Course Outlines
About Course Outlines
There are three things to remember when teaching: know your stuff; know whom you are stuffing; and then stuff them elegantly. - Lola May
An ESL course outline performs an important role in every prestigious English language school. It forms the basis for an agreement among the student, teacher and school: it identifies the expectations which serve as the basis of the student's grade and gives the fundamental required components of the course which the student is assured to receive from the ESL teacher and the school.
A good course outline performs the following functions:
1. It is the principal means for course planning: highlights the required components of the course.
2. It states the level for which students will be held accountable.
3. Provides coherent information and skills that are needed to prepare students in a particular subject.
4. Contains the prerequisites needed to take the course.
5. Records changes when a course is updated.
6. Contains the requirements and components of the course and acts as an agreement between the school and the student.
7. Shows that all the required components of the course are present as specified in a school curriculum.
8. Serves to maintain academic standards: demonstrates that the school provides consistent, high quality teaching.
9. Through the course outlines the program design is evaluated and it helps to identify needs of the students, as well as to allocate resources.
Here are a few samples:
Course Outlines
Basic English The four language skills - listening, speaking, reading and writing - are integrated. This includes elements of contextual grammar, active vocabulary building, paragraph writing, face-to-face communication, group discussions, public speaking, word games, pronunciation, and question-answer sessions. More...
General English The course develops listening, speaking, reading, writing and cross-cultural communication skills. In addition, students can improve practical grammar skills. More...
Communication Skills The course develops English for international communication skills. The textbook (with audio cassettes/CDs) by Jack C. Richards (2001) New Interchange, Book 2. English for International Communication (Cambridge University Press) is used for this course. Lots of interesting topics are covered. More...
Practical English The course aims at enabling students to acquire basic oral and written communication skills. It is designed for non-English majors to develop spoken and written skills at a beginner’s level. More...
Academic Writing The course improves students’ writing abilities at an essay level. They learn how to write comparison and contrast, classification, process analysis, cause-and-effect analysis, and argumentative essays. More...
Writing a Research Paper The course develops written communication skills that are needed in an academic environment. In addition, students develop their critical reading skills, grammar skills, and expand vocabulary. More...
English for Academic Purposes The course focuses on giving presentations, listening to academic lectures, note-taking, participating in group discussions, comprehending academic texts and lectures, summary writing, citing techniques, developing the Internet and library skills, and writing a research project. Tutorial activities include discussions of lectures and helping students to find information in order to solve basic academic research problems. More...
Public Speaking Students develop public speaking skills. The course consists of two parts, theoretical and practical. In the theoretical part students focus on methods of delivering an effective public speech. They learn how to speak in front of many people and how to overcome fear and nervousness, how to use effective body language skills, how to prepare and how to use PowerPoint presentations. In the practical part students design outlines of presentations and give presentations to large audiences. More...
Extensive Reading Students select texts for extensive reading. They use various strategies for comprehension and vocabulary recognition, maintain a log with details of reading accomplished each week, summarize weekly reading, and establish personally relevant reading goals. More...
Language & Culture This is an ESL course at an upper-intermediate level that focuses on Western culture and its relationship with and influence on the development of the English language. It focuses on origins of Western culture, present-day Western etiquette, Western ways of thinking, Western cultural values and traditions. More...
Business Communication The course introduces vocabulary that is widely used in business communication environment, spoken and written communication, telephone calls, business meetings, presentations, letters, faxes, emails, and more...
Mass Media & Communication The course describes the whole process of mass communication, gives detailed definitions of mass communication and mass media, revises the development of mass media, the process of writing books, newspapers, and magazines. Other topics are related to electronic media, movies, advertising, public relations, sexism, racism, and more.
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