TECHNICAL ENGLISH- II L T P C
(Common to all B.E/B.Tech programmes) 3 0 0 3 Aim: To motivate students to develop their communication skills along with the thinking skill, and thus equip them for autonomous learning.Objectives:
To enable the students to:
- Extend their power to listen to English at the advanced level and comprehend its message.
- Have a functional knowledge of spoken English at the formal levels.
- Be able to read and get the in-depth meaning of technical and non-technical passages in English.
- Master the art of writing official letters, reports, proposals, etc.
- Expand their thinking capability so that they learn how to think and verbalize their thoughts.
UNIT I 9
Listening task: Listening to technical topics. Speaking task: Debating for and against an issue – group discussion – persuading and negotiating strategies – public speaking. Reading task: Intensive reading & predicting content. Writing task: Writing extended definitions – writing paragraphs based on discussion – writing analytical paragraphs on different debatable issues – circular writing – memos – notice – agenda – minutes of a meeting. Language highlights: Technical vocabulary – one word substitution – prepositions.
UNIT II 9
Listening task: Listening to intercultural communication. Speaking task: Speaking exercises involving the use of stress and intonation – presentations based on short stories / poems. Reading task: Extended reading – suggested reading (short stories, poems). Writing task: Writing formal letters – inquiry, quotation – clarification – orders – complaint – letters seeking permission for industrial visits – book reviews – writing for the web. Language highlights: Compound adjectives – making sentences using different grammatical forms of the same word (object verb / object noun).
UNIT III 9
Listening task: Listening to interviews of famous / political personalities. Speaking task: Giving an oral presentation of a prepared report. Reading task: Critical reading – reading comprehension exercises with critical questions. Writing task: Report writing – types (industrial accident reports – survey reports – recommendation & feasibility reports) – writing recommendations. Language highlights: Impersonal passive voice – negative prefixes – direct and indirect speech.
UNIT IV 9Listening task: Listening exercises related to the TV (talk shows – news – other programmes). Speaking task: Speaking on academic topics – news reading – acting as a compeer. Reading task: Reading comprehension exercises with analytical questions on context – evaluation of context. Writing task: Writing argumentative paragraphs – writing letters of application enclosing a CV / Résumé – writing email messages – short biography writing. Language highlights: Numerical adjectives – error correction.
UNIT V 9
Listening task: Listening to films of short duration (1 to 1.5 hrs). Speaking task: Brain storming & discussion – speaking about case studies on problems and solutions – extempore speeches – non-verbal communication. Reading task: Extensive reading (novel). Writing task: Writing an essay – writing a proposal. Language highlights: If-conditionals – technical and general meanings of words.
TOTAL = 45 PERIODS
Project work: At the beginning of the semester, the students should be informed of a mini project of 3000 words which they need to submit towards the end of the semester. This can be judged as part of their internal assessment.
TEXTBOOK
- Dhanavel, S.P. 2010. English and Communication Skills for Students of Science and Engineering. Units 6-10. Chennai: Orient Blackswan.
REFERENCES
- Houp, K W., T E Pearsall, E Tebeaux, and S Dragga. 2006. Reporting Technical Information. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Ibbotson, Mark. 2009. Cambridge English for Engineering. New Delhi: Cambridge University Press.
- Mishra, Sunita., and C Muralikrishna. 2006. Communication Skills for Engineers. New Delhi: Pearson Education.
- Mohan, Krishna., and Meera Banerjee. 2009. Developing Communication Skills. 2nd edition. New Delhi: Macmillan.
- Riordian, Daniel. 2009. Technical Communication. New Delhi. Cengage Learning.
- Weiss, E H. 2009. The Elements of International English Style: A Guide to Writing Correspondence, Reports, Technical Documents, Internet Pages for a Global Audience. New Delhi: Prentice-Hall of India Ltd.
- Extensive Reading: (NOT FOR EXAMINATION) Khera, Shiv. 2011. You Can Win. New Delhi: Macmillan
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