English 1 defines and solidifies the foundational skills for effective communication in English as well as fosters international awareness, as both are typically required in the globally expanding domain of scientific and technological research activities. It also prepares students to study or do research abroad in the future. Students are assigned training exercises that cover the four language skills — reading, writing, listening, and speaking. The reading and listening materials include topics such as international and intercultural issues as well as the fundamentals of science and technology. Practice exercises in writing and speaking are provided so that students can develop confidence and competence to participate in discussions and conferences where opinions are exchanged through both text and speech. TOEFL-type exercise problems are also used in the course.
This course aims to establish a base on which students can build toward a higher level of communication competence specifically in an English language environment. The base is composed of three elements: (1) identifying relevant information accurately, (2) exercising fair judgement to form a valid opinion, and (3) stating opinions clearly and persuasively. English 1 covers these three elements, and the communication abilities acquired will help students in the future when they have to assume positions of responsibility in group activities.
Each student is assigned to a group led by an instructor. Instructors for each group conduct the course using the "Course description and aims" and "Student learning outcomes" as the basic framework. "Class direction," "Course schedule," and other information below explain the features of each class.
By the end of this course, students will:
・Become aware of the degree to which practical English abilities are required for learning at university and for research activities both in Japan and abroad
・Be able to grasp the main ideas and arguments of written and spoken materials in diverse areas including international and intercultural issues, science, and technology
・Have increased their knowledge of effective vocabulary and expressions to actively communicate their ideas and opinions in English
・Have gained confidence in using English to state their opinions
・Be able to understand the structural characteristics of good paragraphs and write their own short paragraphs with unity and coherence
Four language skills, fostering international awareness, communication skills, studying abroad, TOEFL
Specialist skills | ✔ Intercultural skills | ✔ Communication skills | Critical thinking skills | Practical and/or problem-solving skills |
Students are required to read the assigned unit in the textbook and prepare in advance. Class activities will also include TOEFL-style exercises.
Course schedule | Required learning | |
---|---|---|
Class 1 | Course Introduction | |
Class 2 | 'Unit 1 Number,' 'Unit 2 Arithmetic' | Master basic expressions of numbers, arithmetic |
Class 3 | 'Unit 3 Points and Lines,' 'Unit 4 Surfaces and angles'/ | Master basic expressions of numbers, arithmetic |
Class 4 | 'Unit 5 Spaces and volumes,' 'Unit 6 Measuring' | Master basic expressions of numbers, arithmetic |
Class 5 | Mid-term review (Number,Arithmetic,Points and Lines, Surfaces and angles,Spaces and volumes, Measuring) | Review and fix what have been learned in the last four classes. |
Class 6 | Unit 7 Algebra and formula,' 'Unit 8 Elements and compounds' | Master basic expressions of numbers, arithmetic |
Class 7 | 'Unit 9 States of matter,' 'Unit 10' | Master basic expressions of states of matter, arithmetic |
Class 8 | the Review on the whole (Number,Arithmetic,Points and Lines, Surfaces and angles,Spaces and volumes, Measuring,Algebra and formula, Elements and compounds, States of matter,Property of matter, States of matter,Property of matter) | Review and fix what have been learned in this course. |
Terry Phillips, Kenji Hitomi, and Eiichi Yubune, "Integrated Technical English," Seibido, 2005. (ISBN:978-4-7919-0075-6)
Useful sources will be referred to as necessary.
Class participation: 60% Final exam: 40%
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