ANGLO-AMERICAN LANGUAGE 2

Academic year
2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
LINGUA ANGLO-AMERICANA 2
Course code
LT006B (AF:322383 AR:173062)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
12
Subdivision
Class 1
Degree level
Bachelor's Degree Programme
Educational sector code
L-LIN/11
Period
2nd Semester
Course year
2
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
Anglo-American Language 2 (Language and Literature curriculum)

General description
Anglo-American Language 2 has a two-part structure, consisting in a module, taught by the Professor for a semester, and sessions of language practice taught by Language Teaching Assistants (CEL). The course offers the necessary metalinguistic competence and language proficiency to understand and use English in a variety of contexts, such as daily life, academic and specialist contexts (including complex literary texts and critical and theoretical essays).

Learning outcomes:

Upon successful completion of this course, students should :

1) Master theoretical and applied knowledge and comprehension of the English language as it is produced and used in Anglophone countries, whether as first or second language (L1, L2) or as a global means of communication or lingua franca (LS), in a variety of situations such as daily life and academic and specialist contexts with particular attention to morphology, syntax and the structure of discourse both from a diachronic and synchronic perspective;
2) Master comprehension, analysis and production of multimodal texts in English, within the appropriate context(s) and in the appropriate linguistic register;
3) Give reasons and explanations for opinions and judgments;
4) Know how to interpret and analyze complex texts in English;
5) Develop communicative skills, especially with regard to appropriate interaction in English when discussing those extra-linguistic historical-political, social and cultural factors that might be responsible for linguistic variation in texts, and demonstrate the ability to use communicative strategies equivalent to Level C1 of the CEFR.
6) Acquire the learning ability necessary to identify critical sources and digital resources to help expand on the ideas presented by the instructor’s module, as well as improve their language competence;
7) Build on the knowledge acquired in Anglo-American Language 2 to access profitably the next level course (Anglo-American Language 3), capitalizing on increased learner awareness and independent monitoring of learning success, with regard to both metalinguistic content mastery and individual language competence.
Requirements

Students must have passed Anglo-American Language 1. Level B2+ of the CEFR is required.

Detailed course description

Anglo-American Language 2 is structured as follows:
1. Theoretical module (Prof Mena Mitrano)
2. Language practice with Language Teaching Assistants (CEL) aimed at enabling students to master a level of written and oral production equivalent to Level C1 of the CEFR.


Module title: Anglo-American Language 2: Ways of Reading

The module is designed to familiarize students with the discipline of Composition in English. Students will read, discuss, analyze, and interpret texts by twentieth- and twenty-first century North American writers, critics, and thinkers. Students will learn to produce brief well-structured and focused essays using an appropriate lexicon. They will learn to respond a variety of readings, formulate a position and pursue their point of view in an informed and coherent manner in a brief critical paper. They will learn to debate their point of view with other readers, and to draw on academic sources to pursue a thesis and give voice to informed judgments in a prose that is as error-free as possible. Students will learn to detect and appreciate a variety of linguistic registers and sharpen their sensibility for the nuances of literary and critical language.
The main aim is to enable students to articulate and share their ideas. To this end, the module avails itself of one of the best textbooks ever. Ways of Reading assumes an active learner ready for an exciting intellectual experience. Students are encouraged to become active participants in the academic debate and are invited to write about ideas and issues that cannot be ignored in our time.

Language practices:
Further development of comprehension skills for oral and written texts
Development of speaking skills
- exercises leading towards C1 level on CEFR

Required texts:
(for attending and non-attending students):

• David Bartholomae, Anthony Petrosky, Stacey Waite, Ways of Reading: An Anthology for Writers, Twelfth Edition (Bedford/St Martins 2020).
• Gerald Graff, Cathy Birkenstein, They Say/I Say: The Moves that Matter in Academic Writing, Fourth Edition (New York, London: W.W. Norton & Company, Paperback June 2018)

Language practice with Language Teaching Assistants (CEL):
• Bartram, Mark; Pickering, Kate. NAVIGATE COURSEBOOK C1, OUP, 2017.
• Vince, Michael. LANGUAGE PRACTICE FOR ADVANCED. STUDENTS' BOOK. 4th edition. Macmillan.


Suggested dictionaries:

Picchi, Fernando. GRANDE DIZIONARIO INGLESE-ITALIANO E ITALIANO-INGLESE.
Oxford: OUP.

OXFORD ADVANCED LEARNER'S DICTIONARY. Oxford: OUP, with iWriter CD Rom

MACMILLAN ENGLISH DICTIONARY FOR ADVANCED LEARNERS WITH
CD-ROM: Oxford: Macmillan Education.

MERRIAM-WEBSTER'S COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY. Springfield: Merriam-Webster.
The final exam of Anglo-American Language 2 is a two-part exam: a written exam at the end of the theoretical module and a language exam.

The final exam for the module will consist in the production of a short critical essay.

In the language exam, students will have to demonstrate the ability to apply the theoretical knowledge acquired in the module and practiced during the sessions with the Language Teaching Assistants (CEL).

Teaching methodology:

Lecture
Interactive sessions
Peer-to-peer evaluation and editing

Students will be encouraged to produce drafts of critical responses to selected readings. The Professor will respond to the drafts; the grades for the drafts will not count toward the final grade.

Language of instruction: English


The course materials and debates will help students gain greater awareness of social inequality.
written

This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Poverty and inequalities" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development

Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 17/12/2019