Assignment of English For Specific Purposes (ESP)
Assignment of English For Specific Purposes (ESP)
Assignment of English For Specific Purposes (ESP)
By :
2018
NEEDS ANALYSIS
Learners need to learn English because all courses are based on a perceived need of some
sort. The differences between ESP and GE are mostly In theory nothing, in practice a great
deal. In General English, GE learner’s needs are not specifiable, and this is the weakest of all
arguments. It is always possible to specify needs. There is always an identifiable need of
some sort.
1. Target needs: what the students needs to do in the target situation Learning needs: what
the students needs to do in order to learn. In Target Needs there are:
a) Necessities: according to the demands of the target situation, this is what the learner has to
know in order to function effectively in that situation. Business letter/the linguistic features,
discoursal,funti onal, structural, lexical communicate effectively at sales conferences/ Getting
information from sales catalogues.
b) Lacks: according to what the learner already knows, we decide what necessities are
missing. There is a gap between the existing proficiency and the target proficiency.
c) Wants: according to what we have considered from an objective POV, we have to say that
„a need does not exist independent of a person. Gathering Information About Target Needs
Different ways in which information can be gathered about needs: Questionnaires, Interviews,
Observation , Data collection, Informal consultations, Important: the choice will depend on
the time and resources available. And, needs analysis is not a once-for-all activity. It should
be a continuing process.
3. Learning needs is What we have not considered yet is the route. How are we going to get
from our starting point to the destination? The whole ESP process is concerned not with
knowing or doing, but with learning. We need to take into account the destination or needs of
a learning situation: A task that is enjoyable, fulfilling, manageable, generative, etc. A
project in class can be guided in terms of its general orientation by the target situation, but its
specific content is a response to learning needs.
For example, in a target situation students may need to read long, dull, complex texts, but
their motivation may be high because:
3. They will carry out interesting experiments or practical work (based on the texts) 4. They
like and/or respect the teacher/boss.
Case Study In a class, there is one ESP student who feels bored when he is learning (not only
in the class but also out of the class). For example: when his friends anthuciastic to speak and
discuss, he stays silent. As a teacher, could you make an order based on the target needs from
necessities, lacks and wants to solve the problem?
ESP (English for Specific Purposes) involves teaching and learning of specific skills and
language needed by particular learners for a particular purpose. ESP makes use of the
methodology and activities of the disciplines it serves. ESP is centered on the language
(grammar, lexis, register), skills, discourse and genres appropriate to these activities.
Course design is the process by which the raw data about a learning need is interpreted in
order to produce an integrated series of teaching-learning experiences, whose ultimate aim is
to lead the learners to a particular state of knowledge the appproaches to course design there
are:
APPLICATION
1. THE SYLLABUS
a. The evaluation syllabus: It focuses on what successful learner will know by the end of
the course. It is concerned with “the nature of language and linguistic performance” It
puts record the basis on which success or failure will be evaluated. It is the most familiar
type as the document handed down by ministries or other regulating bodies.
b. The organisational syllabus: It states the order in which it is to be studied. It is an
implicit statement about the nature of language and learning. It differs from the
evaluation syllabus in that: 1. It carries assumptions about the nature of learning as well
as language in organizing items in a syllabus. 2. It is necessary to consider factors which
depend upon a view of how people learn. (e.g. What is more easily learnt? What is more
useful in the classroom? Are some items needed in order to learn other items?
c. The materials syllabus:
• It does not describe how learning will be achieved.
• Interpreted by the materials writer.
• The author adds more assumption about the nature of language, language learning, and
language use
d. The teacher syllabus: The great majority of students in the world learn through the
mediation of a teacher. Teacher can influence the clarity, intensity, and frequency of
any item and affect the image that the learner receive. Different capability of teachers
will bring different result in conducting the course/classroom.
e. The classroom syllabus: What is planned and what actually happens are different things.
A classroom is a dynamic and interactive environment A lesson is a communicative
event created by the interactions. A classroom creates condition affecting the nature of
a planned lesson. (eg. Hot weather, tired students, noise, interruption, etc)
f. The learner syllabus: It is an internal syllabus. It is a retrospective record of what has
been studied rather than a prospective plan of what will be studied. It crucially
influences on whether and how future knowledge is studied. Learners must be taken
into account on a continuing basis through every stage of the course design process.
Language is a complex entity, it cannot be learnt is a very short time. Better management of
study time, assessments, and reading materials. In practical benefits, a syllabus gives moral
support to the teacher and learner An ESP syllabus is a projected route (the teacher and
learners will know where they’re going and how they get there) A syllabus provides a set of
criteria for material selection and writing. A syllabus as a standardizing tool. It is a visible
basis for testing. The dangers regarding a syllabus A syllabus is a model-a statement of an
ideal. A syllabus is not a statement of what will be learnt but it constitute an approximate
statement of what will be taught. A syllabus cannot express the intangible factors that are so
crucial to learning: emotions, personalities, subjective views, motivation. A syllabus cannot
take account of individual differences. On what criteria can a syllabus be organised?
Topics syllabus: Topics are selected from the students’ specialist studies. (e.g.
health/pollution) Topic syllabus •The focus is on aspects of grammar
Structural/ situational syllabus: The focus is on communication. It entails conceptual
meanings and communicative purpose. (e.g. notional: time/space; functional:
request/apology)
Functional/notional syllabus • It is based on one or more English skills and also the
microskills. (Reading skill, microskill: skimming, scanning, reading for information)
Skills syllabus On what criteria can a syllabus be organised? • the situations or
contexts in which the language will be used and analyses the language needed for
those situations. (e.g. classroom/post office/night market)
Situational syllabus •consisting of a set of real world tasks or activities ordered
according to cognitive difficulty. (e.g. organizing an event/writing a report)
Task-based syllabus •It emphasizes in communcation. Making an oral presentation is
an example of a macroskill , including microskills such as control of gestures and
body language.
Discourse syllabus
MATERIAL EVALUATION
Three ways of turning your course design into actual teaching materials:
MATERIALS EVALUATION
Three ways of turning your course design into actual teaching materials:
2. Analyze the materials you have selected by answering the B question. If possible, test your
ideas by teaching extracts from the material.
Materials Design
Defining Objectives
INPUT: Stimulus materials for activities •New language items •Correct models of language
use •A topic for communication •Opportunities for learners to use their information
processing skills •Opportunities for learners to use existing knowledge
CONTENT FOCUS: •Conveying feeling about sth •Non -Lx content should be exploited to
generate meaningful communication in the classroom
LANGUAGE FOCUS •Enable learners to use language •Good materials hould involve both
opportunities for analysis and syntesis
TASK •Materials can lead towards a communicative task in which the learners use the
content and knowledge they have built through the unit.
Sample materials
A model must be able to ensure adequate coverage through the syllabus of all the features
identified as playing a role in the learning development. There needs to be a coherence
between the unit structure and the syllabus structure to ensure that the course provides
adequate and appropriate coverage of syllabus items.
Conclusion
Don’t reinvent the wheel, Work in a team, Set up draft, Time is important, Pay attention to
your materials.
Methodology
Analysis
Gaps
Variety : Spice of learning. How to achieve? Variety of medium: text, tape, etc. Variety of
classroom organization: whole class, pair,Variety of learners roles: presenter, evaluator.
Variety of exercise, Variety of skills: listening, writing. Variety of topic, Variety of focus
EVALUATION
Placement test: to determine the learner’s state of knowledge before the course begins to
put learners into the course suitable to their needs this test is diagnostic to indicate how far
and in what ways the learners falls short of the proficiency level. good placement test
should reveal positive factors, not just show the learner lacks but also his potential that can
be exploited in ESP course. problems: do the test can accurately diagnose the learner’s
needs? what’s important is that any placement test can only be approximate guide and
should be treated with due caution.
Achievement test: to see how well the learners keep up with the syllabus principles: - test
what the students have learnt - test what to test - no bias in the test.
b. It is an integrated task
Proficiency test to assess whether the students can cope with any particular situations to
assess whether the students can perform the language tasks required for them (Davies and
West, 1984) this test is criterion-referencing so that there is no pass/fail distinction but rather
a scale of degrees of proficiency in the task.
problems:- what makes communicative performance possible? - what features are crucial to
the real-life performance? - how specific of specific?
Course Evaluation
Needs of ESP Learners Is the course fulfilling the learners’ language learning needs?
Needs as language users Is the course fulfilling the learners’ language using needs?
How can ESP course be evaluated?: Institution Teachers Sponsors Learners Former students
Who should be involved in the evaluation? At the beginning of the course - At regular
intervals - At the end of the course.