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1 Lecture 5 Dr. Hameed Al-Zubeiry ESP - Language-centred Course Design - Skills-centred Course Design - A Learning-centred Course Design Approaches to ESP Course Design

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Page 1: Lecture 5

1

Lecture 5

Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

- Language-centred Course Design

- Skills-centred Course Design

- A Learning-centred Course Design

Approaches to ESP Course Design

Page 2: Lecture 5

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Three Main Approaches to ESP Course Design

Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

1) Language-centred Course Design:

- is the simplest kind of course design process

- is most familiar to English Teachers;

- aims to draw as direct connections as possible between the

analysis of the target situation and the content of ESP

course.

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESPModel of Language-centred Approach

to Course Design

NOTE: Though this approach is logical and straightforward, it fails to recognise the fact that learners are people and learning is not a straightforward process.

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

2) Skills-centred Course Design:

- Emerged in response to the students’ need to read

subject texts in English, because they are unavailable in

the mother tongue.

- a number of ESP projects have been set up with specific

aim of developing the students’ ability to read in English.

- Skills-centred course design is based on two fundamental

principles: Theoretical and pragmatic

Page 5: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

1) Theoretical hypothesis

- states that underlying any language behaviour are certain

skills and strategies, which the learner uses in order to

produce or comprehend discourse;

- aims to get away from the surface performance data and

look at the competence that underlies the performance.

Example from a Brazilian ESP syllabus for Library science students:

Page 6: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

1) Pragmatic hypothesis

- derived from a distinction made by Widdowson (1981)

between goal-oriented courses and process-oriented

courses. Holmes (1982) points out that:

“In ESP the main problem is usually one of the time available and

student experience. First, the aims may be defined in terms of what is

desirable. –i.e. to be able to read in the literature of the students’

specialism but, there may be nowhere near enough time to reach this

aim during the period of this course. Secondly, the students may be in

their first year of studies with little experience of literature of their

specialism. Accordingly, both this factors.. May be constraints which say

right from the start, “the aims cannot be achieved during the

course.”

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

- The emphasis in the ESP course, then, is not achieving a

particular set of goals, but on enabling the learners to achieve

what they can within the given constraints;

- The process oriented approach is at least realistic in

concentrating on strategies and processes of making students

aware of their own abilities and potential, and motivating them

to tackle target texts on their own after the end of the course,

so that they can continue to improve..”

Page 8: Lecture 5

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Theoretical views of language

Identify target situation

Analyze skills/ strategies required to cope in target

situation

Write syllabus

Theoretical views of learning

Select text and write exercises to focus on

skills/strategies in syllabus

Establish evaluation procedure which require the use of

skill/strategies in syllabus

Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

Page 9: Lecture 5

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3) A Learning-centred Approach

- based on the principle that learning is totally determined by the

learner. As teachers we can influence what we teach, but what

learners learn is determined by the learners alone;

-learning is seen as a process in which the learners use what

knowledge or skills they have in order to make sense of the flow of

new information;

-learning, therefore, is an internal process which is crucially

dependent upon the knowledge the learners already have and their

ability and motivation to use it;

-learning is not just a mental process, it is a process of negotiation

between individuals and society.

Page 10: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESPIdentify

Learners

Theoreticalviews of

Language

Analyze Target

Situation

Theoreticalviews of Learning

Analyze LearningSituation

Identify attitudes/wants/potential of

learners

Identify needs/ potential/ constraints of learning

teaching situation

Identify skills and knowledge needed to function in the target

situation

Write syllabus/materials to exploit the potential of the

learning situation in the acquisition of skills and

knowledge required by the target situation

EvaluationEvaluation

Page 11: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

A language-centered approach says: this is the nature of

the target situation performance and that will determine the

ESP course.

A skills-centered approach says: that’s not enough, we

must look behind target performance data to discover what

processes enable someone to perform. Those processes will

determine the ESP course.

A learning-centered approach says: that’s not enough

either. We must look beyond the competence that enables

someone to perform, because what we really want to discover

is not the competence itself, but how someone acquires that

competence.

Page 12: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESPA

com

par

ison

of

appro

ach

es t

o c

ours

e des

ign

Analyze target situation

Analyze learning situation

Write syllabus

Write materials

Teach materials

Evaluate learner achievement

Identify target situation A language-centered approachConsiders the learners to here

A skill-centered approachConsiders the learners to here

A learning-centered approachConsiders the learners to here

Page 13: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

The diagram shows that a learning-centered approach to course design takes account of the learner at every stage of the design process. This has two implications: Course design is a negotiated process. There is no single factor which has an outright determining influence on the content of the course. The ESP learning situation and the target situation with both influence the nature of the syllabus, materials, methodology and evaluation procedures. Similarly each of these components will influence and be influenced by the others.Course design is a dynamic process. It does not move in a linear fashion from initial analysis to complete course. Needs and resources vary with time. The course design, therefore, needs to have built-in feedback channels to enable the course to respond to developments.

Page 14: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-ZubeiryESP

In Short:

ESP is based on designing courses to meet Learner’s

need

What does course design

involve?

Ways of describing language

Needs Analysis

Models of learning

Approaches to course design

SECTION 2:COURSE DESIGN

Page 15: Lecture 5

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Dr. Hameed Al-Zubeiry

- Hutchinson, T., & Waters, A. (1987). English for specific purposes:

a learning-centred approach. Cambridge: Cambridge University

Press.

-Munby, J. (1978). Communicative syllabus design.

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Swales, J. (1988). Episodes in ESP. Prentice Hall.

Reading materials:

ESP