Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students

Prompted by increasing demand in South Africa for the development of a focused but flexible English Second Language (ESL) curriculum at university level, this thesis contends that substantial theoretical under-pinning is needed for decisions on ESL course materials. Once the theoretical constructs...

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Main Author: Swemmer, Derek
Other Authors: Adey, David
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/16161
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-161612016-04-16T04:08:35Z Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students Swemmer, Derek Adey, David Goedhals, J. B. Muller, C. H. 428.00711 English language -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- South Africa -- Foreign speakers Prompted by increasing demand in South Africa for the development of a focused but flexible English Second Language (ESL) curriculum at university level, this thesis contends that substantial theoretical under-pinning is needed for decisions on ESL course materials. Once the theoretical constructs are determined, a model based on a systematic approach to course design is proposed. It maximizes the individualization of experiential learning, despite the large numbers of students who take these courses, through a multi-form course structure offering four streams of study at three levels of difficulty. Entry is possible at the start of the year and at mid-year. The empirical research which forms the basis of the study is an analysis of the 1985 student group at the University of South Africa (UNISA). Several methods are used, including post-course questionnaires, diagnostic assignments and a detailed language and stylistic error count linked with a clause analysis of a sample of assignments and examination scripts. The model curriculum meets the contextually basic science requirements of a university course, within the parameters of response needed in regard to the ESL student profile determined by the needs and role analysis completed in Chapter 2. Model aims and terminal learning objectives are presented in Chapter 3 as the foundation on which the rest of the thesis is constructed, and include comprehension, applied composition, oral and aural skills, use of reference works, methods of thinking, and occupationally relevant specialist language. In Chapters 4 and 5, in-depth analyses of appropriate course content and methods emphasize the use of Afrocentric English literature in contemporary settings with appropriate readability levels, language in use in specified contexts, development of vocabulary, remedying incorrect usage, comprehension skills, composition skills, development of cognitive processes, oral and listening skills, and the purpose and place of grammar. The final chapters outline approaches to criterion-referenced assessment and evaluation, and suggest appropriate set works and criteria for their selection. The course materials aim at improving English communicative performance. The underlying principles used in developing this course design and its associated materials can be valuably extrapolated and applied at universities and other tertiary institutions. English Studies D. Litt et Phil. (English) 2015-01-23T04:24:19Z 2015-01-23T04:24:19Z 1992 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/16161 en 1 online resource (iv, 327 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic 428.00711
English language -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- South Africa -- Foreign speakers
spellingShingle 428.00711
English language -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- South Africa -- Foreign speakers
Swemmer, Derek
Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students
description Prompted by increasing demand in South Africa for the development of a focused but flexible English Second Language (ESL) curriculum at university level, this thesis contends that substantial theoretical under-pinning is needed for decisions on ESL course materials. Once the theoretical constructs are determined, a model based on a systematic approach to course design is proposed. It maximizes the individualization of experiential learning, despite the large numbers of students who take these courses, through a multi-form course structure offering four streams of study at three levels of difficulty. Entry is possible at the start of the year and at mid-year. The empirical research which forms the basis of the study is an analysis of the 1985 student group at the University of South Africa (UNISA). Several methods are used, including post-course questionnaires, diagnostic assignments and a detailed language and stylistic error count linked with a clause analysis of a sample of assignments and examination scripts. The model curriculum meets the contextually basic science requirements of a university course, within the parameters of response needed in regard to the ESL student profile determined by the needs and role analysis completed in Chapter 2. Model aims and terminal learning objectives are presented in Chapter 3 as the foundation on which the rest of the thesis is constructed, and include comprehension, applied composition, oral and aural skills, use of reference works, methods of thinking, and occupationally relevant specialist language. In Chapters 4 and 5, in-depth analyses of appropriate course content and methods emphasize the use of Afrocentric English literature in contemporary settings with appropriate readability levels, language in use in specified contexts, development of vocabulary, remedying incorrect usage, comprehension skills, composition skills, development of cognitive processes, oral and listening skills, and the purpose and place of grammar. The final chapters outline approaches to criterion-referenced assessment and evaluation, and suggest appropriate set works and criteria for their selection. The course materials aim at improving English communicative performance. The underlying principles used in developing this course design and its associated materials can be valuably extrapolated and applied at universities and other tertiary institutions. === English Studies === D. Litt et Phil. (English)
author2 Adey, David
author_facet Adey, David
Swemmer, Derek
author Swemmer, Derek
author_sort Swemmer, Derek
title Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students
title_short Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students
title_full Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students
title_fullStr Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students
title_full_unstemmed Developing English communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of English in meeting the needs of English second language students
title_sort developing english communicative skills : a reassessment of the role of university departments of english in meeting the needs of english second language students
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/16161
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