Chabot College Fall 2010
Course Outline for ESL 149L
INTERMEDIATE READING AND WRITING
Catalog Description:
149L- Intermediate Reading and Writing 3 units
A continuation of the study of logical paragraph development; reading fiction and nonfiction; emphasis on the development of vocabulary and grammatical structures of written English. Prerequisite: A grade of pass in ESL 149K . 3 hours.
[Typical contact hours: 54]
Prerequisite Skills:
Before entering the course the student should be able to:
- Use a paragraph as an organizing convention in writing;
- Use coordination and subordination to show relationships between ideas;
- identify basic sentence components in own writing;
- use present perfect, past perfect, future perfect verb tenses appropriately for specific purposes;
- demonstrate understanding of concept of count and non-count nouns, singular and plural forms;
- use a variety of approaches to read texts, such as previewing, scanning, discovering meaning through context;
- have reading experience that includes both short and long works of fiction and nonfiction;
- able to analyze and comment on the organization of another student’s writing
Expected Outcomes for Students:
Upon completion of the course the student should be able to:
- write more than one paragraph on a topic all related to one thesis;
- distinguish between a dependent clause and an independent clause
- form present, past, & future verb tenses and of modals can, could, may , might, will, would;
- use modal auxiliaries to alter meaning of verbs for advice, ability, permission, regret;
- distinguish when the definite article the is needed and when it is not;
- have reading experience that includes both short and long works of non-fiction;
- critically analyze a reading for the author’s opinion and logical use of support
Course Content:
1.Writing multiple-draft paragraphs
2.Dependent vs. Independent clauses
3.Present, past and future of verb tenses and of modals can, could, may, might, will, would
- Modal auxiliaries used to express advice, ability, permission, regret
- Definite and indefinite articles and the need / lack of need for them
- Read long selections on academic subjects, fiction and nonfiction
- Critical reading of assigned texts
Methods of Presentation:
1.Lectures
2.Discussions
3.Group work
4.Daily writing and reading assignments
Typical Assignments and Methods of Evaluating Student Progress
1.
a.Read a chapter from a textbook or novel. Write a summary of the main ideas or events in the chapter. Then write a personal response to what they have read.
- Read a given article in the news. Identify the main ideas in the article; circle transitions that show movement from one point to the next.
2 . Methods of Evaluating Student Progress
a. Homework and participation..10%
b. Writing assignments…25%
- Vocabulary Quizzes………15%
- Grammar Tests….25%
- Final examination (in-class writing test) …25%
Recommended Textbooks:
FUTURE 4: English for Results, Beatriz B. Diaz, Irene E. Shoenberg.
Pearson Longman (2010) with cd-rom.
Issues for Today, third edition, Lorraine Smith and Nancy Mare, Thompson/ Heinle, 2004