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COURSE
DESIGN
is the process by which the
raw data about a learning
need is interpreted in order
to produce an integrated
series of teaching-learning
experiences, whose ultimate
aim is to lead the learners
to a particular state of
knowledge.
this is the simplest kind of
course design process and is
probably the one most familiar to
English Teachers. This aims to
draw as direct connections as
possible between the analysis of
the target situation and the content
of ESP course.
Identiify learner’s
target situation
Select theoretical views
of language
Create Syllabus
Identify linguistic
features of target
situation
Design materials to
exemplify syllabus items
Establish evaluation procedures to test
acquisition of syllabus items
• It has been applied in a number of countries,
particularly in Latin America. Students in
universities and colleges there have the
limited, but important need to read subject
texts in English, because they are unavailable
in the mother tongue. In response to this
need, a number of ESP projects have been set
up with specific aim of developing the
students’ ability to read in English.
 Basic theoretical hypothesis
is that underlying any language
behavior are certain skills and strategies
which the learner uses in order to produce or
comprehend discourse. SCA aims to get away
from the surface performance data and look
at the competence that underlies the
performance
 Pragmatic Basis
it was derived from a distinction made by
Widdowson (1981) between goal-oriented courses and
process-oriented courses. Holmes pointed out that:
In ESP the main problem is usually one of the time
available and student experience. First, the aims may be
defined in terms of what is desirable. –i.e. to be able to
read in the literature of the students’ specialism but,
there may be nowhere near enough time to reach this
aim during the period of this course. Secondly, the
students may be in their first year of studies with little
experience of literature of their specialism. . . Accordingly
both this factors.. May be constraints which say right
from the start, “the aims cannot be achieved during
the course.”
The emphasis in the ESP course, then, is
not achieving a particular set of goals, but
on enabling the learners to achieve what
they can within the given constraints:
• The process-oriented approach… is at
least realistic in concentrating on
strategies and processes of making
students aware of their own abilities and
potential, and motivating them to tackle
target texts on their own after the end of
the course, so that they can continue to
improve..
Theoretical
views of
language
Identify target
situation
Analyze skills/ strategies
required to cope in target
situation
Write syllabus
Theoretical
views of
learning
Select text and write
exercises to focus on
skills/strategies in syllabus
Establish evaluation procedure which
require the use of skill/strategies in
syllabus
this approach is based on the principle that
learning is totally determined by the learner. As
teachers we can influence what we teach, but what
learners learn is determined by the learners alone
learning is seen as a process in which the
learners use what knowledge or skills they have in
order to make sense of the flow of new information.
learning, therefore, is an internal process
which is crucially dependent upon the knowledge
the learners already have and their ability and
motivation to use it.
learning is not just a mental process, it is a
process of negotiation between individuals and
society.
Identify Learners
Theoretical
views of
Language
Analyze
Target
Situation
Theoretical
views of
Learning
Analyze
Learning
Situation
Identify
attitudes/wants/potential of
learners
Identify needs/ potential/
constraints of learning
teaching situation
Identify skills and
knowledge needed to
function in the target
situation
Write syllabus/materials to
exploit the potential of the
learning situation in the
acquisition of skills and
knowledge required by the
target situation
EvaluationEvaluation
A language-centered approach says: this
the nature of the target situation
performance and that will determine ESP
course.
A skills-centered approach says: that’s not
enough, we must look behind target
performance data to discover what processes
enable someone to perform. Those processes
will determine the ESP course.
A learning-centered approach says: that’s
not enough either. We must look beyond the
competence that enables someone to perform,
because what we really want to discover is
not the competence itself, but how someone
acquires that competence.
Analyze target situation
Analyze learning situation
Write syllabus
Write materials
Teach materials
Evaluate learner achievement
Identify target situation
A language-centered approach
Considers the learners to here
A skill-centered approach
Considers the learners to here
A learning-centered approach
Considers the learners to here
A
comparison
of
approaches
to course
design
In the figure shows that a learning-centered approach to course
design takes account of the learner at every stage of the design
process. This has two implications:
Course design is a negotiated process. There is no single
factor which has an outright determining influence on the
content of the course. The ESP learning situation and the target
situation with both influence the nature of the syllabus,
materials, methodology and evaluation procedures. Similarly
each of these components will influence and be influenced by
the others.
Course design is a dynamic process. It does not move in a
linear fashion from initial analysis to complete course. Needs
and resources vary with time. The course design, therefore,
needs to have built-in feedback channels to enable the course to
respond to developments.
WHAT?
Language
descriptions
WHO? WHY?
WHERE?
WHEN?
Needs Analysis
HOW?
Learning
Theories
ESP
COURSE
Nature of
particular
target and
learning
situation
syllabus
Method
ology
Factors
affecting ESP
Course Design
ESP is based on designing
courses to meet Learner’s
need
What does course
design involve?
Ways of
describing
language
Needs
Analysis
Models of
learning
Approaches to
course design
SECTION 2:
COURSE DESIGN
How do you
use a course
design?
Syllabus design
Materials
evaluation
Materials
design
Methodology
Evaluation
What is the
role of ESP?
ResourcesOrientation
SECTION 3:
APPLICATION
SECTION 3:
THE TEACHER
• This principles below applies to intermediate and advanced students of
English.
1. Content difficulty should approximate the level in their normal courses.
This means for instance, you cannot expect medical students and
doctors to study high school biology. Medical students need University
Level content. And if this means that the English teacher cannot
understand the science, then so be it: let the English teacher learn the
science.
2. Content should lead language. The content itself should be useful to the
students, and should be stretching in its own right. This does not mean
that the texts used are always complicated: there are plenty of genres,
such as blogs, the latest news etc where the content is new and
interesting and still covers the needs to reinforce basic language.
3. The exercises on the material should be authentic, as well as the
material itselfThis means an end to trivial tasks, and a major focus on
real world comprehension, inferencing, and debating.
4. There should be massive exposure to content and
language This massive exposure should often come from
many directions simultaneously.
5. We need to be using authentically long texts for listening
and reading
6. Communication gaps should be massively exploited
It is well known that language is learned fastest when there
is a desire to know, or when there is controversy.
7. Methods should draw inspiration from content teachers
The comparison to be made is with how L1 learners advance
and learn a new technical subject in L1. Therefore, ESP
should draw inspiration from the content teaching methods
in L1 (which frequently have high demands on language).
8. Elaborate, but do not simplify Elaborated texts retain the original
complex authentic text, with all the associated context, redundancy, and
language clues. They add extra supporting material, and this elaboration
is much more than translations or synonyms. It can include
supplementary material, and extra extended explanations. In short,
elaboration should not lead to simplification. Rather, the material is
repeatedin another linguistic form.
9. Train students to handle difficult texts. Just as in advanced L1, we
should not expect
students to understand every idea or word Native speaker academics
frequently do not understand every single idea or word in a text. Yet they
are capable of using the texts. Therefore, the language teacher should not
expect students to fully understand every text.
10.Consider using translation as a scaffolding for weak students:
11.Speed up learning by drawing on the research comparing French and
English
Of course, this research is hard to find, except on this website! Few
linguists have been willing to
do the careful legwork needed for such comparisons.
12.Massive exposure, and extracting meaningful information
should be the focus - NOT
language pointsThis point derives from the fact that for students
from B2 onwards (upper intermediate) there is no6.
Communication gaps should be massively exploited. It is well
known that language is learned fastest when there is a desire to
know, or when there is controversy.
13.A course designer should have three syllabuses: a content syllabus,
a language syllabus, and a
learning/skills syllabus. The ‘content syllabus’ should be related to the
way the specialists
divide up the subject.
14.Students need exposure to the multiple genres within their specialty.
These genres can differ widely in language and style.
15.Ideally, another subject should be taught in English, and failing that,
compulsory readings in English should be set by the subject specialist.
When students really want to understand, when they are encouraged
by examination pressure, then they will make the extra effort to learn.
English for Special Purposes
English for Special Purposes
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English for Special Purposes

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. COURSE DESIGN is the process by which the raw data about a learning need is interpreted in order to produce an integrated series of teaching-learning experiences, whose ultimate aim is to lead the learners to a particular state of knowledge.
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  • 6. this is the simplest kind of course design process and is probably the one most familiar to English Teachers. This aims to draw as direct connections as possible between the analysis of the target situation and the content of ESP course.
  • 7. Identiify learner’s target situation Select theoretical views of language Create Syllabus Identify linguistic features of target situation Design materials to exemplify syllabus items Establish evaluation procedures to test acquisition of syllabus items
  • 8. • It has been applied in a number of countries, particularly in Latin America. Students in universities and colleges there have the limited, but important need to read subject texts in English, because they are unavailable in the mother tongue. In response to this need, a number of ESP projects have been set up with specific aim of developing the students’ ability to read in English.
  • 9.  Basic theoretical hypothesis is that underlying any language behavior are certain skills and strategies which the learner uses in order to produce or comprehend discourse. SCA aims to get away from the surface performance data and look at the competence that underlies the performance
  • 10.  Pragmatic Basis it was derived from a distinction made by Widdowson (1981) between goal-oriented courses and process-oriented courses. Holmes pointed out that: In ESP the main problem is usually one of the time available and student experience. First, the aims may be defined in terms of what is desirable. –i.e. to be able to read in the literature of the students’ specialism but, there may be nowhere near enough time to reach this aim during the period of this course. Secondly, the students may be in their first year of studies with little experience of literature of their specialism. . . Accordingly both this factors.. May be constraints which say right from the start, “the aims cannot be achieved during the course.”
  • 11. The emphasis in the ESP course, then, is not achieving a particular set of goals, but on enabling the learners to achieve what they can within the given constraints: • The process-oriented approach… is at least realistic in concentrating on strategies and processes of making students aware of their own abilities and potential, and motivating them to tackle target texts on their own after the end of the course, so that they can continue to improve..
  • 12. Theoretical views of language Identify target situation Analyze skills/ strategies required to cope in target situation Write syllabus Theoretical views of learning Select text and write exercises to focus on skills/strategies in syllabus Establish evaluation procedure which require the use of skill/strategies in syllabus
  • 13. this approach is based on the principle that learning is totally determined by the learner. As teachers we can influence what we teach, but what learners learn is determined by the learners alone learning is seen as a process in which the learners use what knowledge or skills they have in order to make sense of the flow of new information. learning, therefore, is an internal process which is crucially dependent upon the knowledge the learners already have and their ability and motivation to use it. learning is not just a mental process, it is a process of negotiation between individuals and society.
  • 14. Identify Learners Theoretical views of Language Analyze Target Situation Theoretical views of Learning Analyze Learning Situation Identify attitudes/wants/potential of learners Identify needs/ potential/ constraints of learning teaching situation Identify skills and knowledge needed to function in the target situation Write syllabus/materials to exploit the potential of the learning situation in the acquisition of skills and knowledge required by the target situation EvaluationEvaluation
  • 15. A language-centered approach says: this the nature of the target situation performance and that will determine ESP course. A skills-centered approach says: that’s not enough, we must look behind target performance data to discover what processes enable someone to perform. Those processes will determine the ESP course. A learning-centered approach says: that’s not enough either. We must look beyond the competence that enables someone to perform, because what we really want to discover is not the competence itself, but how someone acquires that competence.
  • 16. Analyze target situation Analyze learning situation Write syllabus Write materials Teach materials Evaluate learner achievement Identify target situation A language-centered approach Considers the learners to here A skill-centered approach Considers the learners to here A learning-centered approach Considers the learners to here A comparison of approaches to course design
  • 17. In the figure shows that a learning-centered approach to course design takes account of the learner at every stage of the design process. This has two implications: Course design is a negotiated process. There is no single factor which has an outright determining influence on the content of the course. The ESP learning situation and the target situation with both influence the nature of the syllabus, materials, methodology and evaluation procedures. Similarly each of these components will influence and be influenced by the others. Course design is a dynamic process. It does not move in a linear fashion from initial analysis to complete course. Needs and resources vary with time. The course design, therefore, needs to have built-in feedback channels to enable the course to respond to developments.
  • 18. WHAT? Language descriptions WHO? WHY? WHERE? WHEN? Needs Analysis HOW? Learning Theories ESP COURSE Nature of particular target and learning situation syllabus Method ology Factors affecting ESP Course Design
  • 19. ESP is based on designing courses to meet Learner’s need What does course design involve? Ways of describing language Needs Analysis Models of learning Approaches to course design SECTION 2: COURSE DESIGN
  • 20. How do you use a course design? Syllabus design Materials evaluation Materials design Methodology Evaluation What is the role of ESP? ResourcesOrientation SECTION 3: APPLICATION SECTION 3: THE TEACHER
  • 21. • This principles below applies to intermediate and advanced students of English. 1. Content difficulty should approximate the level in their normal courses. This means for instance, you cannot expect medical students and doctors to study high school biology. Medical students need University Level content. And if this means that the English teacher cannot understand the science, then so be it: let the English teacher learn the science. 2. Content should lead language. The content itself should be useful to the students, and should be stretching in its own right. This does not mean that the texts used are always complicated: there are plenty of genres, such as blogs, the latest news etc where the content is new and interesting and still covers the needs to reinforce basic language. 3. The exercises on the material should be authentic, as well as the material itselfThis means an end to trivial tasks, and a major focus on real world comprehension, inferencing, and debating.
  • 22. 4. There should be massive exposure to content and language This massive exposure should often come from many directions simultaneously. 5. We need to be using authentically long texts for listening and reading 6. Communication gaps should be massively exploited It is well known that language is learned fastest when there is a desire to know, or when there is controversy. 7. Methods should draw inspiration from content teachers The comparison to be made is with how L1 learners advance and learn a new technical subject in L1. Therefore, ESP should draw inspiration from the content teaching methods in L1 (which frequently have high demands on language).
  • 23. 8. Elaborate, but do not simplify Elaborated texts retain the original complex authentic text, with all the associated context, redundancy, and language clues. They add extra supporting material, and this elaboration is much more than translations or synonyms. It can include supplementary material, and extra extended explanations. In short, elaboration should not lead to simplification. Rather, the material is repeatedin another linguistic form. 9. Train students to handle difficult texts. Just as in advanced L1, we should not expect students to understand every idea or word Native speaker academics frequently do not understand every single idea or word in a text. Yet they are capable of using the texts. Therefore, the language teacher should not expect students to fully understand every text. 10.Consider using translation as a scaffolding for weak students: 11.Speed up learning by drawing on the research comparing French and English Of course, this research is hard to find, except on this website! Few linguists have been willing to do the careful legwork needed for such comparisons.
  • 24. 12.Massive exposure, and extracting meaningful information should be the focus - NOT language pointsThis point derives from the fact that for students from B2 onwards (upper intermediate) there is no6. Communication gaps should be massively exploited. It is well known that language is learned fastest when there is a desire to know, or when there is controversy. 13.A course designer should have three syllabuses: a content syllabus, a language syllabus, and a learning/skills syllabus. The ‘content syllabus’ should be related to the way the specialists divide up the subject. 14.Students need exposure to the multiple genres within their specialty. These genres can differ widely in language and style. 15.Ideally, another subject should be taught in English, and failing that, compulsory readings in English should be set by the subject specialist. When students really want to understand, when they are encouraged by examination pressure, then they will make the extra effort to learn.