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EIL2110 - English as an International Language: Meaning, Language and Purpose

6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL

Undergraduate Faculty of Arts

Leader: Lorraine Bullock

Offered

Clayton First semester 2007 (Day)

Synopsis

This unit examines how form and function in English are seen as part of the interaction between the participants in a language situation, both in speech and writing. It is based on a functional approach to language study, especially on Halliday's concept of language as a social semiotic. This view of language is one that takes the broad, social context of the situation as an important influence on the system of choices made by the language user. Students are asked to consider the importance of social perspective of language through the concept of field, tenor and mode.

Objectives

At the completion of this unit it is expected that students, as multilingual speakers, will be able to:

  1. Identify and manipulate the appropriate English form and structure in a variety of language functions.
  2. Recognize major contextual influences on language choice.
  3. Understand the differences in language features between written and spoken texts.
  4. Understand the importance of field, tenor and mode as a model of language use in a variety of contexts, especially those contexts that have a cultural significance for the multilingual speaker.
  5. Identify the influences that affect appropriate forms of language associated with different contexts.
  6. Select the appropriate forms of cohesion for a wide variety of texts in English.
  7. Construct spoken and written texts with appropriate responses in various authentic language situations; which is quite distinct from constructing a grammatically correct text.
  8. Identify the power structures that operate within a range of genres and registers.
  9. Identify the role culture plays in the structure of meaning within texts in English.
  10. Understand how culture positions the multilingual writer and speaker within the context of the language situation.
  11. Reflect on their own language practices in a variety of situations.
  12. Use their own language background as a resource within the multilingual situation.

Assessment

Written (1500 words) : 40%
Test (1 hour) : 15%
Oral Presentation (800 words) : 15%
Participation : 5%
Research Project: 25%

Contact hours

two hours/week

Prerequisites

Faculty of Arts second language entry criteria