47
ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY : EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic School Masters Program in Economics -New Economic School & Higher School of Economics Joint Bachelors Program in Economics Moscow, Russian Federation “4-4-3-6” INROADS!

ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY:EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES

Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience-New Economic School Masters Program in Economics-New Economic School & Higher School of Economics Joint Bachelors Program in EconomicsMoscow, Russian Federation

“4-4-3-6” INROADS!

Page 2: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

~ COURSE OVERVIEW ~

“4-4-3-6” INROADS!

Page 3: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

EST COURSE APPROACHPROBLEM-BASED LEARNING (PBL)

The course consisted of 4 three-week modules, each revolving around a “big problem” in science and technology:

WEEK 1: Introduce the module problem

WEEK 2: Solve the module problem

WEEK 3: Express the module problem

Page 4: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

1st LOA (wide scope, or inter-field)Problems drawn from three different fields:A science problem, a literature problem, a history problem

2nd LOA (intermediate scope, or intra-field)Problems drawn from three disciplines within a single field:Field = science: An engineering problem, a biology problem, a physics problem

3rd LOA (narrow scope, or intra-disciplinary)Problems drawn from three subject areas within a single discipline:Discipline = engineering: An aerospace engineering problem, a biomedical engineering problem, a civil engineering problem

4th LOA (narrower scope, or within-subject area)Problems drawn from a single subject area:Subject area = civil engineering: A structural engineering problem, a transportation engineering problem, an environmental engineering problem

CHOOSING PROBLEMS: AT WHAT LEVEL OF ANALYSIS?

Page 5: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

BALANCING UNDERGRADUATESTUDENT NEEDS AT NES-HSE!

Need for English assistance in EMI

economics courses

Need to think outside the

“economics box”

Happy Compromise:

Provocative issues outside the discipline of economics

yet within the domain of science!

Page 6: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

FOR NES-HSE UNDERGRADUATES: “BIG PROBLEMS” CHOSEN AT THE 2ND LOA …

Module 1: Threat of asteroid impact

Module 2: Oceanic garbage mega-patches

Module 3: Loss of planetary biodiversity

Module 4: Bid-winning team choice!X

Page 7: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

S = Situation: Who? What? When? Where? (Objectively describe or report dilemma)

P = Problem(s): What’s wrong/the matter?(Identify & prioritize problems: 1°,

2°, etc. )

R = Response: Reaction to problem(s).(How do we go about solving the

problems? What specific actions should be taken? What form should intervention take?)

E = Evaluation: Overall critical assessment.(Will our response be effective?

What are its pros/cons, costs/benefits? What should be applied/eliminated/modified going

forward?)

PBL PROPELLED BY A 4-PART CRITICAL THINKING FRAMEWORK (CTF): SPRE …

Page 8: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

AN ALTERNATIVE CTF

~ CIFA Critical Thinking Framework~C = Contemplate: Consider the dilemma!

(Listen, read, watch, discuss, debate, role play,reflect, empathize - from multiple perspectives.)

I = Investigate: Look into and analyze the dilemma!(Research; credible and reliable examples,reasoning, statistical evidence, etc…)

F = Formulate: Seek a solution to the dilemma!(With classmates, hatch an “action plan”,brainstorm a solution, etc…)

A = Activate: Put your plan into action!(Fundraising; surveys; volunteer at school, soup kitchen, orphanage, nursing home, clinic; assist thehomeless; HSE/NES food bank; consciousness-raising; tree planting, micro-lending, etc…)

CIFA

!

The 8 Millennium Development Goals!

Page 9: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

OR CREATE YOUR OWN CTF!

(CTF Stage 1) __________________________

(CTF Stage 2) __________________________

(CTF Stage 3) __________________________

(CTF Stage 4) __________________________

Page 10: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

…EXPRESSED IN 3 MODALITIES…

Verbal

Graphic

Visuospatial

Page 11: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

… ALL AIMED AT SATISFYING THE 6 300-LEVEL DEPARTMENTAL LEARNING OUTCOMES!

Speaking 

Continue developing the ability to give well-planned, organized, informative, and engaging academic presentations. Achieve high proficiency at engaging in live discussions and debates across a wide range of subjects. Master various registers and pragmatics.

  Writing 

Produce clear and detailed academic text in all basic rhetorical modes, develop genre awareness and begin to write in different genres (reviews, long form essays, research papers, etc.), begin to exercise creativity in writing, continue to improve in all aspects of the writing process such as prewriting, planning, drafting, revising, peer review, demonstrate mastery of language mechanics and the ability to self-correct and proofread independently, master proper citation methods and standard styles; understand the gravity and definition of plagiarism.

Listening 

Comprehend ~90% of the content and meaning of an academic lecture, with the ability to summarize main ideas and record significant details. Expand the range of comprehension to include various media and genres.

 

Reading 

Further develop a comprehensive, detailed, understanding of academic texts and research papers within and across disciplines, cultivate close reading skills and the ability to perceive subtlety in texts, exhibit awareness of a wide range of genres and the ability to approach common genres appropriately, accurately evaluate sources for credibility, relevance, and timeliness, increase pace and volume of reading without sacrificing comprehension, increased independence from dictionaries and ability to decipher words in context, improved ability to recognize cultural references.

Grammar 

Mastery of basic through advanced grammatical structures. Declarative linguistic knowledge should be functional and productive.Awareness of different grammatical patterns in different genres.

 Pragmatics

Increased exposure to a wide range of cultural customs, beliefs and traditions and greater sensitivity to cultural differences, develop greater familiarity with fundamental Anglophone cultures and cultural artifacts, broad historical knowledge about Anglophone cultures.

Page 12: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

1 – 2 – 3 SPRE !

My EST course “guinea pigs”

Page 13: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

~ COURSE DETAILS ~

MODULE 1 (WEEKS 1-3):THREAT OF ASTEROID IMPACT

Page 14: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1: WEEK 1

Introduce the module problem!

Page 15: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1 1ST WEEK

A. Introduce module problem• Podcasts & video segments (TED, NPR, PBS,

YouTube)

• Academic lectures (publically available seminars, guest lectures, etc.)

Page 17: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1 1ST WEEK

B. Listening ComprehensionNOTE: For all exercises, language is extracted from the audio-visual segments that introduced the module problem.

• Comprehension:

(Cloze exercises; gist/details; shifts in topic, voice, mood, & opinion, etc.)

• Vocabulary:

(Scientific jargon; synonyms/antonyms; collocations; roots, prefixes, suffixes/word

families; word associations, etc.)

Page 18: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

TEDx TALKS: How to Defend the World from Asteroids, by Dr. Phil Plait:

CLOZE EXERCISES

(1) Fill in the following blanks with the numbers you hear.

0:12 I want to talk to you about something kind of big. We'll start here. __________ million years

ago the dinosaurs had a bad day. (Laughter) A chunk of rock ___________ miles across, moving

something like __________ times the speed of a rifle bullet, slammed into the Earth. It released its

energy all at once, and it was an explosion that was mind-numbing. If you took every nuclear

weapon ever built at the height of the Cold War, lumped them together and blew them up at the

same time, that would be __________ __________ __________ of the energy released at that

moment. The dinosaurs had a really bad day. Okay?

(2) Fill in the following blanks with the places you hear.

1:03 Now, a six-mile-wide rock is very large. We all live here in __________. If you look out your

window and you can see __________ Peak, you're probably familiar with it. Now, scoop up

__________ Peak, and put it out in space. Take __________, Mt. __________. Lump that in there,

and put that in space as well, and Mt. __________, and __________, and the Indian peaks. Then

you're starting to get an idea of how much rock we're talking about, okay? We know it was that big

because of the impact it had and the crater it left. It hit in what we now know as __________, the

Gulf of __________. You can see here, there's the __________ Peninsula, if you recognize

__________ off the east coast there.

(3) Now try both numbers and places.

1:41 Here is how big of a crater was left. It was huge. To give you a sense of the scale, okay, there

you go. The scale here is __________ miles on top, __________ kilometers on the bottom. This

thing was __________ kilometers across -- __________ miles -- an enormous crater that excavated

out vast amounts of earth that splashed around the globe and set fires all over the planet, threw up

enough dust to block out the __________. It wiped out __________ percent of all species on

__________. Now, not all asteroids are that big. Some of them are smaller. Here is one that came

in over the __________ __________ in October of __________. It came in on a Friday night. Why

is that important? Because back then, video cameras were just starting to become popular, and

people would bring them, parents would bring them, to their kids' __________ __________ to film

their kids play football. And since this came in on a Friday, they were able to get this great footage of

this thing breaking up as it came in over West __________, __________, Pennsylvania and New

__________ until it did that to a car in New ___________. (Laughter)

Page 19: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Module 1: Threat of Asteroid Impact

~ Word Families: Linking Parts of Texts ~

(1) Find two words from the same family in each extract.

The Tunguska Cosmic Body (TCB) exploded several kilometers above the earth’s surface. The 10-15 megaton explosion set the forest below ablaze and flattened trees for hundreds of square kilometers.

At first, many assumed the TCB to be a comet. This assumption, however, appears to be false in light of significant evidence indicating it was an asteroid.

(2) Complete the table by changing the verbs into nouns belonging to the same family.

verb noun(s) verb noun(s)

establish

estimate

vary

indicate

explode

explosion

interpret

assess

process

distribute

prioritize

priority, prioritization

define

occur

investigate

assume

(3) Choose three verb-noun families from the above table and write one sentence with the verb form and another with the noun form. Example: explode/explosion:

Verb form: The TCB exploded to bits about 7 kilometers above the earth, igniting the forest below and sending shock waves throughout the region.

Noun form: The explosion, estimated at 10-15 megatons, blew out windows and doors and knocked several people unconscious.

Page 20: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1: WEEK 2

Solve the module problem!

Page 21: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1 2ND WEEK

A. Prepare for “Expert” Panel Discussion (PD)

Speak-to-write philosophy (a prewriting as well as listening and speaking exercise)…

• Teacher explains task and establishes 4-member teams (might need to improvise).

• Each team member assigned a SPRE (situation, problem, response, evaluation) role for PD.

• In teams, students help each other prepare for PD, scheduled to take place the following week.

• Teacher monitors discussions for participation (rubrics) and errors (exercises); assists teams upon request.

Page 22: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

~ Module 1: Asteroid Impact ~

Speaking Assessment: Expert Panel Discussions!

IMMINENT THREAT: An asteroid approximately 1.02 kilometers in diameter is hurtling

toward Earth at speed of 40 km per second. Ground-zero is estimated within 100 kilometers

of the Siberian city of Novosibirsk, Russian Federation; estimated time of impact is 15 days - 2

hours - 31 seconds - 17 milliseconds and counting!

TASK 1: As a leading team of astrophysicists and aeronautical engineers at the IPPA

(International Planetary Protection Agency), your job is to avert cataclysmic disaster by

clearly and concisely articulating an ironclad solution consisting of 4 parts: Situation,

Problem(s), Response, and Evaluation. You will present your solution as “experts” in a series

of “asteroid panel discussions” scheduled to take place in class next week.

TASK 2: Reach consensus with teammates as to panel discussion roles by filling out the chart,

below. I will collect one from each team by the end of class today.

Expert Panel Members Problem-Solving Roles

(1) SITUATION (2) PROBLEM (3) RESPONSE (4) EVALUATION

Page 23: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

S P R E !

(1) Situation (2) probl em

(3) Response (4) Eval uation

Page 24: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

EXPRESSION IN 3 MODALITIES: SPRE FRAMEWORK

STUDENT 1SITUATION:Verbal, graphic & visuospatial objective description of asteroid impact

STUDENT 2PROBLEM:Verbal, graphic & visuospatial problem statement of asteroid impact based on S

STUDENT 3RESPONSE:Verbal, graphic & visuospatial action plan in response to asteroid impact based on S & P

STUDENT 4EVALUATION:Verbal, graphic & visuospatial critique of S, P, & R; pros/cons, costs/benefits of asteroid impact

NOTES: 1. Presentations will typically take the form of expert panel discussions or team debates.

2. Written claims & figures will be documented & formatted according to scientific convention(s).

Page 25: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Module 1 Module 2 Module 3 Module 4

Student 1 Situation Problem Response Evaluation

Student 2 Evaluation Situation Problem Response

Student 3 Response Evaluation Situation Problem

Student 4 Problem Response Evaluation Situation

SPRE ROTATION

X

Page 26: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1 2ND WEEK

B. Special Focus: Science Trade Journals• Close reading:

(annotation of journal article sections forcontent, scientific discourse patterns and grammar, transitional devices)

• Comprehension and proper formatting of figures: (e.g., graphs, tables, charts, models, etc.)

• Genre-appropriate documentation:(citation, references, figures, footnotes, etc.)

Page 27: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

• “Text-busting”!

• Scientific structures & discourse patterns!

• Genre-appropriate documentation & formatting!

Page 28: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

~ 1908 Siberian Impact ~

Report 1: The Russians collected a number of accounts [of the Tunguska Event] from eyewitnesses at the Vanavara trading station, which was probably the closest permanent habitation. These included: "I was sitting on the porch of the house at the trading station, looking north. Suddenly in the north...the sky was split in two, and high above the forest the whole northern part of the sky appeared covered with fire. I felt a great heat, as if my shirt had caught fire... At that moment there was a bang in the sky, and a mighty crash... I was thrown twenty feet from the porch and lost consciousness for a moment.... The crash was followed by a noise like stones falling from the sky, or guns firing. The earth trembled.... At the moment when the sky opened, a hot wind, as if from a cannon, blew past the huts from the north. It damaged the onion plants. Later, we found that many panes in the windows had been blown out and the iron hasp in the barn door had been broken." [William K. Hartmann, 1908 Siberia Explosion: Reconstructing an Asteroid Impact from Eyewitness Accounts]

Report 2: The height of the explosion is closely related to the value of the energy emitted, usually estimated to be equal to about 10–15 MT* (Hunt 1960; Ben-Menahem 1975), although some authors consider the energy value to be higher, up to 30–50 MT (Pasechnik 1971, 1976, 1986). In agreement with the first energy range, which seems to have more solid grounds, the height of the TCB** explosion was found equal to 6–14 km. A height of 10.5 ± 3.5 km was obtained by Fast (1963) from data on forest devastation. Using more complete data on forest devastation, Bronshten and Boyarkina (1975) subsequently obtained a height equal to 7.5 ± 2.5 km. From seismic data, Ben-Menahem deduced an explosion height of 8.5 km. Data on the forest devastation examined, taking into account the wind velocity gradient during the TCB flight (Korotkov and Kozin, 2000), gave an explosion height in the range 6–10 km. [Longo, Giuseppe (2007). "18: The Tunguska event". In Bobrowsky, Peter T.; Rickman, Hans. Comet/Asteroid Impacts and Human Society, An Interdisciplinary Approach. Berlin Heidelberg New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 303–330] *MT = megatons; **TCB = Tunguska Cosmic Body

Page 29: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

PURPOSE(S) CONTEXT(S)

REPORT 1

REPORT 2

COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING MATRIX. THEN COMPARE IT WITH A PARTNER OR TWO.

Page 30: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

UNIQUEGRAMMATICAL FEATURES

REPORT 1

REPORT 2

NOW TRY YOUR HAND AT THIS MATRIX. HOW IS EACH REPORT UNIQUE IN TERMS OF

GRAMMATICAL STRUCTURE?

Page 31: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Module 3: Loss of Planetary Biodiversity 10 SEPTEMBER 2004 VOL 305 SCIENCE

Figure-Caption Matching Exercise With a partner or two, closely examine the three figures, below, with the goal of matching each of them with the correct figure caption. To assist you in making sense of the figures, please refer to the JA authors’ description of the Nomographic Model of Affiliate Extinctions.

Figure _____

Module 3: Loss of Planetary Biodiversity 10 SEPTEMBER 2004 VOL 305 SCIENCE

Figure _____

Figure _____

Page 32: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Fig. 1. Proportion of affiliate species expected to go extinct through coextinction for a given proportion of host extinction in eight affiliate-host systems: pollinating Agaonidae Ficus wasps– Ficus, primate Pneumocystis fungi–primates, primate nematodes–primates, primate lice–primates, seabird lice–seabirds, bird mites– birds, butterflies– host plants, and Lycaenidae ant butterflies–ants. Coextinction curves were estimated with a rigorous probabilistic model. Briefly, we used an explicit combinatorial model (20) as implemented in EstimateS 7 (21) to estimate, for each data set, the number of affiliate species expected to survive, given a decreasing number of surviving host species. The estimated number of affiliate extinctions for a given number of host extinctions was then computed by subtracting the number of surviving species from the respective total number of species. See (10) for details.

Fig. 2. Nomographic model expressing affiliate extinction probability as a function of host extinction probability and mean host specificity for 20 affiliate-host systems of varying mean host specificities: pollinating Agaonidae Ficus wasps–Ficus, primate Pneumocystis fungi–primates, primate nematodes–primates, primate lice–primates, seabird lice–seabirds, bird mites (including Avenzoariidae, Alloptidae, Analgidae, Proctophyllodidae, Pterolichidae, Pteronyssidae, Ptiloxenidae, Syringobiidae, and Xolalgidae)– birds, butterflies (including Papilionidae, Nymphalidae, Pieridae, Lycaenidae, and Hesperiidae)– host plants, and Lycaenidae ant butterflies–ants. See (10) for method. The affiliate extinction levels predicted by the nomographic model were highly concordant (concordant correlations Rc _ 0.99) with those predicted from the probabilistic model (10). Symbols and lines represent predicted affiliate extinction levels from the probabilistic and nomographic models, respectively. Fig. 3. Predictions of affiliate extinctions from the nomographic and combinatorial models. (A) Estimated numbers of historically extinct affiliate species based on the number of host species recorded as extinct. (B) Projected numbers of affiliate species extinctions, were all currently endangered hosts to go extinct. The first value in parentheses represents the absolute number and the second value the percentage of species extinct or endangered as predicted by the nomographic model; the second set of values in parentheses represents predictions from the combinatorial model for selected affiliate-host groups for which affiliation matrices are available. See (10) for details.

Page 33: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1: WEEK 3

Express the module problem!

Page 34: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1 3RD WEEK

A. Panel discussions or debates happen!

(1) Teacher role:

• Assesses each speaker separately according to speaking rubric

(2) Audience roles:

• Note-taking toward oral/written summary, Q&A period (possible graded assignments)

• Timer, moderator

• Judges (content/arguments – class vote)

Page 35: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

SPRE EXPERT PANEL DISCUSSION (PD) SCHEME

Team 1 Team 2

Team 3 Team 4

S

S S

S

PD 1: SITUATION PD 2: PROBLEM

PD 3: RESPONSE PD 4: EVALUATION

P

P P

P

R

R

R

R

E

E

E

E

Page 36: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

OARC TEAM DEBATE (TD) SCHEME

(Key: O=opener, A=attacker, R=rebutter, and C=closer.)

Team 1 Team 2

Team 3 Team 4

O

O O

O

TD #1: PRO/FOR TD #1: CON/AGAINST

TD #2: PRO/FOR TD #2: CON/AGAINST

A

A A

A

R

R

R

R

C

C

C

C

VS.

VS.

Page 37: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Your team’s claim:

Key point: Key point:

Key point:

Key point:

Key point:

Key point:

Set forth your debate team’s claim/thesis (center circle) and brainstorm key points you could make in support of it (rectangles). Also, think of ways you can convincingly support each key point.

SIDE 1

Page 38: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Your opponent’s claim:

Key point: Key point:

Key point:

Key point:

Key point:

Key point:

Now set forth your opponent’s claim/thesis (center circle) and try to anticipate the key points they’ll make in support of it (rectangles). What winning strategy(s) can you develop – both offensive and defensive?!

SIDE 2

Page 39: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE 1 3RD WEEK

B. SPRE writing assignment (can begin in class)

The following should be handed out and reviewed with students well in advance of the assignment due date:

(1) Different assignment for each SPRE component clearly specifying the task, due date, criteria, formatting, documentation

(2) Different rubric for each SPRE component (informing students of expectations!)

Page 40: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

~ English for Science and Technology (English 371) ~

“Problem” Writing Assignment: Problem Statement

Writing goal. The purpose of this paper is to state your team’s understanding of the Module Problem (MP) as clearly and as succinctly as possible. In the very least, this will entail (1) identifying the root, or core, problem, (2) delineating sub- and/or “downstream” problems, and (3) prioritizing core and sub-problems terms of relative severity, or the “magnitude of threat” each poses. Critically, your problem statement should also imply a “causal chain of events”, whereby the inability to effectively deal with one problem could result in “cascading”, or a catastrophic “domino effect”. Do NOT, in this paper, map out the sequence with which core and sub- problems should be solved/tackled as that is the sole responsibility of your Response (action plan) teammate.

Writing criteria. Taking into account the module video(s), Linked chapters, class exercises, SPRE team analysis and problem-solving strategy, panel discussions (PDs), and journal article (JA) analyses you’ve experienced to date, you must:

Write an introductory paragraph containing a (1) clever hook to capture the reader’s attention, (2) brief overview of the MP your team has attempted to solve, and (3) a “good” thesis, one containing both your topic (SPRE role/purpose = to clearly and succinctly state the MP) and controlling ideas (a listing of the core and sub- problems mentioned in “Writing goal”, above).

Develop each problem (limit =4) in separate body paragraphs. All four body paragraphs should be properly structured (i.e., contain a topic sentence, support for the topic sentence, and a concluding statement) and conform to the “rules” of unity and coherence.

Support each problem you state by way of clear examples, sound reasoning, and/or and credible evidence. Not mandatory, but you may include a figure or two.

Write a concluding paragraph, where you (1) restate (paraphrase more directly/forcefully) your thesis, and (2) leave the reader with a thought provoking “concluding remark”, for example, a question, a prediction, a warning, a call to action, etc.

Submission due date. One electronic copy (email attachment, MS Word) of your paper is due by the beginning of class on Thursday, October 23rd.

Format. Carefully adhere to the following specifications. Your paper must:

Bear, in the upper left corner of the 1st page, your full name and paper due date (line 1), and the writing assignment (line 2).

Be written in prose: Carefully crafted, complete sentences; clear, well-organized discourse; attention to both substance and style.

Be 2 or 3 pages in length (no more, no less). Be double-spaced. Be typed in MS Word with black, size “12”, Times New Roman font. Include 2 or 3 in-text citations with “notes” according to Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) convention; see

“my.nes” for CMS guidelines and examples.

Page 41: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

Brainstorm by “free writing” Simply jot down in the space below anything about your subject (thesis topic and controlling ideas) that comes to mind. The idea is to keep writing without stopping. It doesn’t matter if you drift off topic – just continue writing without being critical of yourself. Don’t worry at all about grammar and spelling. Just write! Brainstorm with a “cluster diagram” Write your thesis topic in the center circle and its controlling ideas (CI) in the surrounding circles. Also feel free to brainstorm supporting details for each of the controlling ideas.

CI #2:

CI #1:

CI #3:

My Thesis Topic:

Page 42: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

PROBLEM: PROBLEM STATEMENT ~ Introductory Paragraph ~

CRITERIA: Write an introductory paragraph containing a (1) clever hook to capture the reader’s attention, (2) brief overview of the MP your team has attempted to solve, and (3) a “good” thesis, one containing both your topic (SPRE role/purpose = to clearly and succinctly state the MP) and controlling ideas (a listing of core and sub-problems).

STEP 1: Come up with a clever hook, one that captures your readers’ attention. ______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

STEP 2: Provide your readers with a brief overview of the Module Problem (MP).

MP: __________________________________________________________________________

Briefly describe the MP to your readership. Provide just enough background information (context) so that they can understand it – but make sure not to overdo it!

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

Page 43: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

STEP 3: Set forth your thesis.

A thesis is a statement that indicates the main point of an essay or argument. It consists of two parts: a topic and controlling ideas for that topic. With reference to your panel discussion recording sheet and your team’s collective memory, please develop your thesis in the spaces provided below.

OPTION: You may want to first brainstorm your thesis by “free writing” about it and/or mapping it out on a “cluster diagram” (see below).

(1) thesis topic: _____________________________________________________________

(2) thesis controlling ideas (4, one core problem & three sub-problems):

a. (core) _________________________________________________________________

b. (sub-) _________________________________________________________________

c. (sub-) _________________________________________________________________

d. (sub-) _________________________________________________________________

NOTE: Each controlling idea will be supported in its own “body paragraph” & be expressed in a “topic sentence”).

(3) State your thesis by combining “1” and “2”, above, into a coherent sentence or two. The sentence(s) should be complete and concise. Use signal words and sentence transitions where needed.

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________________

Page 44: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

~ Problem Writing Rubric: Problem Statement ~

STUDENT: ___________________________________________ ___________ /28 = ___________________

SPRE! 4

Excellent 3

Good 2

Satisfactory 1

Needs Work 0

Not Submitted Problem Identification (core & sub-problems? prior-itize: magnitude/severity?)

Causal Reasoning (problems causally linked? cascading/domino threat?)

Written Fluency (clarity? word choice? style? cadence? transitions?)

Introductory Paragraph (hook? essential background? thesis with topic and claims?)

Body Paragraphs (topic sent.? point-by-point? support? unity & coherence?)

Concluding Paragraph (thesis restated? provocative concluding remark?)

Mechanics & CMS Doc. (sentence structure? punc.? spelling? citation & notes?)

Page 45: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

MODULE “X”:BID-WINNING TEAM CHOICE!SPEAKING BIOTERRORISM THREAT

Module 4: Bioterrorism threat

Speaking Assessment: Expert Panel Discussions!

TERRORIST ATTACK: Epidemic of a recently discovered virus ESH8 has already caused many deaths in Equatorial Africa. The first deaths were registered in September, and, mainly due to lack of funding, scientists haven't found any vaccine yet. ESH8 is an airborne virus (i.e. it can be transmitted through the air), so the speed of spread is extremely high.

Our intelligence agency reported that the spread of ESH8 is a deliberate attack of a group of terrorists and their next target is Moscow! The infection predicted day is December, 2 and the source of infection is unknown. MISSION: As a leading team of security agents, doctors, epidemiologists and biologists, your job is to clearly and concisely articulate an ironclad solution to the bioterrorism treat problem consisting of 4 parts: Situation, Problem(s), Response, and Evaluation. You will present your solution as “experts” in a series of “bioterrorism panel discussions” scheduled to take place in class next week.

FOREWARNED IS FOREARMED!

1.534 10.384103.568

512.894

AUG SEPT OCT NOV

DEATHS IN AFRICA

Page 46: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

TEAM CAPSTONE PROJECT (COURSE SYNTHESIS)

CAUSAL WEB:

THE CHALLENGE IS FOR TEAMS OF STUDENTS TO DEMONSTRATE HOW MODULE PROBLEMS 1-4 ARE

INTERRELATED; THAT IS TO SAY, “INEXTRICABLY ENTWINED” - ILLUSTRATING HOW PRECARIOUSLY OUR PLANET HANGS IN THE

BALANCE!

X

Page 47: ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE &TECHNOLOGY: EASING THE TRANSITION TO EMI SCIENCES COURSES Sharon Hannigan, M.A.T. TESOL / Ph.D. Behavioral Neuroscience -New Economic

SPRE

!