Navigating English Medium Instruction
Routledge (Verlag)
978-1-032-89298-6 (ISBN)
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This is a valuable resource for any EMI student across the world, EMI teachers, EAP/ESP educators, and academic support staff.
This skills-oriented handbook for English Medium Instruction (EMI) learners provides students with a toolbox of strategies and approaches to maximize their performance in their courses.
EMI learners are students who are studying an academic subject, other than English itself, through the medium of English. Through a series of carefully designed exercises and awareness-raising tasks showcased in this book, students can develop the skills and strategies they need to optimize their academic performance in the face of considerable academic and language challenges. This accessible text is full of strategies for students to use the English language they already have in order to engage more fully in their academic courses. They will become much more efficient at preparing for, performing in, and reflecting on their classes. The book covers preparing for classes (pre-flight activities); performing in classes (in-flight strategies); and reflecting on classes (after landing).
Grounded in the research of EMI teaching and learning and in extensive teacher-training within EMI, this is a valuable resource for any EMI student studying in a university across the world, as well as EMI teachers, EAP/ESP educators, and academic support staff who work with EMI learners.
Ernesto Macaro is Emeritus Professor of Applied Linguistics at the University of Oxford. Before becoming a teacher educator and researcher in language learning he was a language teacher for 16 years. His research has focused on second language learning strategies and on the interaction between teachers and learners. He now applies these foci to classrooms where academic content is being taught through English. Mark Searle is an Honorary Norham Fellow, Associate of the EMI Research Group and previously was a Lecturer in ELT in the University of Oxford Department of Education. For many years he was a senior consultant teacher trainer for the British Council, designing and delivering teacher training courses in EAP and EMI in universities worldwide. This experience has given him considerable insight into the needs of EMI teachers and learners in many different contexts. He has also co-designed and co-delivered EMI teacher training courses with Ernesto Macaro both in the Department of Education and abroad.
Contents
Some reactions of students from sri lanka and from hong kong
Chapter 1 : INTRODUCTORY SECTIONS
1.1a How to work with this book
1.1b A glossary of terms used in this book
1.2 Your Transition From School To University
1.3 Let’s ‘Situate’ Your Emi Subject
1.4 What Are You EMI Lessons Like?
1.5 Your ‘Language Support’ Programme
1.6 Dealing with words: Technical words; Technical-plus words; general academic words; Everyday words
Chapter 2 : AROUND YOUR CLASSES – BEFORE TAKING OFF!
2.1 Strategies For You To Consider Just Before The Lesson
2.2 Technical And Academic Words In A Text
2.3 Keywords and the ‘concept iceberg’
2.4 Before the lecture: Getting ready!
2.5 Using the Lecture Title And Course Outline To Prepare
2.6 Knowing Your Lecturer’s Voice And Language
2.7 Online Lectures And Podcasts
2.8 Preparing To Listen To Your Teacher: Using Audio Recordings
2.9 Pre-Lecture Reading: Your Own Reasons For Reading
2.10 Pre-Reading Around Your Classes
Chapter 3 : IN-FLIGHT STRATEGIES – COPING WITH TURBULENCE
3.1 Note Taking: What goes on in our brains!
3.2 Making in-flight lecture notes
3.3 Strategies To Think About During The Lesson
3.4 Discourse Markers: Navigating a lecture
3.5 The Prior Knowledge Strategy When Listening
3.6 The IRF Sequence: What It Is For; What It Does; How To Deal With It.
3.7 You and your Home Language: To Use Or Not To Use, That Is The Question!
3.8 Language Demands Of Notes
Chapter 4 : AROUND YOUR CLASSES – REFLECTING AFTER LANDING
4.1 Improving your note taking together
4.2 The Power of Talking
4.3 Work With Course-Mates – From Notes To Connected Speech
4.4 Accountable Talk – Making It All A Little More Formal
4.5 Multiword units
4.6 Word families
4.7 Gently persuading your teacher
4.8 Elaborate Interrogation – How/Why?
4.9 Guided Reciprocal Peer Questioning – The Power Of Questions And Answers!
4.10 Reflecting On Questions Post-Lesson
4.11 Examples Of Socratic Questions – Invitations To Better Thinking
4.12 Ideas For Better Answers
4.13 Developing Your Range Of Rhetorical Functions
4.14 Working On Your Own With Your Smartphone
4.15 Modified Cornell Notes – From In-Flight Note-Taking To Post-Flight Note-Making
4.16 Post-Class Reading For Writing
4.17 Writing
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 1.3.2025 |
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Zusatzinfo | 12 Tables, black and white; 5 Line drawings, black and white; 5 Illustrations, black and white |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 152 x 229 mm |
Themenwelt | Schulbuch / Wörterbuch ► Wörterbuch / Fremdsprachen |
Geisteswissenschaften ► Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft ► Sprachwissenschaft | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Pädagogik | |
ISBN-10 | 1-032-89298-6 / 1032892986 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-032-89298-6 / 9781032892986 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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