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ENG4503 - English Skills & Employability

Objectives:

Assessment tasks are designed to enable students to demonstrate the Learning and Employability outcomes for the relevant level of study. Level Learning Outcomes are embedded in the assessment task(s) at that level. This enables a more integrated view of overall student performance at each level.

Content:

During both semesters students will be encouraged to audit and reflect on their employability skills and career plans, and to engage appropriately with the process of finding a suitable placement. They will reflect on how the academic skills exercised in the first two elements of assessment are applied to their employability, for example preparation, attention to detail, clear and precise communication. At the end of the semester they will engage in a period of placement preparation followed by a five-week placement.

In Semester 1, students will be given the opportunity to develop skills in reading narrative texts closely, critically and analytically. The module will focus on a selection of short stories from a range of different eras and cultural settings.

In Semester 2, students will be given the opportunity to develop their skills in reading poetry critically and analytically, focusing on a selection of poems representing various traditional forms and periods including early modern, romantic and modernist. They will think about how poems are represented online, in education, and in the media, and work towards presenting their own discussion and analysis of a poem in a podcast or other artefact.

Learning and Teaching Information:

Seminars
Hours: 60
Intended Group Size: 30

Placement Preparation
Hours: 10
Intended Group Size: 30

Placement
Hours: 150
Intended Group Size: 1

Guided independent study
Hours: 80

Further details relating to assessment
The skills audits are short exercises in close reading of prose narratives, research into specific terms used for the analysis of narrative, and application of those terms. Completion of these elements of assessment will be preceded by practice exercises for formative assessment.

The negotiated assessment is the creation of an artefact about a selected poem from the module selection, with a recorded recitation (this can be one they have found online but students are encouraged to record their own) plus a commentary.

Formative assessment exercises (eg analysing poems and evaluating recitations) will be scheduled within the first 4 weeks and contribute to an ‘assessment unpacking’ session.

Assessment:

001 Skills audit 1; 1,000 word equiv.; mid-semester 1 20%
002 Skills audit 2; 1,500 word equiv.; end of semester 1 30%
003 Negotiated assessment; 2,000 word equiv.; mid-semester 2 50%
004 Placement; pass/fail; end of semester 2 0%

Fact File

Module Coordinator - Richard Storer
Level - 4
Credit Value - 30
Pre-Requisites - NONE
Semester(s) Offered - 4YL