For languages, it 1 x 1hr lecture + 3 x 1hr tutes. I guess the idea is to learn the grammar in the lecture, and practice applying it through tutes. The resources, the composition of the intermediate stream and the actual tute lessons sound a lot like the seminars Macquarie and UTS have, only we have one hour less at Sydney.
The lecture/tute format shouldnt have been too much of a problem, but the discrepancies between the two were more pronounced with the intermediate course (no pun intended). Do they cover grammar thoroughly in seminar-style teaching (ie. 1 hour on grammar and examples, then another hour of practice?) . In our tutes, grammar was taught somewhat ad-hoc, especially in the first few weeks when we were expected to plunge into script-writing, debates and whole article translations - to a large degree, grammar was meant to be learned indepedently (which I did too little of, and I suffered greatly since I hadn't done French since Year 10). I suppose this is the case with uni in general, but unlike with other subjects, it's hard to ad lib in language classes, and it was very intimidating when others were using conditional and future tenses while I was still getting over the difference between parfait and imparfait...
The problem last semester was that barely anyone from the intermediate stream attended the stupid lecture on Monday mornings last semester because revising basic negation and articles did not help in anyway, yet from the first week we were translating whole articles and using heaps of advanced grammar few, if not anybody had learned . Assessments were easier than the actual class work done, the lecturer even claimed that some assessments were easier than the beginners yet the intermediates still performed worse. This was of course testament to the problems of the intermediate French course (or the laziness of intermediate students...)
A lot of people also dropped down to lower streams, so people that had done Continuers were doing intermediate when they shouldve been doing advanced (and outperforming HSC beginners/Tafe/yr 10 french and technically native-speakers), and people who had previously done french were dropping down to beginners and topping their classes. Out of sheer pride and stubborness, I refused to drop down on the premise that the beginners course wouldn't have advanced my French skills as much - my GPA/WAM has suffered as a result. So to all the genuine beginners out there of any language at uni - beware of the imposters who make you feel like shit when you're finding it more difficult to grasp new grammar or vocab, when they've secretly done it all before (alternatively, you can befriend them/use them for personal gain, but you'll feel guilty as hell, like this one girl who dropped down to beginners because she didn't want to spend the whole semester 'using' a friend of ours for answers!)
Keep in mind that that a few factors are affecting my ability to provide an honest assessment of Sydney Uni French and what I say may not truly reflect it's supposed greatness , despite there being no final exam, the French Department have yet to post up Semester 1 results (like the rest of the Arts Faculty, they've yet to grasp the advances of technology), and I am expecting a bare pass at best (it was hard to get working once the semester got rolling, and I couldn't stop comparing my high school experience of learning French, which was oh so slow but so much more enjoyable).