ENGLISH LANGUAGE 2
- Academic year
- 2022/2023 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- LINGUA INGLESE 2
- Course code
- LT007P (AF:389682 AR:205304)
- Modality
- Blended (on campus and online classes)
- ECTS credits
- 12
- Subdivision
- Class 1
- 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
Knowledge and Understanding:
- Theoretical and applied knowledge of the English language. The course will have a particular focus on the English morphology, syntax, lexicon, and discourse organization.
- Applying Knowledge and Understanding:
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.
- Making Judgments:
Students will be able to analyse complex texts produced in English.
- Communication Skills:
Students will be able to appropriately interact and discuss the extra-linguistic factors (socio-cultural, historical and political) that induce linguistic variation and change in English. In so doing, students will demonstrate they have reached the C1 level of the CEFR.
- Learning Skills:
Students will be able to self-assess their progress with respect to their metalinguistic and communicative competence in English. Students will be able to select appropriate bibliographical (re)sources (printed and in digital form) to enhance their knowledge on the topics studied in the Professor’s module as well as their 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.
Pre-requirements
Contents
Title of the course: “An Introduction to ESP and EAP".
The Professor’s module provides students with the theoretical-methodological frameworks to be used to understand, analyse and produce texts in English in specialised and academic communicative contexts. In particular, students will observe and analyse the lexico-grammatical features and the organizational structure of authentic (multimodal) materials from the diaphasic and diamesic perspective.
The practice labs (esercitazioni) will hep students to develop their linguistic integrated skills at the C1 level to be used, particularly, in specialised and academic contexts.
NB: Students who choose English Language 2 as elective course (‘corso singolo’) are informed that the course does not prepare for a language certification. The course indeed contributes to the achievement of the overall LCSL degree programme goals. Students interested in merely obtaining a language certification are strongly advised to contact the University Language Center (Centro Linguistico di Ateneo, CLA).
Referral texts
• Cesiri, Daniela. 2015. Variation in English across space and discourse. An introductory textbook. Roma: Carocci. [Chapters ONE and FOUR]
• Lecture/course material available in Moodle (http://moodle.unive.it/ ): password-protected, please contact Prof Cesiri.
• Dictionary: any "Advenced Learner's Dictionary" (the latest edition, by any publisher, e.g., (in order of preference) Collins Cobuild, Oxford, Macmillan, Longman - SUGGESTED dictionary for EAP: Oxford Learner’s Dictionary of Academic English.
Optional suggested reading list:
- Biber, Douglas / Conrad, Susan (2009). Register, Genre, and Style. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Garzone, Giuliana (2006). Perspectives on ESP and Popularization. Milano: CUEM.
- Gotti, Maurizio (2011). Investigating Specialized Discourse. New Edition. Bern: Peter Lang.
- Swales, John (1990). Genre Analysis. English in Academic and Research Settings. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Swales, John (2004). Research Genres. Explorations and Applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Optional suggested list of grammar books for EAP/ESP:
- Biber, Douglas, Conrad, Susan, Leech, Geoffrey (2002). Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English. Harlow: Longman.
- Carter, Ronald and McCarthy, Michael (2006). Cambridge Grammar of English. A Comprehensive Guide. Spoken and Written English Grammar and Usage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Swan, Michael (2016). Practical English Usage. Fully Revised | Fourth Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
PRACTICE LABS WITH THE CEL (ATTENDEES AND NON-ATTENDEES):
- Christina Latham-Koenig, Clive Oxenden and Kate Chomacki. English File ADVANCED PLUS Fourth Edition. Oxford University Press
- Mark Foley, Diane Hall. MyGrammarLab C1/C2. Pearson
Assessment methods
The written exam, which lasts 90 minutes, consists in a structured test (including direct questions and the production of a written academic text typical of the genre of discursive essays). The exam assesses the student’s competence in the contents of the Professor’s module. Students are allowed to use a monolingual English dictionary.
The oral exam with the Professor assesses the student’s metalinguistic competence in presenting, and discussing about, the contents of the module, using the appropriate terminology. To take the oral exam, students need to have successfully passed the written exam (the written and the oral exam have to be completed in the same appello).
The portfolio assesses the student’s integrated skills at the C1 level (see Learning Outcomes in this syllabus). The portfolio includes the following tasks: two gap-filling tests (Grammar and Lexicon in Context, GLiC), a register transformation task, production of a written report based on given data, a brief interview (this does not replace the actual oral exam with the Professor). The portfolio can be submitted in two different ways: (1) during the academic year, or (2) before each exam session (three slots, one for each session). In both cases, students have to meet specific deadlines, given at the beginning of the first term. The portfolio has also to be submitted before sitting the written exam with the Professor. The portfolio can be submitted only through Moodle; the assessment contributes (in due proportion) to the final mark. The mark will be kept for two academic years. The deadlines, instructions for submission, and further information on the portfolio are available, as of September, on the Professor’s Moodle page dedicated to the course. Students cannot submit their portfolio with different deadlines or procedure from those detailed in Moodle.
For further information, please contact ONLY PROF CESIRI (daniela.cesiri@unive.it).
NB: in September, the Professor organises an online informative meeting with interested students. The event informs students about the organisation of the course and the final exam. The event is communicated and publicised in due time through the Professor’s and the Department’s pages. Students who will not be able to participate in the event will find information material in the Professor’s Moodle page.
Teaching methods
The language practice labs with the CEL support students in the consolidation of the language skills necessary to successfully approach the Professor’s module.
Teaching language
Further information
• The Professor’s module is a blended course held in English. It starts in the second semester and is only for students enrolled in the curriculum in international politics (surnames A to L), in the curriculum in linguistics (surnames A to Z) and as elective course;
• Materials to be studied will be available in the Professor’s Moodle Learning Environment (password protected);
• Language practice labs with the CEL start in the first term and will continue in the second term.
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.
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Human capital, health, education" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development