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The case for a new acronym ESAP Increasingly English is being used as the teaching medium for BusinessStudies, Medicine, Engineering etc at Higher Education and Universitylevels. This presents interesting challenges for the English teacherfaced with students who are not interested in learning English for its ownsake, but who are concerned to have sufficient command of English to help themprogress in their chosen careers. General English is being replaced byEnglish for Specific Purposes but within an atmosphere of English forAcademic Purposes. How can this best be done?
A general view Language teachers lack the expertise and confidence to teach subject specific conventions and content Skills and language across a range of disciplines remain the same
General English Level driven: the main focus is on what a student can and cannot do now. Student motives are varied and general. They may be interested in the language or want to enjoy the global community.
the specific view When English is taught, it should include: • current specific needs • wider needs (transferable skills and competencies) • acknowledgement of future needs • •
What do students say? “We’ve been learning English for 6 years and we’re still doing the verb to be.” (Lack of interest / progression) “I’d like more time to speak and practise the language. I forget it straight after the lesson.” (Frustration) “Different teachers tell us different things. (Lack of faith in the teacher – or is it the book?)
Which means ... Students are generally goal-orientated. Students might not know what they need, but they do know what they don’t need. Our materials and methods should reflect this.
The acronyms EFL? ENOP? ESP? EAP? ESAP? EOP?
English study at university ENOP? EAP? ESP? ESAP?
EAP provides … • Discourse structures and vocabulary spanning all academic fields • General skills to help decode and construct text in appropriate registers i.e., Bottom Up skills •
EAP Themes based on areas of human knowledge • not quirky • not imaginary • not ‘one-off’ human interest stories • not ‘teen’ topics
EAP Listening: to lectures Speaking: seminars, tutorials Reading: for research Writing: essays, assignments
EAP LISTENING Listening and taking notes • not interactive listening • not ‘eavesdropping’ • not multiple listening • not ‘after doing’ comprehension questions
This seems like a simple ... but there is no simple … In the next two lectures, we’re... to look at theories of … This week, I’m going to talk... theories from Ancient… Next, theories from … theory from a Russian scientist, … ...agree about learning. However... question answer going learning about Greece Islamic scholars Ivan Pavlov (contrary view) How do we learn?
Top down bottom up listening How do we learn? This seems like a simple … but there is no simple … In the next two lectures, we’re … … to look at theories of … I’m going to talk about … … from Ancient … Next, theories from … A Russian scientist, … … agree about learning. However
EAP SPEAKING Speaking from research • not phatic communion • not every function that can be thought of • not convergent, ‘what I know / think’
EAP READING Reading for research • not reading for pleasure • not every and any text type • not ‘after doing’ comprehension questions
Reading to Writing Researched Meaning into Rehearsed Words
EAP WRITING Writing in academic genres • not first person • not informal postcards, letters • not convergent, ‘what I know / think’
EAP WRITING is: analytical not impressionistic objective not subjective intellectual not emotional serious not conversational impersonal not personal formal not colloquial
Teaching writing: top down • Researching • Structuring research notes • Understanding models • Organising information into paragraphs • Writing topic sentences
The TOWER of Production Thinking Organizing Writing Editing Rewriting audience, purpose, content information from research, knowledge, opinion appropriate writing plan writing for the writer – cohesion writing for the reader – coherence
We can start with a few facts ... 75% - 85% of EAP is in … … the present (including passives) 10% - 15% of EAP is in … … the past (including passives) 5% - 10% of EAP uses … … modals (Source: Various inc. Longman Grammar of Written and Spoken English)
And ... 90% of EAP is in the simple aspect 7% of EAP is in the perfect aspect 3% of EAP is in the progressive aspect 0.5% of EAP is in the perfect progressive aspect (Source: Longman Grammar of Written and Spoken English)
EAP Grammar the complex noun phrase clause joining clause embedding prepositional phrases stance adverbials
How does ESAP differ from EAP material? • Content-centred approach to promote more meaningful learning • teaches students to cope with input texts in their discipline (lectures, research articles, etc.) • Addresses variations within disciplines - different skills, conventions, lexis and register
ESAP students need … TOP DOWN SKILLS to use specific information from the field to check and develop arguments and theories Building background knowledge enables ESAP English for Specific Academic Purposes •
ESAPWhat background knowledge? • What is the discipline? • What are its branches? • What does a practitioner do? • What is the history of the discipline? • Who are the great people in the discipline – biography? • What are the great works in the discipline – references? • What are the basic principles / knowledge in the discipline? • What are the current issues? • What are the contentious issues? • Are there any Health and Safety issues (if relevant)? • How do you distinguish fact from opinion in the discipline? • What might the future hold?
ESAP Disciplinary variations: Disciplines see reality in different ways
ESAP Learning tasks Humanities & social sciences Analysing & synthesizing from multiple sources Science and technology Describing procedures, defining procedures, planning solutions
ESAP Lexis and collocation Common core ignores multiple meanings Consist means ‘stay the same’ in the social sciences and ‘composed of’ in the sciences Volume means “book’ in applied linguistics and ‘quantity’ in biology Abstract means ‘remove’ in engineering and ‘theoretical’ in social sciences
ESAP Reporting conventions Social sciences; Verbs which refer to writing activities: discuss, hypothesize, suggest, argue Engineers and scientists: Verbs which refer to research activities: observe, discover, show, analyse, etc
Self-mention (per 1,000 words) Philosophy 5.5 Marketing 5.5 Applied Linguistics 4.5 Sociology 4.3 Physics 4.1 Biology 3.4 Electrical engineering 3.3 Mechanical engineering 1.0
Stance features (per 1000 words) Philosophy 42.8 Sociology 31.1 App Ling 37.2 Marketing 39.5 Physics 25.0 Mech Eng 19.8 Elec Eng 21.6
Discipline Citations per 1000 words Biology 15.5 Sociology 12.5 Philosophy 10.8 Applied Linguistics 10.8 Marketing 10.1 Electronic Engineering 8.4 Physics 7.4 Mechanical Engineering 7.3
Some implications for teaching.. Use target-language authentic texts Encourage analysis Encourage critical thinking Encourage reflection Use authentic models Use expert informants
and .................... S What we teach in any kind of content based course is not the content itself but some form of the discourse of that content. ESAP should equip students with the vocabulary and skills they need to enable them to study their chosen discipline in the most effective way.