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FP073-0 Undergraduate Pre-Sessional English

Department
Warwick Foundation Studies
Level
Post-Experience
Module leader
Nigel Prentice
Credit value
0
Module duration
6 weeks
Assessment
100% coursework
Study location
Distance or Online Delivery

Introductory description

This module focuses on English for Academic Purposes, so materials are adapted to students’ respective disciplines (or related disciplines). Students develop skills that are applicable to academic research and writing processes, including techniques for finding relevant sources, assessing source quality, identifying key information, making and organising notes, and critically evaluating information from academic texts. Input on writing includes appropriate and accurate use of paraphrasing, summarising and quoting techniques as well as discipline-appropriate citation and reference practices. Iterative processes of writing to a rubric and editing written work in response to feedback are emphasised.
Students develop skills that are applicable to academic listening and speaking situations. Listening practice highlights strategies for prediction and note-taking, and supports the understanding of spoken discourse markers and rapid or elliptical speech. Collaborative, student-led discussion is emphasised as a method of developing skills for managing spoken interaction, exercising critical evaluation skills and raising student awareness of the benefits of dialogic learning.

Module aims

This module aims to prepare students for undergraduate study at a UK HE institution. Students will be introduced to common academic text types, such as journal articles and book chapters, and will engage with texts related to their respective disciplines (or related disciplines). They will gain a preliminary understanding of how guided library research can be used to acquire and evaluate knowledge around a key debate or question, and will learn how to present this knowledge in a logical and appropriately academic style. They will also be introduced to basic criteria that they can use to assess their own learning in these areas.
Students will be introduced to common modes of academic discourse and student-led seminar discussions based on set listening or reading material. Students will gain preliminary understanding of how lectures and seminars promote learning and what they (as students) are expected to do in order to facilitate this.

Outline syllabus

This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.

  • READING: selecting texts around a key debate or question; identifying key sections of longer texts; note-taking, including paraphrasing, summarising and quoting; identifying key points; critically evaluating written information; synthesising multiple texts.
  • WRITING: planning an extended piece of writing; structure and paragraphing; paraphrasing, summarising and quoting; citing (including reporting verbs) and referencing; avoiding plagiarism; formality and informality; the language of caution; coherence, cohesion and linking conjunctions.
  • LEARNER AUTONOMY: using library research tools to find source texts; self-assessing and editing written work; responding to feedback; monitoring and reflecting on learning.
  • LISTENING: predicting and listening for information; note-taking techniques; identifying signposting and other discourse markers; listening and identifying main ideas; expressing critical views on lecture content.
  • SPEAKING: taking part in small group discussions; language for participating in and co-creating knowledge within discussions; using academic resources as a basis for discussion.

Learning outcomes

By the end of the module, students should be able to:

  • Communicate with accuracy and fluency, using appropriate vocabulary and academic style to clearly and coherently convey meaning in an academic genre relevant to undergraduate study.
  • Apply online tools to conduct guided library research, evaluate and use a range of sources to provide evidence to support analysis of relevant theories within their discipline (or a related area); and display their findings in extended written form by making appropriate use of paraphrasing, quoting and summarising techniques.
  • Recognise the need to adhere to conventions of citation and reference to support claims and acknowledge others' work.
  • Critically reflect on processes of learning and set future goals for undergraduate study.
  • Implement a range of listening strategies to interpret others' speech in seminar settings to create syntheses of the information presented and to co-construct understanding.
  • Demonstrate the use of spoken academic discourse with a good range of vocabulary on various discipline-related topics to both specialist and non-specialist audiences.

Subject specific skills

Students will be trained in a range of academic reading and writing strategies. They will learn how to appropriately select from and apply these strategies in order to synthesise and evaluate information from academic texts in order to produce an extended, structured piece of writing in an appropriately academic style.
Students will be trained in a range of academic listening and speaking strategies. They will learn how to appropriately select from and apply these strategies in order to manage English-language listening and speaking situations that commonly arise in the undergraduate context, such as seminar discussions.

Transferable skills

Students will learn how to manage a time-intensive schedule that includes synchronous and asynchronous teaching input as well as self-guided study. They will also be introduced to techniques for informal self-assessment.

Study time

Type Required
Seminars (0%)
Tutorials 6 sessions of 15 minutes (1%)
Online learning (scheduled sessions) 48 sessions of 1 hour (28%)
Online learning (independent) 54 sessions of 1 hour 30 minutes (47%)
Private study 12 hours (7%)
Assessment 29 hours (17%)
Total 171.5 hours

Private study description

Using the VLE and other materials for independent learning and assessment preparation

Costs

No further costs have been identified for this module.

Students can register for this module without taking any assessment.

Assessment group A
Study time Eligible for self-certification
Assessment component
Writing Project 25 hours No

Students produce a research report informed by formative tutor feedback on shorter writing submissions. Submission includes a reflective portfolio element

Reassessment component
External language test No

Students who fail the assessment will be required to take an alternative University of Warwick approved external language test

Assessment component
Seminar 4 hours No

Group seminar discussion based on academic material relevant to the discipline

Reassessment component
External language test No

Students who fail the assessment will be required to take an alternative University of Warwick approved external language test

Feedback on assessment

Written and or audio feedback will be given to individual students through Tabula or 1 to 1 tutorials. General feedback is given in seminars.

There is currently no information about the courses for which this module is core or optional.