18 students)
The focus of this course is
on a partial review of first-year grammar with emphasis on listening,
speaking, reading, and writing. As in the past, it had a very
similar curriculum to the ITL 312K offered on the UT campus during
a long semester, so that students are able to go on in the fall
to ITL 312L, the fourth-semester course, with the same preparation.
The city of Rome is a living laboratory in which students can
improve their language skills and vocabulary while immersing
themselves completely in Italian culture and the Italian environment.
At the end of the session, the 312K students performed their
interpretation of "I quattro veli di Kulala" by Stefano
Benni.
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ITC 349:
Rome, Eternal City: Myths and Realities.
3 credit hours, taught by Douglas Biow.
(Enrollment: 23 students)
This is a very intense, demanding
and excellent interdisciplinary course taught in English with
focus on the powerful myths of Rome--political, religious, cultural--from
antiquity to the present. An analysis of historical, literary,
and cinematic works was added to the artistic and architectural
resources of the city itself. Study was enriched by visits to
sites such as the Forum, the Coliseum, the Galleria Borghese,
visits to see several works by Caravaggio, etc. Students appreciated
these field trips immensely and learned to look around themselves
to discover and recognize the many treasures of Rome.
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ITC 365:
Contemporary Italian Culture.
3 credit hours, taught by Douglas Biow and Antonella Olson.
(Enrollment: 9 students)
This is an upper-division course
taught in Italian with focus on major Italian cultural movements.
The students analyzed selected stories from "Marcovaldo"
by Italo Calvino, poems by Pier Paolo Pasolini and studied and
performed two plays by Stefano Benni. The performance was impressive
and the host families--our audience--were very pleased with the
final result.
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The Palazzo Antici-Mattei has
been used as classroom space since summer 1999. The Centro Studi
Americani (CSA) is one of the major Italian libraries of American
Studies and is situated in the majestic Palazzo Antici-Mattei,
a seventeenth-century palace. Its rooms are frescoed by Tuscan
and Flemish painters of the early 1600s. The CSA provided and
will provide again next year a spacious, elegant and distinctive
environment for our students.
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Included in the program's cost:
- 1) Two orientation sessions
in Rome;
- 2) two guided visits to ancient
Roman sites;
- 3) a guided visit to the Museum
of the Galleria Borghese;
- 4) a guided visit to Roman
churches housing paintings by Caravaggio;
- 5) a visit to an Italian high
school;
- 6) a guided visit to the film
studios of Cinecittà;
- 7) a guided visit to Tivoli
(Villa Adriana, Villa D'Este)
Optional field trips organized
by the Director:
- 1) A three-day visit to Bologna,
Venice and Ravenna;
2) A three-day visit to Naples, Sorrento, Capri and Pompeii;
3) A three-day visit to a beach resort near Circeo.
This summer, Ms. Priscilla
Ebert, Coordinator for International Programs in the College
of Liberal Arts, visited the program for a week and joined the
students in the first field trip.
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