Program name: | Eastern Studies |
Study Level: | Undergraduate |
Program leader: | Alexander Chulukhadze |
Study language: | Georgian |
Qualification: | Bachelor of Near or/and Middle East Studies |
Program capacity: | 240 |
Program permission: | Enrollment of students at the first level of academic higher education (undergraduate programs) is carried out based on the results of unified national exams or the order of the Minister of Education and Science of Georgia No. 224/N (December 29, 2011), passing administrative registration and the order of the presidents. |
Program goals: | The program aims at training a qualified specialist of Middle East studies, a qualified specialist of one of the three main languages of the Middle East (Arabic, Persian, Turkish), a citizen with high social awareness and democratic values, who can understand and respect different cultures; an individual with analytical, critical and communication skills. At the same time, the program provides knowledge about the history of the Middle East region, economic, political, legal, religious systems and culture, political trends and factors leading to various types of conflicts considering the peculiarities of the countries of the region, the dynamics of political relations with each other and with Georgia, the current situation, and perspectives. The program develops the student's ability to critically understand the past and present of the Middle East; in general, the ability to identify the main characteristics of the Middle East as a large region and the separate countries within it, and a general understanding of the characteristics of the regional development and diachronic framework. The undergraduate of the program will be employed in almost all areas related to various aspects of the acquired competences: public service, international organizations, scientific-research institutes, foreign relations service, Eastern private or state trade / economic missions, macro and microeconomic international companies, diplomatic missions of the relevant countries, etc. |
Methods for Attaining Learning Outcomes: | • the method of working on the book; • explanatory method; • using video-audio material; • interactive lectures; • Dislike news; • team working; • Practical working; • Written working • make a presentations; • Verbal or oral method • Discussion-debates |
Learning outcomes: | |
Date of approval: | 12-03-2012 |
Approval protocol number: | 43-12 |
Date of program update: | |
Update protocol number: | #12PDC6022-02 |
Program details: | In addition to the core subjects shaping competence, the program two university-compulsory elective subjects - social/humanitarian and STEM blocks, a block of mandatory elective oriental languages and free credits; In addition to the major specialty, a student can choose a minor specialty. It is possible to choose an minor specialty both in the school offering the major specialty or in another school (the minor specialty does not grant the student an academic degree, however, in combination with the major specialty, it strengthens the general and sectoral competencies of the student and/or provides an opportunity to acquire certain basic knowledge, which, along with the major specialty, will form the sectoral competences necessary for employment or pursuing studies at the next level of education). The program is meticulously designed to account for the individualization of students' language competencies. Specifically, students start learning the English language at a proficiency level relevant to the assessed knowledge evidenced by the unified national examinations and internal assessments. The maximum raw score determined on the unified national exam:
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Teaching Process Characteristics: | To obtain a bachelor's degree in Near and/or Middle Eastern Studies, a student must earn 240 credits comprising:
|
Code | Subject | ECTS | Semester |
ANTH3130 | Basics of Cultural Anthropology | 6 | 2 |
BUSN4433 | Economy, business, management | 6 | 2 |
HIST1222 | History of Russian occupation in Georgia | 6 | 2 |
LAWB1155 | Debates and Critical Thinking | 6 | 2 |
LAWB1177 | Thinking and Morality | 6 | 2 |
LAWB1195 | Citizenship in the modern world | 6 | 2 |
LITR1212 | The great Books | 6 | 2 |
POLI2260 | Basics of Political Ideologies | 6 | 2 |
Credits sum: | 6 |
Code | Subject | ECTS | Semester |
STEM0002 | Ingenuity, entrepreneurship and technology | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0003 | Experiments that changed the world | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0004 | Game theory | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0007 | Mathematics and Civilizations | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0011 | Computational reasoning | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0012 | Biology and Health of the Human | 6 | 1,2 |
STEM0013 | Basics of Cyber Hygiene | 6 | 1,2 |
MATH1414 | Analytical and Quantitative Reasoning | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0005 | Modern technologies | 6 | 1,4 |
STEM0010 | Logic | 6 | 1,4 |
Credits sum: | 12 |
Code | Subject | ECTS | Semester |
ENGL3213 | English Language VI (B2/2) | 6 | 1 |
HIST1118 | Civilizations and Mankind Development | 6 | 1 |
ORST1110 | Introduction to The Oriental Studies | 6 | 1 |
ORST1210 | History of The Middle East I (Ancient and Middle Periods) | 6 | 2 |
ORST2120 | Islam (Region, History, Civilization) | 6 | 2 |
ORST1117 | Political relations of Georgia and the Near East | 6 | 3 |
ORST2110 | History of The Middle East II (New and Contemporary Periods) | 6 | 3 |
ORST2131 | Political and Economic Geography of the Near East | 6 | 3 |
ORST2222 | Arts and Culture of The Middle East | 6 | 4 |
JMMB3120 | Media and Politics | 6 | 6 |
ORST1116 | 6 | 6 | |
ORST4210 | The Contemporary Middle East (Ideology, Politics and Security) | 6 | 6 |
ORST1115 | Geopolitics of ethnic and religious conflicts in the Near East | 6 | 8 |
ORST2217 | State Structure and Law of The Middle East | 6 | 8 |
ORST4230 | Bachelor Thesis in Oriental Studies | 12 | 8 |
Credits sum: | 96 |
Code | Subject | ECTS | Semester |
ARAB1140 | Arabic Language I (A1) | 6 | 1 |
ARAB1240 | Arabic Language II (A2) | 6 | 2 |
ARAB2141 | Arabic language (B1/1) | 6 | 3 |
ARAB2241 | Arabic language IV(B1/2) | 6 | 4 |
ARAB3142 | Arabic language V (B2/1) | 6 | 5 |
ARAB3242 | Arabic language VI (B2/2) | 6 | 6 |
ARAB4140 | Arabic Language VII (Economics, Politics, Law) | 6 | 7 |
ARAB4241 | Arabic language VIII (Translation Theory and Practice | 6 | 8 |
Credits sum: | 48 |
Code | Subject | ECTS | Semester |
TURK1140 | Turkish Language I (A1) | 6 | 1 |
TURK1240 | Turkish Language II (A2) | 6 | 2 |
TURK2141 | Turkish Language III(B1/1) | 6 | 3 |
TURK2241 | Turkish language IV (B1/2) | 6 | 4 |
TURK3142 | Turkish language V(B2/1) | 6 | 5 |
TURK3242 | Turkish language VI (B2/2) | 6 | 6 |
TURK4140 | Turkish Language VII (Economics, Politics, Law) | 6 | 7 |
TURK4241 | Turkish language VIII (Translation Theory and Practice | 6 | 8 |
Credits sum: | 48 |
Code | Subject | ECTS | Semester |
PERS1140 | Persian Language I (A1) | 6 | 1 |
PERS1240 | Persian Language II (A2) | 6 | 2 |
PERS2141 | Persian language III(B1/1) | 6 | 3 |
PERS2241 | Persian language IV(B1/2) | 6 | 4 |
PERS3142 | Persian language V (B2/1) | 6 | 5 |
PERS3242 | Persian language VI (B2/2) | 6 | 6 |
PERS4140 | Persian Language VII (Economics, Politics, Law) | 6 | 7 |
PERS4241 | Persian language VIII (Translation Theory and Practice | 6 | 8 |
Credits sum: | 48 |
Point | GPA | The university assessment | The general assessment in Georgia | |
97-100 | 4,00 | A+ | A | Excellent |
94-96 | 3,75 | A | ||
91-93 | 3,50 | A- | ||
87-90 | 3,25 | B+ | Very good | |
84-86 | 3,00 | B | B | |
81-83 | 2,75 | B- | ||
77-80 | 2,50 | C+ | C | good |
74-76 | 2,25 | C | ||
71-73 | 2,00 | C- | ||
67-70 | 1,75 | D+ | D | Satisfactory |
64-66 | 1,50 | D | ||
61-63 | 1,25 | D- | ||
51-60 | 1,00 | E | E | Sufficient |
Not passed | ||||
41-50 | FX | FX | Insufficient | |
<40 | F | F | Failed |