Academic year 2021/2022 |
Supervisor: | Mgr. Martina Vránová, Ph.D. | |||
Supervising institute: | ÚJ | |||
Teaching language: | English | |||
Aims of the course unit: | ||||
The goal of English for Doctoral Degree Study is to provide students with language skills suitable for academic and professional areas, and prepare them for practical output of the acquired academic skills in the form of independent oral and written discourse at the C1 level of CEFR. | ||||
Learning outcomes and competences: | ||||
Skills: The skill to comprehend a scientific text, to reproduce it, and to compile a discipline-specific glossary. The skill to properly use the acquired grammar and academic style in both oral and written professional discourse. The ability of critical thinking, independent communication, and argumentation prevalent in the academia. Output: independent written and oral performance. |
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Prerequisites: | ||||
Minimum necessary CEFR level of English is lower B2. | ||||
Course contents: | ||||
English for Doctoral Degree Study focuses on a complex development of language skills in academic and scientific areas. It is divided into three courses (Academic Skills 1, 2, 3), which lead up to the C1 level of English. The courses concentrate on acquiring general academic and discipline-specific vocabulary, reading academic texts, presentation skills, and independent writing of publishable research papers. | ||||
Teaching methods and criteria: | ||||
Instruction is composed of three voluntary courses in the form of seminars. Instruction is supplemented by a self-study e-learning course. | ||||
Assesment methods and criteria linked to learning outcomes: | ||||
The exam has a written and an oral part. Written part: 1 Submission of glossary of discipline-specific and academic vocabulary selected from at least three impact-journal articles with a minimum extent of 50 items. Assessment criteria: ability to study a foreign language independently. 2 Submission of research paper (minimum 9,000 characters) based on the student's master's or doctoral thesis. Assessment criteria: compliance with pre-set article structure, stylistic and grammatical correctness, use of discipline-specific vocabulary. 3 Short written assignment (150--200 words) on a general academic topic. Assessment criteria: general academic vocabulary and writing used in every-day academic contexts. Oral part: 1 Presentation of conference contribution and follow-up discussion. Assessment criteria: compliance with pre-set structure of presentation, level of language skills, follow-up discussion. 2 Interview on doctoral study (research, teaching, participation in conferences including international ones, mobilities in abroad). Assessment criteria: fluency and interaction. Students must pass all parts of the exam. |
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Controlled participation in lessons: | ||||
Students' participation in seminars is voluntary and the extent of instruction (one to three semesters) may be assessed by students themselves by taking a placement test in the e-learning. | ||||
Type of course unit: | ||||
Language exercise | 30 × 2 hrs. | optionally | ||
Course curriculum: | ||||
Language exercise | Academic Skills 1 Week 1: Introduction, Appearance and success (Listening and speaking) Week 2: Extended definitions (Reading and writing) Week 3: Laws of science (Listening and speaking) Week 4: Review of verb tenses (Grammar) Week 5: Describing visual information I (Writing) Week 6: Describing visual information II (Presenting) Week 7: Accidental discoveries (Listening and speaking) Week 8: Passive constructions (Grammar) Week 9: Inspiring innovation (Listening and speaking) Week 10: Effective teaching Academic Skills 2 Week 1: Adulting school (Listening and speaking) Week 2: Process description (Reading and writing) Week 3: Modern cities (Listening and speaking) Week 4: Modals (Grammar) Week 5: Science and food (Listening and speaking) Week 6: Comparison and contrast (Writing and grammar) Week 7: Work and fun (Listening and speaking) Week 8: Conditionals (Grammar) Week 9: Consequences of progress (Listening and speaking) Week 10: Pronunciation Academic Skills 3 Week 1: The writing process: heuristics, evaluating sources, references Week 2: Compiling glossary, General, academic and technical vocabulary Week 3: Introduction to rhetoric; Title, abstract, key words Week 4: Introductions and body paragraphs Week 5: Methods, Results and discussion Week 6: Cohesion, thematic progression, referencing Week 7: Conclusions Week 8: Articles and punctuation Week 9: Giving conference papers Week 10: Giving conference papers |
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Literature - fundamental: | ||||
3. Earle–Carlin, Susan. Q: Skills for Success 5. Listening and Speaking. Third edition. Oxford: OUP, 2020. | ||||
4. Freire, Robert, and Tamara Jones. Q: Skills for Success 4. Listening and Speaking. Third edition. Oxford: OUP, 2020. | ||||
7. Chazal, Edward de, and Sam McCartter. Oxford EAP: A Course for Academic Purposes. Upper-intermediate. Oxford: OUP, 2012. | ||||
8. Chazal, Edward de, and Julie Moore. Oxford EAP: A Course for Academic Purposes. Advanced. Oxford: OUP, 2013. | ||||
Literature - recommended: | ||||
3. Brieger, Nick, and Alison Pohl. Technical English Vocabulary and Grammar. Summertown, 2008. | ||||
4. Gardner, Peter S. New Directions: Reading, Writing and Critical Thinking. Cambridge: CUP, 2005. | ||||
5. Hewings, Martin. Advanced Grammar in Use. Cambridge: CUP, 2013. | ||||
6. McCarthy, Michael, and Felicity O'Dell. Academic Vocabulary in Use. Cambridge: CUP, 2008. | ||||
7. Mounsey, Chris. Essays and Dissertations. Oxford: OUP, 2002. | ||||
8. Oshima, Alice, and Ann Hogue. Introduction to Academic Writing. New York: Pearson, 2007. | ||||
9. Paterson, Ken, and Roberta Wedge. Oxford Grammar for EAP. Oxford: OUP, 2013. | ||||
10. Wallwork, Adrian. English for Academic Correspondence and Socializing. New York: Springer, 2011. | ||||
11. Wallwork, Adrian. English for Academic Research: Writing Exercises. New York: Springer, 2013. | ||||
12. Wallwork, Adrian. English for Presentations at International Conferences. New York: Springer, 2016. | ||||
13. Wallwork, Adrian. English for Writing Research Papers. New York: Springer, 2023. |
The study programmes with the given course: | |||||||||
Programme | Study form | Branch | Spec. | Final classification | Course-unit credits | Obligation | Level | Year | Semester |
D-ENE-P | full-time study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-IME-P | full-time study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-KPI-P | full-time study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-MAT-P | full-time study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-STG-P | full-time study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-APM-P | full-time study | --- | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-APM-K | combined study | --- | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-FIN-P | full-time study | --- | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-ENE-K | combined study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-FIN-K | combined study | --- | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-IME-K | combined study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-KPI-K | combined study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-MAT-K | combined study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
D-STG-K | combined study | --- no specialisation | -- | DrEx | 0 | Compulsory | 3 | 1 | W |
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering
Brno University of Technology
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