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ENGLISH TEST

Academic year and teacher
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Versione italiana
Academic year
2022/2023
Teacher
GUIDO ZAVATTINI
Credits
6
Didactic period
Secondo Semestre
SSD
L-LIN/12

Training objectives

Students will acquire a knowledge of subject-specific English relating to the field of Physics and Geological Sciences. They will study morphosyntactic elements at a linguistic level equivalent to B1 of the Common European Framework of Reference, and will learn lexis, phrases and functions relevant to the field of Physics and Geological Sciences. There will also be the opportunity to approach reading scientific texts in English, and to develop passive awareness of grammar and specific vocabulary.

Prerequisites

Students should have a level of English equivalent to A2 on the Common European Framework of Reference.

Course programme

The course is divided into two parts, the first of which consists of 24 hours of grammar lessons at level B1 of the European Framework of Reference, whilst the other 24 hours will cover specific English relating to Physics and Geological Sciences. This latter part will focus on the main topics of scientific language helping the student to acquire specialised vocabulary, develop reading and aural comprehension skills when faced with technical and scientific terms and learn structures and functions commonly used in the field.

The grammar part of the course covers the following points:

Programme – Grammar
Determiners, Quantifiers and Articles
Present Tenses 
Past Tenses 
Future Tenses
Adjectives and Adverbs
Comparatives and Superlatives
Relative Pronouns and Relative Clauses
Modals
The Passive
Conditional Clauses (zero, first, second and third)
Direct and Indirect Speech

The subject-specific English lessons will make use of a scientific textbook and will cover the following points:

Lesson 1: The Scientific community – Communicating with scientific communities p. 14, 15, 16.
Lesson 2: Applying for research funding p. 8, 9
Lesson 3: Completing a material transfer agreement p. 20, 21
Lesson 4: Doing a literature review, linking words for combining and comparing p. 22-25
Lesson 5: Designing an experiment pgs. 30-34
Lesson 6: Interactive – feedback, question and answer and practice of language from lessons 1 – 5
Lesson 7: Describing and predicting results pgs. 35-37
Lesson 8: Describing an experiment pgs. 38-40
Lesson 9: Describing problems with an experiment pgs. 42-44
Lesson 10: Describing states and processes pgs. 46,47
Lesson 11: Progress Test
Lesson 12: Interactive – feedback, question and answer and practice of language from lessons 7 – 11
Lesson 13: Describing data: numbers/ numerical values pgs. 49,50
Lesson 14: Laboratory notes pg.51-53
Lesson 15: Statistical analysis pg.54 - 56
Lesson 16: Summarising and describing visual data pg. 57, 58, 61
Lesson 17: Research: Results and discussion pg.62,63
Lesson 18: Interactive – feedback, question and answer and practice of language from lessons 13 – 17
Lesson 19: The results section pg. 65, 66
Lesson 20: The discussion section pg. 67, 68, 69
Lesson 21: Research: Introduction pg. 70,71, 72
Lesson 22: Research: Abstract pg. 73, 74, 75
Lesson 23: Mock Exam
Lesson 24: Interactive – final feedback, question and answer and practice of language from lessons 19 – 23

Didactic methods

The course will be divided in two parts: 24 hours of grammar at B1 level which will be recorded as video-lessons and can be viewed using the e-learning platform, and which will be accessible to students who log in using their UNIFE credentials; 24 hours of subject-specific classes held by native speaker teachers focussing on English for Specific Purposes (ESP). The ESP part of the course will follow a cycle of five asynchronous lessons followed by an interactive session in which students will be able to ask for clarification and feedback on points covered, as well as put into practice the language that has been introduced in the previous lessons. The asynchronous lessons present the technical language and functions in a variety of ways including analysis of technical / scientific texts from which field-specific lexis will be extrapolated and examined.

Learning assessment procedures

Exams may be carried out either remotely (Moodle Platform) or in presence depending on the regulatory and/or epidemiological context.
The final exam will focus both on the grammar part and the lexis/structures part of the course. It will consist of 15 questions relating to the grammar points studied in the video-lessons followed by 16 questions relating to the topics covered in the ESP lessons.
Each question is worth one point, and leaving the answer blank counts as a mistake in the same way as an incorrect answer.
The score in “trentesimi” is calculated by adding up the total number of correct answers given.

Reference texts

For the grammar module:
Reader available online on the unife site (in the reserved area- login required)

For the ESP module:
Cambridge English for Scientists, T. Armer, Cambridge Professional English – Cambridge University Press (2011)