Spanish

Our Spanish program is grounded in the belief that language is a dynamic social practice, serving as a gateway to interdisciplinary exploration and cultural understanding

four students sit at a table and converse

About Our Program

  • Our simple guiding principle: language is a social practice. Our program is distinct because of our community-based approach to teaching and learning. 
  • Our goals and objectives promote intercultural communication based on what you can do with language in meaningful, real-world contexts. 
  • Spanish is inherently interdisciplinary. Course topics include environmental issues, migration, race, gender, urban culture, literature, and much more.  
  • We offer three Spanish major tracks: Spanish Language and Literature, Spanish Language and Cultures, and Interdisciplinary Studies in Spanish. 

At a Glance

Degree Awarded

  • Bachelor of Arts

Field Group

Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures

Program Type

Area of Study

Spanish & Our Values

Pitzer’s core values are woven throughout all our academic programs. Learn how our Spanish program addresses the value of intercultural understanding.

Intercultural Understanding

We offer semester-long study abroad programs in Costa Rica and Ecuador and a summer program in Costa Rica. You may also study abroad through approved programs in Argentina, Chile, Cuba, Mexico, and Spain.

View Study Abroad Programs
100% Cultural Immersion

A language immersion experience within a Spanish-speaking community is required for all Spanish majors.

Student Experiences

veronica martinez portrait

A Global Education

As an Organizational Studies and Spanish major, Veronica Martinez’s ’21 experiences teaching English globally has demonstrated how the power of bilingualism can increase one's social and cultural knowledge in the midst of a globalizing world.

Pitzer Voices

Diego Borgsdorf Fuenzalida '24, an Anthropology and Spanish major, researched the return of objects and archival documents from the Chilean exile triggered by Pinochet's dictatorship.

Read Diego's Story
headshhot of diego borgsdorf fuenzalida wearing a collared shirt and tie
“The Spanish Program at Pitzer has provided me with a curriculum that has not only improved my capacity to write, think, and speak in Spanish, but has also opened my worldview to new scholarly and cultural discussions that often go unheard in this country. Spanish at Pitzer is not only about language development, it's also about developing intercultural knowledge and toolkits that have helped me grow as an ethnographic researcher and Chilean-American.”

Diego Borgsdorf Fuenzalida ’24

he/him/his

Anthropology and Spanish major

Student Resources

students practice speaking portuguese together at the fletcher jones language lab.

Fletcher Jones Languages and Cultures Resource Center

The Fletcher Jones Languages and Cultures Resource Center is a unique space dedicated to supporting in-person and virtual language and culture learning as well as intercultural exchange among local and international students and members of our extended community.

Explore Our Language Lab

Spanish Program Details

View Course Catalog

Choose one of three Spanish tracks: Spanish Language and Literature, Spanish Language and Cultures, or Interdisciplinary Studies in Spanish.  

What You Will Learn

  • How to participate with confidence in a community of speakers of the language.
  • How to understand and identify differences in socio-cultural contexts and their social implications.
  • How to explain the importance of appreciating the complexity of the human experience across cultures.
  • Citizenship skills and increased self-awareness and personal growth. 
  • How to examine the rights and responsibilities shared by the interconnected members of a community.
  • How to identify your own personal strengths, limits, goals, fears, or prejudices as they relate to interacting with members of a community of speakers.
  • How to explain the connections between personal, interpersonal, community, and socio-political transformation.
  • The value of knowing another language and understanding how to become a lifelong learner.
  • The importance of extending the use of the language outside university boundaries to develop personal relationships and explore new social spaces.

Learn More

Visit the Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures field group page for more information and resources. 

Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group

Students who are Spanish heritage speakers are strongly recommended encouraged to take SPAN50-Spanish for Heritage Speakers, which counts toward the major and minor requirements.

Major Requirements

General requirements for the three tracks are:

  1. Spanish language proficiency at the intermediate level upon entry to the major (end of the sophomore year) and at the advanced or superior level upon completion (ACTFL standards).
  2. An immersion experience in at least one Spanish-speaking community abroad or within the United States, as determined with the adviser.
  3. Eight of the required courses within each track should be taught in Spanish and be above SPAN 044 PZ . With the adviser’s consent these eight may include cross-listed courses with Spanish or other courses numbered below SPAN 044 PZ, such as SPAN 031 PZ – Community–Based Spanish Practicum.
  4. In addition, each student will complete the requirements for one of the following tracks (at least 9 to 10 courses). Courses listed below are sample options. Course selection should be made in consultation with the major faculty adviser.

 Track One: Spanish Language and Literature

  1. One theory of language course or an equivalent, for example: LGCS 010 PZ.
  2. One course on literary analysis or an equivalent, for example: SPAN 101 SC.
  3. One course that provides a sociocultural or historical background for the student’s area of literary focus.
  4. Six courses with a focus on the literature of either Spain or Latin America, or a comparative transatlantic study.
  5. SPAN 199 PZ, a capstone senior research project.

 Track Two: Spanish Language and Cultures

  1. One course as a theoretical foundation for understanding culture, for example: ANTH 002 PZ, SOC 001 PZ.
  2. One course that connects language and society, for example: LGCS 112 PZ, LGCS 115 PZ, LGCS 116 PZ, ANTH 003 PZ, ANTH 117 PZ. 
  3. One foundations course that provides a sociocultural or historical background for the student’s area of focus, for example: SPAN 102 CM, HIST 011 PZ, HIST 032 CH, HIST 100I CH.
  4. Six courses focused on the study of one or two Spanish–speaking cultures.
  5. SPAN 199 PZ, a capstone senior research project.

Track Three: Interdisciplinary Studies in Spanish


This option requires a second adviser in the additional area of study who is on either The Claremont Colleges or the study abroad site faculty and has the appropriate expertise.

  1. One course as a theoretical foundation for understanding culture, for example: ANTH 002 PZ, SOC 001 PZ.
  2. One introductory course in the emphasis area.
  3. One course that provides a sociocultural or historical background for the student’s emphasis area.
  4. Four elective upper–division courses in Spanish.
  5. Two courses in the emphasis that are taught in Spanish.
  6. SPAN 199 PZ, a capstone senior research project.

Honors

Students whose general academic work and senior research are judged as excellent will be considered for graduation with honors in Spanish.

Sigma Delta Pi

Pitzer College is a member of The Claremont Colleges chapter of Sigma Delta Pi, the national Spanish honor society. Juniors and seniors are elected to membership on the basis of academic standing and regulations for eligibility established by the chapter and the national society. Information may be obtained from Professor Ethel Jorge.



 

Students may consider a combined major with Spanish; it requires a minimum of six courses in Spanish.

  • The minor in Spanish requires successful completion of six graded courses in Spanish, five of them above SPAN 033 PZ. 
  • The sixth course will be in a language immersion setting (community-based Spanish, internship, study abroad, or other). 
  • The student will tailor the minor with the adviser and develop a brief written rationale of goals. 
  • Two of the courses should be taken in the Northern Colleges (Pitzer, CMC, Scripps); exceptions require written approval.

Spanish Faculty

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Arianna Alfaro-Porras

  • Senior Lecturer and Global Engagement Coordinator
  • Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group
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Juanita Aristizábal

  • Professor of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures
  • Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group
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Makela Brizuela

  • Visiting Lecturer
  • Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group
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Fély Catan

  • Assistant Professor of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures
  • Modern Laguages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group
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José Luis Flórez

  • Senior Lecturer and Assessment Specialist
  • Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group
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Paula Gutierrez

  • Senior Lecturer and Lower Division and Placement Coordinator
  • Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group
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Yuting Jia

  • Visiting Spanish Lecturer
  • Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures Field Group

Contact us

portrait of juanity aristizaba
Juanita Aristizábal
  • Professor of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures
  • Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures Field Group

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