- •Методическая записка
- •Contents
- •Visit its webpage1, then work out a similar word map for the words “method” and “principle”.
- •After Babel, a new common tongue. It turns out to be Engiish
- •Translate and Render 1.1 Применение Lingvo 9.0
- •Speak about the most promising ones. Comment on your choice.
- •Read and Discuss 1.2.
- •Global Issues in Higher Education
- •Exercises 1.2.
- •Listen and Discuss 1.2.
- •1) What University is putting pressure on other schools to expand financial aid for students?
- •2) What is “college endowment”?
- •3) Do you think that high educational fees are always fair?
- •Read and Write 1.2.
- •Burrhus Frederic Skinner
- •Edward Lee Thorndike
- •John Broadus Watson *
- •Integrated approach
- •Students forced to sign 'I'll try harder' contracts
- •Exercises 1.3.
- •Translate and Render 1.3. Британские университеты могут "сдать мировые позиции"
- •Listen and Discuss 1.3.
- •Discuss and Write1.3.
- •What do you know about the Bologna process?
- •What are implications of those agreements and compacts that laid the foundation of single European educational space?
- •The Russian system of higher education in view of the Bologna process
- •Exercises 1.4.
- •Translate and Render 1.4 Фундаментальная методика
- •Классический подход к изучению иностранного языка
- •Listen and Discuss 1.4.
- •1) What are the changes that can be observed in teaching efl at universities?
- •2) Listen to the voa educational report “Teachers of English in Russia Feeling Winds of Change in Their Profession” and see whether you were right.
- •3) Answer the following questions.
- •Discuss and Write1.4.
- •Find and present information 1.4.
- •Suggestopedia
- •In Practice
- •Exercises 1.5.
- •Translate and Render 1.5. Интенсивная методика
- •Эмоционально-смысловой метод
- •Listen and Discuss 1.5. College, University or Institute?
- •Discuss and Write1.5.
- •To promote one of the fringe methods of teaching
- •To criticize fringe methods in favour of traditional ones.
- •1) What do the letters call stand for? What do you know about this system of learning?
- •2) What are obvious advantages of call?
- •3) Study the information provided in the right columns and find the heading to it in the left one.
- •Read and Discuss 1.6.
- •Exercises 1.6.
- •Translate and Render 1.6. Технологии дистанционного обучения в России
- •Listen and Discuss 1.6.
- •What is e-learning?
- •What can be advantages and disadvantages of e-learning?
- •Listen, fill the gaps and check your answers.
- •Discuss and Write1.6.
- •Do you know what the notion Threshold level implies? If not, read and find out.
- •Do you know any other ways to denote the level of language competence?
- •Read and Discuss 2.1.
- •For students different levels of language proficiency (Elementary, Pre-intermediate, Intermediate, Upper-Intermediate, Advanced);
- •For young learners and adult learners;
- •For professionals to communicate in academic communities, for those who need language for private communication (with friends, guests etc.) Syllabuses in elt
- •Exercises 2.1.
- •Translate and Render 2.1. Разработка Образовательной программы школы
- •Listen and Discuss 2.1.
- •What country is going to introduce a national curriculum? Why?
- •Who are the participants to the discussion. What points do they make in the report?
- •Discuss and Write 2.1.
- •A comparison of traditional and holistic approaches*
- •Unit 2.2. How to Design a Syllabus? Terminology to Study 2.2.
- •Lead-in 2.2.
- •Read and Discuss 2.2.
- •For students having different levels of language proficiency (Elementary, Pre-intermediate, Intermediate, Upper-Intermediate, Advanced);
- •For young learners and adult learners;
- •For professionals to communicate in academic communities, for those who need language for private communication (with friends, guests etc.)
- •Translate and Render 2.2. Целеполагание при проектировании урока
- •Listen and Discuss 2.2.
- •Ideas for Constructing an esl Syllabus
- •1. Decide what you need to teach.
- •2. Decide what you can teach.
- •3. Decide how to organize the syllabus.
- •4. Teacher Expectations
- •5. Helpful information (if you are giving your students a copy of the syllabus, which is advised):
- •Read and Discuss 2.3.
- •For students different levels of language proficiency (Elementary, Pre-intermediate, Intermediate,Upper -Intermediate, Advanced);
- •For young learners and adult learners;
- •For professionals to communicate in academic communities, for those who need language for private communication (with friends, guests etc.)
- •Translate and Render 2.3.
- •Listen and Discuss 2.3.
- •What do all the missing words and word combinations from Part 1 have in common? What are the possible teaching objectives of the task?
- •Now consider the teaching objectives in Part 2 of this listening task. When and how can these ideas be integrated into the teaching process?
- •Lead-in 2.4.
- •Read and Discuss 2.4.
- •Translate and Render 2.4. О программах изучения английского языка
- •Listen and Discuss 2.4.
- •Adult beginners
- •Bachelors of Arts
- •Migrants to the usa
- •Intermediate Level Syllabus Outline
- •Course Structure
- •30 Hours practical application and self-instruction
- •Read and Discuss 2.5.
- •Problems with synthetic syllabi
- •Translate and Render 2.5. О типологии образовательных программ
- •Listen and Discuss 2.5.
- •Cardinal Pell wades into Victorian education debate
- •Discuss and Write 2.5.
- •Books recommended for home studies
- •Printed Journals
- •Online journals
- •Find and Present the information 1.2.:
- •Listening 1.3
- •Find and Present the information 1.3.:
- •Module 2. Unit 2.1. Listening 2.1.
- •Unit 2.2. Listening 2.2.
- •Unit 2.3. Listening 2.3.
- •Unit 2.4. Listening 2.4.
- •Unit 2.5. Listening 2.5.
- •References
Unit 2.5. Listening 2.5.
Cardinal Pell wades into Victorian education debate
MARK COLVIN: The already fierce controversy in the Victorian education system over the teaching of English has only been increased by yesterday's intervention from the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell.
Cardinal Pell said focusing on the idea of "critical literacy" could fail students morally.
He said if an English curriculum gave young people all critique and no foundation, it left them rudderless.
But there was already anger in some quarters in Victoria about an apparent reduction in the number of books that senior English students would have to read, and some critics of the new system haven't welcomed the Cardinal's emphasis on morals.
Lynn Bell reports.
LYNN BELL: The practice of "critical literacy" involves teaching students to analyse a film, or an advertisement, or any piece of popular culture and examine the work as a text.
Greg Houghton, is an English teacher in Melbourne, and the President of the Victorian Association for the Teaching of English and he says it's an important part of the syllabus.
GREG HOUGHTON: Students, say in the middle years of school, might look very critically at the way advertising works as a persuasive medium, and learn to analyse some of the techniques that advertisements use to persuade a potential consumer to by a product.
That's extremely valuable, because students do have to be able to interpret the world in which they live, they do have to be able to understand it intelligently and to think about the way in which, for example, advertisements might place them.
LYNN BELL: But Cardinal George Pell has attacked the idea of relativism, or the belief that nothing is absolute, which underpins the practice.
GEORGE PELL: There are only sort of dominant positions, dominant power structures, there's no such thing as objective truth.
And to tell young people that you can't get to the truth of
the matter, on many occasions – sometimes it's difficult – I think is to sell them short and to tell them something that isn't true. LYNN BELL: Do you think the critical literacy program fails students on a moral basis?
GEORGE PELL: I think it easily can, because it distracts away from the intrinsic beauty that's in literature and it can distort the study for narrow political purposes and that's often just hostility to what is seen as bourgeoisie, capitalist society or the cultural predominance of dead white males.
LYNN BELL: He advocates a return to studying the classics, but Greg Houghton says the classics haven't dropped off the reading list and students are still reading Shakespeare, and works like The Great Gatsby.
GREG HOUGHTON: It's not one or the other.
This is where English teachers are getting very frustrated, because it's being set up as though somehow or other the only thing kids are looking at are the back of cereal packets. This is just nonsense.
LYNN BELL: But in Victoria concerns have been raised that Year 12 English is being dumbed down.
Under proposed changes to the curriculum, students would only have to read one book as part of Year 12 English; the second text to be studied could be a film.
If the changes are adopted, they'd be introduced to the VCE English program in 2007.
Dr Peter Holbrook is a Senior Lecturer in the School of English at the University of Queensland. Like Cardinal George Pell, he's in favour of increasing the number of classic books studied at high school, but he doesn't believe that should be driven by a moral imperative.
PETER HOLBROOK: I agree with Cardinal Pell that literature is an ideal vehicle for exploring moral and ethical questions. I don't think that literature is as such, a moral education, because the issue with literary texts – at least texts of any interest or complexity – is that they tend not to teach one simple moral lesson.
And this means that the idea that you can simply use literature to teach moral values is, I think, mistaken.
LYNN BELL: Cardinal George Pell says thinking critical teaching is important, but he says the ideal English syllabus must draw on the rich history of truly great writing.
GEORGE PELL: Well I do think that the great bulk of it should be fine literature. Certainly some of it should be from our best Australian writers, but certainly not just those, but the great writers in the English language whether they're British or American and not just recent or contemporary authors.
MARK COLVIN: Roman Catholic Archbishop Cardinal George Pell ending that report from Lynn Bell.
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