English For Academic Purposes (ESP) : ESP Session IV by Mehdi Karimi Soofloo
English For Academic Purposes (ESP) : ESP Session IV by Mehdi Karimi Soofloo
English For Academic Purposes (ESP) : ESP Session IV by Mehdi Karimi Soofloo
ESP refers to any English teaching that relates to a study purpose. Students whose first language
is not English may need help with both the language of academic disciplines and the specific
study skills required of them during their academic course.
The key determinant of what an EAP course should contain is whether or not the subject course
is taught in English. Teachers need to think carefully about whether the success claimed for one
kind of situation will transfer to another, example: Materials teaching note-taking from lectures
on a pre-sessional course in a British university are unlikely to be relevant to teaching note-
making for reading an EFL situation .
1. Students come from another country to study in a foreign system; for them both general and
academic culture may be different; everyone around them operates in English.
( An English-speaking Country)
2. Education in Zimbabwe, at all levels they mainly using English. The Civil Service uses
English, but people mostly use their first language (L1) in their everyday lives.
( An English-as-a-Second-Language)
3. Professional subjects are officially taught in English while for other levels of education the
national language is used. In Jordan, tertiary education some subjects are taught in L1, but other
professional subjects are taught in English.
(A situation in which certain subjects)
4. All tertiary education in Brazil is taught in L1; English is an auxiliary language (A situation
where all subject courses are taught in the national language, but English may be important for
ancillary reasons)
In-sessional work runs in parallel with the subject course and therefore provides the opportunity
for integrated subject-language teaching and more specific work on the key skills of academic
listening, writing and reading, as well as more common-core EAP courses.
Students needs are in the area of study skills and adjusting to the nature of language.
Needs of students span the needs of non-native speakers following an English-medium course
and those of native speakers in need of developing communicative skills.
1. To communicate technical and business information effectively in the work and academic
setting in several modes: written, oral, etc.
2. To adapt material prepared in one form for presentation in another.
3. To communicate effectively with specialist and non-specialist audiences in job-related tasks.
For example, writing memos and letters.
School system mostly uses the national language to teach all subjects. Therefore students have to
make the adjustment from studying all subjects in their national language at school level to
studying subjects such as science, medicine and engineering in English at university level. The
courses are teaching with lower level of English than ESL. Examinations and assignments are in
English. Lectures are in a mixture of English and national language. Here the crucial point is,
How English is really used? Formal order is the official view of how the course runs and how
students succeed or fail within system . Informal order is the same institution as perceived and
operated by its members
EGAP
English for General Academic Purposes
Isolates the skill associated with study activities such as:
Writing Essays
Seminars and Tutorials
Examination Answers
Reading Textbooks
Dissertations and Reports Lectures
ESAP
English for Special Academic Purposes
It integrates the skills work of EGAP with help for students in their actual subject tasks. It adopts
a developmental role by showing how students how to transfer the skill they have learnt in the
EGAP classes.
Cooperation
Cooperation is the first stage and involves the language teacher taking the initiative in asking
questions and gathering info about the students' subject course , that is finding out about the
conceptual and discoursal framework of the subject. This is part of the Target Situation Analysis
required for needs analysis.
Collaboration
It involves the more direct working together of two sides, language and subject. It bears clear
goals but also defined limits. Three options for collaborative work:
1. The planning of series of classes where the language class prepares the students for
subsequent subject class taught in English.
2. The running of a class on a specific skill or related to a specific task where the subject
department has a specific in input to the materials or the language teacher uses material
produced by the department.
3. 3. Adjunct model, in which the adjunct acts as a back-up class to the subject, helping
students with difficulties with that class.
Team-teaching
The actual and final working together in the classroom of the subject and language specialists
usually focusing on two skills of academic writing and listening comprehension.
From cooperation and collaboration to team teaching