SYLLABUS
Academic Year
2013-2014
Year IV Term VIII
|
ASSESSMENT
|
1. STUDENT TEACHING (24/03/14 - 27/04/14)
|
|
Textbook “English
Thematic Vocabulary
Vocabulary Work
Discussion
Translation & Interpreting Practice
Texts
“Gryphon” by
My Best Teaching Practice
Top 10 Reasons To Become
A Teacher Top 5 Things To Consider Before Becoming A Teacher
Additional Texts
|
Essay 1:
Why is teaching practice a culminating experience in teacher
preparation? Dwell on its key position in the programme of teacher education
Rendering 1:
«Мое педагогическое кредо»
|
2. LAW. COURTS & TRIALS (28/04/14 - 08/06/14)
|
|
Textbook “English
Thematic Vocabulary
Vocabulary Work
Discussion
Translation & Interpreting Practice
Texts
“A Time To Kill” by John Grisham
Judicial Institutions
The Legal System In The USA/Britain/Russia
Trial By The Jury
Kinds Of Cases
Capital Punishment
Juvenile Crime
Alternative Sentences
Additional Texts
|
Essay 2:
Dwell on the saying, “Crime and bad lives are the
measure of a state’s failure.” (H.G. Wells)
Translation 1
|
DEBTS (09/06/14 – 15/06/14)
|
Listening Comprehension
Laboratory works
Video
Being Julia
The Emperor’s Club
A Time To Kill
The Life of David Gale
24/03 – 30/03 Biography and works of William Somerset Maugham.
“Theatre”: Pre-reading activities, tasks to Ch.1-6
31/03 – 06/04 Edgar Allan Poe The Tell-Tale Heart
07/04 – 13/04 Aldous Huxley The Giaconda Smile
14/04 – 20/04 Graham Greene The Case For The Defense
21/04 – 27/04 W.S.Maugham. “Theatre”: tasks to Ch.7-14
28/04 – 04/05 O’Henry The Man Higher Up
05/05 – 11/05 Edmund Wilson The Man Who Shot Snapping Turtles
12/05 – 18/05 John Grisham The Testament
19/05 – 25/05 W.S. Maugham. “Theatre”: tasks to Ch.15-24
26/05 – 01/06 John Grisham The Street Lawyer
02/06 – 08/06 W.S. Maugham. “Theatre”: tasks to Ch.25-29, A
Retrospective Look. Movies. Discussion.
09/06 – 15/06 Pleasure Reading
PORTFOLIO
YEAR IV TERM VIII
ACADEMIC YEAR: 2013-2014
GROUP:__________
STUDENT:__________________________________________
TEACHER:__________________________________________
YOUR PORTFOLIO
You are required to have a
portfolio. A well-maintained, organized portfolio will be one of your most
important study tools as you learn to communicate in English. You are required
to keep all your English papers in it.
Your portfolio should be used
solely for one subject: English conversation class. It should be in a good
shape. Creativity is a must.
You will need subdividers
clearly labeled for each topic.
Your portfolio will contain:
1. Cover sheet (Student's name,
year, term, group, language instructor)
2. Vocabulary pertaining to the
topic (in handwriting)
3. Topics studied on the
curriculum (ready for presentation in oral and multimedia form)
4. Lab. Works written tasks,
Listening Comprehension written tasks, video accounts
5. Reviews on your Pleasure
Reading Book
6. Individual Reading Book tasks
and reviews
7. Miscellaneous: handouts,
texts, interesting documents collected by you or your peer students.
All entries in the portfolio
must be dated and labeled according to the theme or topic.
Your portfolio should be kept
up-to-date on a regular basis.
Preferably A4 paper should be
used.
Keep your portfolio and its
contents for future reference, they will come in handy one day!
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Student Teaching
1. What surprised you most
during your first day of student teaching?
2. Were you happy with the school
you were appointed?
3. Did you like the class you
were assigned?
4. Were there any unexpected
things at your first lesson?
5. Was pupils' level of
knowledge of English high or far below the level required for a particular
form?
6. Did your pupils realize that
you were but a student teacher or did they regard you as if you were a regular
teacher?
7. Did the regular teacher or
the institute supervisors give you any useful recommendations about helpful
teaching techniques?
8. Did you ever feel at a loss
at a lesson, why?
9. Did you manage to write good
plans of your lessons or were you up a dark valley sometimes?
10. Did you use the suggestions that you were given in the course of methodology?
11. Were the pupils in your
class alert, attentive, responsive, willing to learn or were they restless and
inattentive?
12. Did you have any
troublemakers in your class (who, for instance, was talking back, chatting all
the time, was jabbering, was calling out, was making silly remarks, was fooling
around, in fact, was creating a disturbance and was a general nuisance)?
13. Did you ever experience
during your student teaching that you couldn't control your feelings? Did you
yell at the pupils?
14. Did you often have formal
observation lessons? Were there many people to observe you? Did you regard your
observation lessons as an ordeal or did you look forward to them?
15. Did your supervisor or your
formal teacher, whoever the observer might be, criticize you on many points?
Was the criticism justified as a rule?
16. Were there any disheartening
episodes while you were observed?
17. Did you try to be a tyrant
of a teacher or were you a softie?
18. Do you believe you are now
familiar with all the teaching techniques or do you think you still have much
to learn?
19. Do you think you managed to
apply practically all the theoretical things you were taught at the Institute?
20. Have you acted as
substitute-teacher? Can you enumerate pros and cons of substitute-teaching?
21. Did your student-teaching
come up to your expectations?
22. What advice can you give to
your fellow-students concerning
student-teaching?
Law. Courts & Trials
1. What is the duel court system existing in the USA ? What three levels of courts
does it consist of?
2. What is the jurisdiction of the trial court? Define the jurisdiction
of the common pleas courts.
3. What kind of civil matters are brought to common pleas courts?
Electorate on probate, domestic relation and juvenile matters.
4. Speak about the jurisdiction of state and federal courts of appeals
and state supreme courts.
5. What is the duty of the US Supreme Court?
6. Who are the participants of the legal procedure?
9. What kinds of offences are known to you? Specify the felony and
misdemeanor.
10. What penalties and sentences are imposed in the USA courts?
11. How is jury selected? What is the difference between a grand jury
and a petit jury?
12. What is the job of a juror? What qualities should a good juror have?
What requirements should one meet to be eligible for jury service?
13. What is a civil case?
14. Who is a plaintiff?
15. Who is a defendant?
16. What is a complaint?
17. What is a counterclaim?
18. Who is the plaintiff in a criminal case?
19. How many jurors are necessary to agree upon the verdict in a civil
case?
21. How many jurors are necessary to agree upon the verdict in a
criminal case?
22. What do you think of the causes of juvenile crime in disadvantaged
and affluent families?
23. What measures do you think can help to prevent juvenile crime? How
does the juvenile justice system try to treat and rehabilitate youngsters?
24. What is the role of drug addiction and alcohol consumption in the
growing crime rate in juvenile delinquency? 25. Do you believe that aggression
is innate in man, that is in his/her genes?
26. Do the terms “capital punishment” and “death penalty” mean the same?
What is lynching?
27. Can we speak about “effectiveness of capital punishment”?
28. What are the classical moral arguments in favor of and against death
penalty? Does death penalty exist in the USA
and in Britain ?
29. Do you agree with the opinion “Get punishment fit the crime”?
30. What is alternative sentencing? What kind of alternative sentences
are being practiced now?
EXAMINATION
TOPICS
Year
4, Term 8
2013-2014
1. Home Reading .
The book in your Pleasure Reading: Are they the books we always have time to
read? Substantiate your choice. Dwell on one of the books that gave you
pleasure, give reasonable arguments. Speak about its subject, theme,
characters, central problems (on the example of an extract from the book).
Interpret it.
2. Home Reading .
Speak about William Somerset Maugham, his life, occupation and creative work,
his manner of writing. Interpret the novel “Theatre” according to the plan
given, be ready to comment on the characters and problems.
3. Home Reading
vs. Movies. Speak
on the movie after W.S. Maugham’s novel “Theatre” (“Being Julia”): compare
the plots, genres, production periods, main characters and events, talk on the
way it corresponds to the original text.
4. Home Reading .
Edgar Allan Poe – the founding father of the horror story genre. Speak in
detail on his style and his place in the world literature. Interpret the short
story “The Tell-Tale Heart”.
5. Home Reading .
Aldous Huxley – speak on his style and his place in the world literature.
Interpret the short story “The Gioconda Smile”. Comment on the author’s message
in the following lines, “He felt that some extraordinary kind of justice was
being done. …It was tit for tat, and God existed after all”. Do you agree with
the author’s philosophy?
6. Home Reading .
Graham Greene – speak on his style and his place in the world literature.
Interpret the short story “The Case For The Defense”. Comment on the problem of
“divine vengeance” raised in the story.
7. Home Reading .
O’Henry is famous for surprise endings and the lawlessness of his stories.
Speak on his style and his place in the world literature. Interpret the short
story “The Man Higher Up”. Comment on the lawless element revealed in it.
8. Home Reading .
Ch. Baxter – speak on his style and his place in the world literature. Give
your opinion on the story “Gryphon” by Ch. Baxter. Do you approve of Miss
Ferenczi's methods of teaching. Would you like your child to be taught by a
teacher like Miss Ferenczi?
9. Home Reading .
John Grisham – speak on his style and his place in the world literature.
Interpret an excerpt from his legal thriller “A Time To Kill”. Speak about its
subject, theme, characters, central problems. Be ready to name and discuss his
other works.
10. Home Reading
vs. Movies. Speak
on the movie after John Grisham’s legal thriller “A Time To Kill”: compare the
plots, genres, main characters and events, talk on the way it corresponds to
the original text.
11. Movies. Give a review of the movie “The Life of David Gale”.
Comment on the statement, “The crime is clear, the truth is not”.
12. Movies. Give a review of the movie “The Emperor’s Club”. Comment on
the statement, “In everyone's life there's that one person who makes all the
difference”.
13. Student Teaching. Describe your first student teaching experience.
Did it come up to your expectations? What could you have done differently?
14. Student Teaching. Share
your ideas on what makes a good teacher and what makes a teacher bad.
15. Student Teaching. Discuss the limitations imposed by the
teaching profession and the rewards of it.
16. Student Teaching. What should the 21st century classroom look like?
Could interactive technology provide solutions to the current system of
education?
17. Student Teaching. What are the advantages/disadvantages of learning
models that exist outside of traditional educational institutions?
18. Student Teaching. Dwell on the issue raised in the essay “Angels
on a Pin” be Alexandra Calandra. What is the basic purpose of tests and examinations?
19. Student Teaching. Why is teaching practice a culminating experience
in teacher preparation? Dwell on its key position in the programme of teacher
education. (Argumentative Essay)
20. Law. Courts and Trials. Speak on the USA Legal System, dwell on its
strong and weak points.
21. Law. Courts and Trials. Speak on trial by the jury (the history,
participants and procedure), dwell on its strong and weak points.
22. Law. Courts and Trials. “For centuries the death penalty, often
accompanied by barbarous refinements, has been trying to hold crime in check;
yet crime persists” (ALBERT CAMUS). Speak on the effectivenes of capital
punishment, provide arguments for and against the death penalty.
23. Law. Courts and Trials. Speak on juvenile crime, dwell on causes of
delinquency and methods of treatment of offenders.
24. Law. Courts and Trials. Dwell on the notion “creative justice”,
its pros and cons. Is it really true justice?
25. Law. Courts and Trials. Dwell on the saying, “Crime and bad lives
are the measure of a state’s failure.” (H.G. Wells). (Argumentative Essay)
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий