Mission Statement
The mission of the Language Support Unit is to serve the students of the Faculty of Engineering by assisting them to acquire the English proficiency and communication skills they need for their current studies and future careers as engineering professionals.
General Objectives
The course is aimed at developing the students’ writing, presentation and technical communication skills in English. The course will provide students with the tools to complete background and in-depth reading, design research tools, do research, write reports and make recommendations based on the research. The course will also provide students with the tools to make presentations based on their own research using computer-based presentation programmes. The course will further extend the students’ use of spoken English at the upper Intermediate and advanced levels.
Aims of the Course
In this course,
1. Students will write reports and technical documents using the AIMRAD model based on their own research.
2. Students will read, research and discuss current topics related to general and technical issues, (specifically issues regarding ethical problems related to general engineering.)
3. Students will engage in lifelong learning activities.
4. Students will present their research findings in PowerPoint presentations.
5. Students will identify and analyze key texts and other professional and scientific sources of information and write literature reviews.
6. Students will identify universal and important concepts, research and structure the content and ensure that it is accurate, clear and concise.
7. Strudents will visit the library and make use of its resources
8. Students will create a project portfolio of completed work.
Textbooks/materials
- Markel, Mike. (2006) Technical Communication, (teacher reference)
- Woolever (2002) Writing for Technical Professions (teacher reference)
- Writing in English: A Practical Handbook for Scientific and Technical Writer. Svobodva et al. 2000
- Face to Face with Basic Research & Communication: A Process & Project-based Course. LSU Team. 2010
Attendance Rules
Attendance for the whole course: 80% minimum. DN grade will be given to students who have 20% unexcused absences (1 absence = one period of 50 minutes).
Students should come to every class on time and ready to participate fully in the lesson.
Students who arrive more than 15 minutes late are recorded absent.
STUDENT PORTFOLIO
Organization is the key to a successful life. Students, and more so engineers, MUST be organized. As a student, it's very important to organize yourself from the very start of your course. This is true for all courses, not just this one. One of the ways to organize your work is by keeping a portfolio. IE204 requires you to keep your portfolio in an A4 two-ring binder with an A4 writing pad always ready to take notes, so bring your portfolio to EVERY class you attend!
You are also required to organize and label your portfolio dividers in the following way, an example of this should be presented to you by your tutor together with this document;
Front Cover: Your name
Student number
Course title, code and date
Institution
Your email address and your phone number
Your Teacher's name
1st Divider: Course Outline
Contents page
Any other official administrative documentation
2nd Divider: Classwork
Notes taken in class (which is EVERYTHING your tutor presents to you!)
All handouts (including samples, class quizzes and activity sheets)
3rd Divider: Research Material
All collected data
Graphs, diagrams, charts or any information gathered through surveys conducted by you.
4th Divider: Write Up
Include proposal and abstract if submitted in writing
Include all complete drafts 1st, 2nd and Final
5th Divider: Presentation Material
A full printout of all the slides used in presentation
Presentation written speech notes if used
Evaluation (Mainly formative
Tasks & Tests
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Evaluation
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PROJECT
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50%
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PORTFOLIO
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20%
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FINAL TEST
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10%
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PRESENTATION
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20%
|
|
|
To pass the course you must get at least 60% final grade.
There will be no exception to the rule
WEEKLY Breakdown
WEEKS
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TASKS
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1
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- Discuss Course Outline & Portfolios
- (course outline quiz)
- Research sample from Password (Why & When we Laugh)
- Introduction to Research
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2
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- Research Quiz from previous week – Check Portfolios
- Research Report Sample 1
|
3
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- Literature Review and Visiting the Library
- Referencing (introduction to Harvard Style)
- Brainstorm Engineering Research Areas
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4
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- Selecting a topic (Guidelines)
- Identifying useful resources (visiting the library)
- Research methods + exercises and activities
- Making a research proposal
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5
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- Collecting data
- Surveys & questionnaires
- Interviews,
- Qualitative VS Quantitative Research
|
6
|
- Data Collection
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7
|
- Data Collection
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8
|
- Data Analysis & Results
- Graphs & Charts
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9
|
Writing Up
- Introduction & Abstract
- Literature Review
- Data Collection Methods
|
10
|
Writing Up
- Data Analysis and Results
- Conclusions
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11
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- Editing, Proofreading and submission
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12
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- Oral presentations preparation and delivery
|
13
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- Final Test
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14
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- Final Portfolio Evaluation
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