Prospectus

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Language Acquisition 2: The Spoken Word

Course
2008-2009
  1. Presentatation and writing skills: Speaking in public is not a skill that comes naturally to most people. Language Acquisition 2 is a course that focuses on public speaking – it will teach you how to give effective presentations on topics in your own field. However, it is also a course about public speaking: the topics of the three short papers (in the form of e-mail, a memo and a report) you will be asked to write will be on various aspects of communicating with an audience. You will be asked to study academic literature on speaking in public, to summarize that literature, and to present your findings in an accessible manner. You will watch and listen to presentations by others and learn how to give constructive feedback. Finally, you will also watch recordings of your own presentation through your audience’s eyes. We hope that by the end of the course you will not only have learnt how to “survive”, but also enjoy speaking in public. Another aspect of this course is the acquisition of idioms and colloquial language. To this purpose you will compile a portfolio containing words and expressions that you have found in magazines, or which you have heard on television on the radio, which you have had to look up in the dictionary.

  2. Language laboratory. In this part of the course you will improve your pronunciation by practising in the language lab. The focus will be on suprasegmental aspects of pronunciation, in particular intonation.

Timetable

The timetable will be available from June 1st on the Internet.

Method of Instruction

Two-hour tutorial per week.

A la carte and contract teaching

More information for students who are interested in taking this course as a Contract student (with exam).

This class is not available as A la carte course.

Course objectives

At the end of this course, students:

  • are familiar with a number of theories on public speaking

  • are familiar with basic rhetorical principles

  • have improved their presentation skills

  • have improved their pronunciation

  • are familiar with strategies for writing non-academic texts

  • have practised writing non-academic text types

  • have enlarged their active vocabulary, including idioms and colloquial language

Required reading

  • Crystal, David. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.

  • Gussenhoven, C. & A. Broeders. English Pronunciation for Student Teachers. Groningen: Wolters-Noordhoff: meest recente druk. (for students in British Language Laboratory).

  • Turk, Christopher. Effective Speaking. London: Spon Press, 1997.

  • Lujan, B.A. The American Accent Guide, Second Edition: A Complete and Comprehensive Course on the Pronunciation and Speaking Style of American English for Individuals of All language Backgrounds, Salt Lake City: Lingual Arts, latest edition.(for students in American laboratory).

Examination

Presentations: 30%; written assignments: 20%; pronunciation, listening and speaking: 50%. To pass the course, you need to make sure that your mark for none of the components is lower than 5. Marks lower than 5 cannot be compensated by other component marks.

Information

Department English, P.N. van Eyckhof 4, room 102c, tel: 071-5272144.
English@hum.leidenuniv.nl

Blackboard/webpage

To be announced.