Topic outline

  • Introduction

     

    Course Overview

    The course will be suitable for learners who have entered tertiary level of education and have to study through the medium of English, but are not skilled enough to meet the demands of academic reading and writing. The course will help learners attain Study Skills necessary for studying in English. 


    Objectives:

    To enable students to:

    • listen to English spoken to them and understand instructions, commands, requests, etc.

    • speak English to respond to questions asked and express themselves

    • read short texts and answer questions on contents of the text

    • write coherent paragraphs to express their thoughts and feelings


    Contents: 

    • Countable/uncountable nouns and the use of articles

    • Use of adverbs and adjectives

    • Sentence types and structures

    • Use of tenses

    • Modal auxiliaries and conditionals

    • Commonly used prepositions

    • Subject-verb Agreement

    • Use of  Passive Voice

    • Use of Reported Speech


    The above will be taught in the context of texts, tasks and activities – and will involve the practice of skills of listening, speaking, reading, and writing.





  • TENSE

    Introduction:  

    Tense is a category that expresses time reference with reference to the moment of speaking. Verbs come in three tenses: past, present, and future. The past is used to describe things that have already happened (e.g., earlier in the day, yesterday, last week, three years ago). The present tense is used to describe things that are happening right now, or things that are continuous. The future tense describes things that have yet to happen (e.g., later, tomorrow, next week, next year, three years from now).

    Objectives:

     1. Students will learn about three types of tense

     2. They will be able to use tense correctly

     3. They will be able to recognize all types of tense

    Content:

    1.Present  tense

    2. Past tense

    3. Future tense

  • ARTICLES

    Introduction: 

    An article is a word used to modify a noun, which is a person, place, object, or idea. Technically, an article is an adjective, which is any word that modifies a noun. Usually adjectives modify nouns through description, but articles are used instead to point out or refer to nouns. There are two different types of articles that we use in writing and conversation to point out or refer to a noun or group of nouns: definite and indefinite articles.

    Objectives:

    1. Students will learn about  Articles.

    2. They will be able to use articles properly in both writing and speaking skill

    Content:

    1. Definite article (the)

    2. Indefinite articles (a, an)

  • ADJECTIVES OR ADVERBS

    Introduction:

    An adjective is a word or set of words that modifies (i.e., describes) a noun or pronoun. Adjectives may come before the word they modify. An adverb is a word or set of words that modifies verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. Adverbs answer how, when, where, why, or to what extent—how often or how much (e.g., daily, completely).

    Content:

    1. Different rules of identifying adverbs and adjectives


  • QUANTIFIERS

    Introduction:

    In grammar, a quantifier is a type of determiner (such as all, some, or much) that expresses a relative or indefinite indication of quantity. Quantifiers usually appear in front of nouns (as in all children), but they may also function as pronouns (as in All have returned). complex quantifier is a phrase (such as a lot of) that functions as a quantifier.

    Content:

    1. Different quantifiers like some,any, no, many, few, little and so on.

  • Instruction for mid-term exam and marks distribution

    Mid- term Syllabus:

    1. Tense(Simple and continuous present, past and future)

    2. Quantifiers

    3. Articles

    4. Adjectives or adverbs

    5. Paragraph writing

    6. Passage comprehension


    Marks distributions:

    1. Reading: 5

    2. Writing: 5

    3. Grammar: 15

    Total : 25

    • CONDITIONALS

      Introduction

      Conditional sentence definition: A conditional sentence is a type of sentence that states a condition and the outcome of that condition occurring. Conditional sentences are made up of a dependent clause and an independent clause joined to express said condition.

      Objectives:

      1. Students will learn about conditional sentences

      2. They will be able to use conditional sentences in academic as well as in real life

      Content:

      1. Zero conditional 

      2. First conditional

      3. Second conditional

      4. Third conditional

    • VOICE CHANGE

      Introduction:

      In grammar, the voice of a verb describes the relationship between the action (or state) that the verb expresses and the participants identified by its arguments (subject, object, etc.). When the subject is the agent or doer of the action, the verb is in the active voice. When the subject is the patient, target or undergoer of the action, the verb is said to be in the passive voice

      Content:

      1. Active voice

      2. Passive voice

    • NARRATION

      Introduction:

      In writing or speech, narration is the process of recounting a sequence of events, real or imagined. It's also called storytelling. Aristotle's term for narration was prothesisThe person who recounts the events is called a narrator. Stories can have reliable or unreliable narrators. For example, if a story is being told by someone insane, lying, or deluded, such as in Edgar Allen Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart," that narrator would be deemed unreliable. The account itself is called a narrative. The perspective from which a speaker or writer recounts a narrative is called a point of view. Types of point of view include first person, which uses "I" and follows the thoughts of one person or just one at a time, and third person, which can be limited to one person or can show the thoughts of all the characters, called the omniscient third person. Narration is the base of the story, the text that's not dialogue or quoted material.

      Objectives:

      1. Students will be able to use direct speech and indirect speech 

      2. They will be able to convert direct speech to indirect speech and vice versa

      Content:

      1. Direct speech

      2. Indirect speech

      3. Examples

    • Passage comprehension

      Introduction:

      Passage comprehension is used to measure students reading ability. They will be given a passage to comprehend. They will have to answer different questions from the passage.


      Objectives:

      1. To make students able to find out the main ideas of the passage

      2. Make them able to paraphrase and summarize successfully.

      3. To read read within a short period time

      Content:

      1. Different passage for practicing

      2. Paraphrasing 

      3. Summarizing