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The Languages, Literature and Linguistics Teaching Course was created at UFRGS in 1943 offering three different teaching majors: Classical Languages, Neo-Latin Languages and Germanic Languages.
The School of Languages, Literature and Linguistics was created in 1970 and established three departments: Department of Portuguese and Classical Languages, Department of Modern Languages and Department of Philology, Linguistics and Literary Theory. In 1973, the Translating major was created.
School of Languages, Literature and Linguistics of UFRGS is divided into three departments:
Department of Portuguese and Classical Languages
Coordinator: José Carlos Baracat Jr.
Substitute Coordinator: Laura Rosane Quednau
Sectors
Department of Modern Languages
Coordinator: Susana Termignoni
Substitute Coordinator: Márcia Montenegro Velho
Secretary: Karina Braz Marchetti
Sectors
Department of Linguistics, Philology and Literary Theory
Coordinator: Luiz Carlos da Silva Schwindt
Substitute Coordinator: Rita Lenira de Freitas Bittencourt
Secretary: Maria Luíza B. Machado
Sectors
Department of Modern Languages
Translation Major
Teaching Major
Our post-graduate program provides qualification for researchers and teachers who already work in, or intend to pursue, a career in further educational institutions. The majority of our students (around 90%) are graduates working as teachers at primary and secondary institutions, who come here to benefit from our training and seek an improvement in their professional qualifications. On a small scale, it also qualifies teachers who seek to improve their professional training and develop research on the institutions in which they teach. Apart from these, it qualifies translating, linguistic and literary study professionals. We can also highlight the fact that many professionals in other fields, such as journalists, anthropologists, psychologists and psychiatrists join our post graduate program due to its interdisciplinary faculty.
The Institute of Languages, Literature and Linguistics of UFRGS endorses academic journals, such as Organon, Nau Literária, Cadernos do IL and others.
Organon is the main academic journal from the institute. Its focus is the publication of new essays on Linguistics and Literary Theory.
Nau Literária is an electronic journal that publishes essays and reviews written not only in Portuguese, but also in English, French, Spanish, Italian and German. It is affiliated to the University of Évora and the Nova Lisboa University, both from Portugal.
Cadernos do IL publishes new articles and essays on Language and Literary Studies. Its focus is on the academic production from graduate and undergraduate students.
Termisul is the group in charge of the Terminologic Project Cone Sul, originated at the School of Languages, Literature and Linguistics in 1991, under the leadership of Maria da Graça Krieger. It counts with the participation of professors from the Department of Portuguese and Classical Languages and from the Department of Modern Languages.
To make a progress in theoretical and applied research in terminology is its ultimate goal. Its theoretical and methodological choice puts terminology on the perspective of specialized language, expressed in technical and scientific texts.
The group committed itself to the development of terminological studies at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul and to the introduction of terminology, as a mandatory subject in the curriculum of the Translation Major of the School of Languages, Literature and Linguistics. In the Graduate Program, the group also proposed the inclusion of a subject about Lexicography and Terminology. In this context, Doctoral Thesis and Dissertations were produced.
Termisul specifically aims at developing terminographic tools as a result of research undertaken and as a feeding source for the work of researchers. They have published the Dictionary of Environmental Law and the Multilingual Glossary of International Environmental Law. In addition, the Environmental Law data base was implemented (BDT Termisul), now disabled, and its material originated the Termisul collection.
The Distance Learning Department encourages knowledge production and development of human resources. For all the distance, the hybrid and the face-to-face courses, this department uses the internet and, in particular, Moodle and ALED platform (Aprendizagem de Línguas Estrangueiras à Distância – Foreign Languages’ Distance Learning).
Through NUED’s extension activities and a research work started in 1999, such Institute intends to foster the Distance Education, in order to contributing to a more democratic and including teaching. Besides, it’s also our objective to preserve the qualified knowledge production already achieved by the face-to-face classroom courses.
Since 2009, the School of Languages, Literature and Linguistics of UFRGS has been discussing major curriculum changes. This reform aims at simplifying the Undergraduate curriculum and adequating it to the Brazilian Federal Government’s University Reform Program (REUNI). There has been public discussion on the subject and all relevant papers are available at the School’s webpage.