ENG1002 University English (II)
BA-ENG, ENG1030 English for Academic Purposes, ENG2010 English for Academic Purposes
This module aims to enhance students’ proficiency in reading and writing in an academic context and develop students’ ability in critical evaluation and reasoning. Students will hone their skills and strategies in analyzing, synthesising and evaluating authentic texts in academic settings. Students will learn to develop a critical stance and produce researched-supported texts using grammar, vocabulary, and citation styles appropriate to academic writing conventions. This module adopts the process writing approach in strengthening students’ academic writing abilities.
Upon completion of this module, students should be able to:
a. comprehend, analyse, synthesise and evaluate texts used in academic settings;
b. write academic texts that show a critical stance and are supported by academic sources and use lexical-grammatical choices appropriate to the task;
c. apply the appropriate citation style when integrating relevant information from a variety of sources into scholarly tasks.
1. Introduction to English for academic purposes
1.1. General characteristics of academic texts
1.2 Language forms and conventions, and vocabulary usage
2. Reading academic texts
2.1 Critical reading skills
2.2 Selecting and using evidence from academic sources.
3. Forming and developing a thesis in writing
3.1 Writing a thesis statement showing a critical stance
3.2 Avoiding logical fallacies
4. Integrating sources
4.1 Structuring ideas
4.2 Reporting verbs
4.3 Signalling phrases
5. Referencing and formatting
5.1 In-text citations
5.2 The reference list
5.3 Formatting conventions
6. Structure of academic research report
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Findings and Discussion
6.3 Conclusion
6.4 Recommendations
7. Effective paragraph writing
7.1 Topic sentence
7.2 Development of a paragraph
7.3 Coherence and cohesion
1. Academic Language and Citation Quiz (30%)
2. Research Report (based on secondary sources)
a. First draft (15%)
b. Final draft (45%)
3. Class participation (10%)
Reference materials: