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ESP Teaching and Research . Dr. Ken Lau Assistant Professor, Centre for Applied English Studies The University of Hong Kong. Course schedule. Acknowledgements. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Dr. Ken LauAssistant Professor, Centre for Applied English StudiesThe University of Hong Kong
ESP TEACHING AND RESEARCH
Time Activities
9:00-9:10 Opening Remarks9:10-10:30 ESP Teaching and Research I: Arts and Humanities
10:30-10:40 Tea Break10:40-12:10 ESP Teaching and Research II: Science and
Engineering12:10-1:20 Lunch
1:20-3:00 Corpus-Informed Teaching and Research I3:00-3:10 Tea Break
3:10-4:40 Corpus-Informed Teaching and Research II
COURSE SCHEDULE
Thanks to colleagues of the Centre for Applied English Studies who have generously shared their course materials for illustration purposes.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
English for Specific Purposes (ESP) has been defined by a number of researchers. One of the most oft-cited definitions is from Hutchison and Waters (1987) who see ESP as an approach rather than a product, meaning that ESP does not imply a particular kind of language, teaching material or methodology. The central idea in their definition lies in the construct of need . “Need is defined by the reasons for which the student is learning English, which will vary from study purposes such as following a postgraduate course in an English-speaking country to work purposes such as participating in business meetings or taking hotel bookings” (Dudley-Evans & St John, 1998, p.3).
A DEFINITION
CLASSIFICATION OF ESP
Faculty Course Nature of the course: EAP/EOP
Architecture Communication Course for Architecture Students
EAP
Arts Academic English for Arts Students EAPBusiness & Economics
English for Academic Communication for Economics and Finance Students
EAP
Dentistry English for Dental Students ?Education Academic English for Education Students EAPEngineering Professional and Technical Written/Oral
Communication for EngineersEAP
Law Writing Solutions to Legal Problems EAPMedicine English for Clinical Clerkship EOP/EAPScience Academic English for Science Students EAPSocial Sciences
Professional Writing Skills for Social Work EOP
THE CASE OF CAES
Needs cover a wide range of issues such as learner’s goals, backgrounds, proficiency, reasons for taking the course, the situations where they need the communication knowledge and skills, etc.
Present Situation Analysis (PSA)
Learning Situation Analysis (LSA)
Target Situation Analysis (TSA)
NEEDS ANALYSIS
PSA refers to information about learners’ current abilities, familiarity with the written and spoken genres, their skills and perceptions; what they are able to do and what they want at the beginning of the course. Data can therefore be both objective (age, proficiency, prior learning experiences) and subjective (self-perceived needs, strengths and weaknesses).
I have difficulty selecting appropriate word choices when writing a feasibility report.
PRESENT SITUATION ANALYSIS (PSA)
LSA is concerned with the learners, teachers and teaching and learning contexts. It includes subjective, self-perceived, process-oriented needs.
I am more comfortable working on my own than in groups.
LEARNING SITUATION ANALYSIS (LSA)
TSA concerns the learner’s future roles and the linguistic skills and knowledge required to perform competently in a target context. This involves mainly objective and product-oriented data: identifying the contexts of language use, observing the language events in these contexts, listing the genres employed, collecting and analyzing target genres.
I have to draft an assessment report after seeing a client.
To collect needs data, teachers can draw on a range of different sources and techniques such as interviews, questionnaire surveys, observations.
TARGET SITUATION ANALYSIS (TSA)
Imagine you are asked by your department head to create an ESP course for social workers entitled “Professional Writing Skills for Social Work”. What kind of (1) writing and (2) language needs do you plan to cover in the course?
DISCUSSION
COURSE DESIGN
How are the topics structured?
SAMPLE MATERIALS – SOCIAL WORK
SAMPLE MATERIALS – SOCIAL WORK
The following are some of the salient language
features in social work:
Description of behaviours and emotions
Using non-judgmental language
Using reported speech
LANGUAGE MATERIALS – SOCIAL WORK
DESCRIPTION OF BEHAVIOURS AND EMOTIONS
DESCRIPTION OF BEHAVIOURS AND EMOTIONS
USING NON-JUDGMENTAL LANGUAGE
USING NON-JUDGMENTAL LANGUAGE
FUNCTIONAL GRAMMATICAL ANALYSIS
FUNCTIONAL GRAMMATICAL ANALYSIS
FUNCTIONAL GRAMMATICAL ANALYSIS
REPORTED SPEECH
This 3-credit English enhancement course offered in the 2nd semester aims to enable first-year LLB students and 2nd year joint-degree law students to adapt and develop their existing language, reasoning, and study skills, and to apply and articulate their knowledge of tort law, as they frame a written response to the kinds of legal problem solution assignment.
Only Negligence and Psychiatric Injury are dealt with in the course.
WRITING SOLUTIONS TO LEGAL PROBLEMS
TEACHING APPROACH
Assignment GenreLegal Problem
Legal content,
study skills, Legal
Practices
Reasoning
“moves”
Rhetorical structure
Other language features
Progression
Weeks 1/2
Weeks 2/3
Weeks 3/4
Disciplinary
One day, when walking home, William trips and falls, damaging his knee. Several days later, while driving to work, he sees Victor crossing the road and brakes to avoid running into him. Unfortunately, due to the pain in William’s knee, he cannot fully press his brake pedal and as a result he runs into Victor. The collision occurs at a fairly slow speed and a normal person would only have suffered bruising as a result, but Victor has brittle bones and suffers two broken legs and a number of broken ribs. He is taken to the local hospital where, due to an administrative mistake, his right arm is amputated.
Advise Victor.
AN EXAMPLE OF PQ
To identify the legal issues involved and to be addressed in the PQ
The collision occurs at a fairly slow speed and a normal person would only have suffered bruising as a result, but Victor has brittle bones and suffers two broken legs and a number of broken ribs.
Remoteness:
If the defendant is negligent, the plaintiff's right to recover damages is not limited by the fact that his injury resulted from aggravation of a preexisting condition. Where an injury arising from a cause which entails liability on the defendant combines with a pre-existing condition to bring about a greater harm to the plaintiff then would have resulted from the injury alone, the defendant may be found liable for all of the consequences. [Thin-skull rule]
FIRST STEP – CASE ANALYSIS
FIRST STEP – CASE ANALYSIS
Common Law Legal Reasoning Flow - IPCAC: Issue – Articulating the issue in terms of the parties and the facts
Principle – invoking a legal principle and/or ruleCase – relying on precedent cases and/or legislation
Application – applying precedent case and/or legislation to the facts of the present case
Conclusion – articulating the (recommended) decision, and grounds for reaching it
SECOND STEP – LEGAL REASONING MOVES
Legal Reasoning MovesAssuming that William is held to have caused the accident, Victor would next have to show that the injuries she suffered were not too remote a consequence of William’s actions. The usual rule that a D is only responsible for harm of a foreseeable type is modified to some extent by the `thin skull’ rule. The operative principle here was set out in Smith v Leech Brain. The court held that in cases where the harm inflicted was of a foreseeable type, the defendant will be liable for the full extent of the injury, even if the full extent was unforeseeable. Thus, the tortfeasor is said to `take his victim as he finds him.’ Applying this principle to the present case, the fact that Victor had brittle bones and suffered more seriously than normal people might otherwise have been, is irrelevant. William will thus be liable to compensate Victor for his broken legs and ribs.
IssuePrincipleCase Application
Conclusion
SECOND STEP – LEGAL REASONING MOVES
Issue NOT Arguable - Deductive Structure
THIRD STEP – RHETORICAL STRUCTURES
Analysis Mary was clearly prima facie in breach of her duty. The standard of care for Mary should be a reasonable customer’s behaviour in a supermarket (Glasgow Corp v Muir). Being in a hurry to get home does not suggest an emergency or any other grounds for holding Mary to a lower standard of care towards the supermarket.
Deductive structure is recommended – it is NOT arguable You don’t succeed point by point or issue by issue – you do that for the overall action
Issue Arguable – Inductive Structure
THIRD STEP – RHETORICAL STRUCTURES
Analysis / Points to Note
We need to determine whether or not Norah’s action of putting her basket down in Mary’s way breached her duty to Mary. The objective standard of care of a supermarket’s customer may indicate it was reasonable for Norah to put down her shopping basket in order to reach up for something like the jar of coffee (Glasgow Corp v Muir). However, Norah’s action of “suddenly” putting down the basket “in the way of” someone walking close to her suggests she fell below that standard (i.e. breached her duty).
Issue: Breach of Duty Principle CaseApplication
Conclusion
FOURTH STEP – LANGUAGE (CONDITIONAL SENTENCES)
This course aims to provide an intensive English environment within the Engineering syllabus which will engage students in problem solving activities that are representative of the engineering disciplines, give you the opportunity to communicate in English and build up their confidence in using the language.
PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL WRITTEN COMMUNICATION FOR ENGINEERS
The course involves a Design and Make Project for which students in groups have to create an Elastic-Powered Paper Vehicle (i.e. using recycled paper to make a car which is powered by one elastic band) with the given specifications. The production of the vehicle itself is not assessed but students are assessed on two things in relation to the project
Conduct a series of meeting and come up with minutes
Write a technical report with appropriate diagrams
PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL WRITTEN COMMUNICATION FOR ENGINEERS
The followings are the sections required in the technical report: Summary Introduction Materials and Specifications Engineering Principle Construction Procedures 1 and 2 Test Procedure Discussion of results Conclusion
PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL WRITTEN COMMUNICATION FOR ENGINEERS
SAMPLE MATERIALS - ENGINEERING
STUDENTS’ WORK - ENGINEERING
SAMPLE MATERIALS - ENGINEERING
SAMPLE MATERIALS - ENGINEERING
Students will write a popular science journal article for a web-journal targeting a non-specialist audience. Students will be challenged to engage in spontaneous speaking task in a small group setting while in class. Students will be provided with guidance in developing a self-access language learning (SALL) plan, carrying this out, and reflecting on their learning experience and learning strategies used.
Pre-requisite: Students taking this course have to pass the first-year course on academic writing so students will have already learnt how to write an essay with the use of reliable sources and proper acknowledgements.
ADVANCED ENGLISH FOR SCIENCE STUDENTS
An important feature of the course is the emphasis on learner autonomy and choices. A significant proportion of the time of the course requires students to undertake self-access language learning. Such a decision is based on the results of the needs analysis (see Gardner 2007):
With more than 400 students taking the same course, there is a very wide range of language abilities
The logistical/scheduling arrangements give rise to the learning situation that students of different majors under the same Faculty are mixed together in a class
According to the statistics gathered by the University in 2001, only around 40% of the science graduates took up science-related employments.
Gardner , D. (2007). Integrat ing se l f-access learning into an ESP course. In D . Gardner (ed. ) , Learner autonomy 10: Integrat ion and support (pp.8-32) . Dubl in : Authent ik .
SPECIAL FEATURES
In most of the sessions they are divided into two 1-hour slots. Half of the students will come for one hour for spontaneous speaking practice and the other half will be working on SALL. The arrangements will be swapped in the second hour. In total, students are required to take part in at least 8 hours of SALL by the end of the course.
Students have to identify several learning goals, formulate a study plan, look for independent learning resources and reflect on their learning experiences.
CLASS ARRANGEMENTS
The course introduces engineering students to professional and technical communication in the context of oral presentations. The course will provide an intensive English environment within the Engineering syllabus which will engage students in verbal communicative activities that are representative of the engineering disciplines. Students work in groups and individually, make decisions on gathering and reformulating data, and select the appropriate language and register to deliver professional presentations to a range of audience.
PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL ORAL COMMUNICATION FOR
ENGINEERS
• Compulsory for all first-year Engineering students (>400 students)
• 12 weeks, 24 contact hours• Three presentation assessments
(Diagnostic Pair, Group and Individual)• Out-of-class learning component
• Self-Access and Reflection (SAR) Record
PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL ORAL COMMUNICATION FOR
ENGINEERS
Two weaknesses identified by the teacher
Weakness identified by the student
Self Assessment and Reflection
Improvement shown in the next presentation
Evaluation of resources chosen and used, and the quality of reflection
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS