ENGLISH LANGUAGE 2
- Academic year
- 2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- LINGUA INGLESE 2
- Course code
- LT007P (AF:306934 AR:166362)
- Modality
- Blended (on campus and online classes)
- ECTS credits
- 12
- Subdivision
- Class 4
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- L-LIN/12
- Period
- 2nd Semester
- Course year
- 2
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
Competences:
Theoretical and applied competence of the English language as it is used in communicative contexts that include everyday as also academic and specialized situations. The course will have a particular focus on the English morphology, syntax, lexicon, and discourse organization.
Competence Applications:
Students will be able to understand, analyse and produce autonomously multimodal texts in English produced for specific communicative contexts. Students will also be able to identify the register and the discipline of the texts, analysing them from a diaphasic and diamesic perspective.
Independent Assessment:
Student will be able to analyse complex texts written in English.
Communicative Competences:
Students will be able (at a C1 level on the CEFR) to interact and discuss, appropriately, in English on the factors that determine textual and linguistic variation in specialized texts in English.
Learning Competences:
Students will be able to select appropriate bibliographical sources (printed and in digital form) to enhance their knowledge on the topics studied in the Professor’s module as well as their general linguistic competence. Students will, then, use what they have learned in the English Language 2 course to study in their English Language 3 course, the following year. Students will be able to self-assess their progress with respect to their metalinguistic and communicative competence in English.
Pre-requirements
Contents
Title of the theoretical module with the Professor: "Introduction to variation in ESP"
The theoretical module (with the Professor) will provide students with theoretical-methodological frameworks that will be used by the students to understand, analyse and produce texts in English that can be used in specialized and academic communicative contexts. Students will analyse, in particular, linguistic variation in authentic (multimodal) texts from the diastratic, diaphasic, and diamesic perspective. The texts to be analysed during the module's classes will be chosen to fit the different curricula of the students.
Referral texts
• Cesiri, Daniela. 2015. Variation in English across space and discourses. An introductory textbook. Roma: Carocci.
• Lecture material available in Moodle (http://moodle.unive.it/ ).
COURSEBOOKS FOR THE LANGUAGE PRACTICE CLASSES WITH THE CEL:
• John Soars, Liz Soars. Headway Advanced. Oxford University Press [class]
• Mark Foley, Diane Hall. MyGrammarLab C1/C2. Pearson [reference grammar, class]
• Paterson, Ken / Wedge, Roberta (2013). Oxford Grammar for EAP: English Grammar and Practice for Academic Purposes. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [OPTIONAL reference grammar]
Reference book for the specific terminology used in the Professor’s MODULE:
• Biber, Douglas, Conrad, Susan, Leech, Geoffrey (2002). Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English. Harlow: Longman
OPTIONAL suggested readings for the Professor’s module part:
• Barber, Charles. 2000. The English Language. A Historical Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Bauer, Laurie. 1983. English Word-Formation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Biber, Douglas / Conrad, Susan (2009). Register, Genre, and Style. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Crystal, David. 2003. English as a Global Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Crystal, David. 1996. The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of the English Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Gotti, Maurizio (2011). Investigating Specialized Discourse. New Edition. Bern: Peter Lang.
• Elmes, Simon. 2005. Talking for Britain. A Journey through the Nation’s Dialects. London: Penguin Books.
• Gregory, Michael & Caroll, Suzanne. 1978. Language and situation: Language varieties and their social contexts. London: Routledge.
• Hughes, Geoffrey. 2003. A History of English Words. Oxford: Blackwell.
• Hitchings, Henry. 2009. The Secret Life of Words: How English Became English. New York: Macmillan.
• Holm, John. 2000. An Introduction to Pidgins and Creoles. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Swales, John (2004). Research Genres. Explorations and Applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Assessment methods
THE FINAL EXAM WILL BE HELD ONLINE ONLY WHILE THE SANITARY EMERGENCY LASTS. THE STRUCTURE OF THE EXAM, ON THE OTHER HAND, WILL BE KEPT FOR THE WHOLE A. Y. 2019/2020.
For further information, please contact Prof Cesiri.
Teaching methods
1. Theoretical module (Prof Daniela Cesiri) - blended course; the module is only for students enrolled in the international politics curriculum (surnames A to L), in the lingistics curriculum (surnames A to Z) and as elective course;
2. Language practice (esercitazioni, ca. 240 hours in class) with the CEL, in small groups, to develop the C1 level (written and spoken language)
Traditional teaching methods will be integrated with the use of multimedia sources and by the students' active participation to activities in class introduced by the Professor to train students in how to individuate and analyse critically the linguistic features of a text from a diachronic as well as a synchronic perspective.
Teaching language
Further information
• The Professor’s module is a blended course held in English and starts in the second semester;
• Materials to be studied for the module’s part and the e-classes will be available in the Moodle Learning Environment (password protected);
• Language practice with the CEL starts in the first semester and will continue in the second semester.
Students who want to read more on specific topics related to the module’s part or who want to write their final dissertation (first- and second-level dissertation) can contact Prof Cesiri via email (daniela.cesiri@unive.it) or during her office hours.