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Working Life English (3 cr)

Code: AE00CW60-3003

General information


Enrollment

14.11.2022 - 22.02.2023

Timing

06.03.2023 - 30.04.2023

Credits

3 op

Virtual proportion (cr)

3 op

Teaching languages

  • English

Seats

16 - 30

Degree programmes

  • Bachelor of Engineering, Automation Engineering

Teachers

  • Maija Varpula
  • Neil Mac Laverty

Scheduling groups

  • Small group 1 (Size: 0. Open UAS: 0.)
  • Small group 2 (Size: 0. Open UAS: 0.)

Student groups

  • AFE22B
    Bachelor of Engineering, Agri-Food Engineering, full time studies

Education groups

  • Small group 1
  • Small group 2

Objective

The students can describe their own education both orally and in writing.
The students are familiar with the job application process and the related vocabulary.
The students recognize the different levels of formality and are able to use formal style in professional communication.
The students can communicate politely and professionally both on the phone and when writing emails.
The students are familiar with the vocabulary related to meetings and negotiations.
The students are able to give presentations on field related topics.
The students know the most central vocabulary of their field of education and are able to use it both orally and in writing

Content

- effective communication
- customer contacts
- presentations
- field-related terminology
- education and work
- meetings and negotiations

Materials

Isaacs, Pesso, Rasimus, Rönkä: Engineer Your English. Edita. Latest edition.
Other material on Moodle as indicated by the teacher

Teaching methods

Spoken and written assignments, independent study.
This course will be taught as a remote course (in Teams). Attendance requirement 80 %. Attending classes include attending in group activities during lessons.

Student workload

81 h

Further information

Active participation in the classes 80%.

Evaluation scale

1-5

Assessment criteria, satisfactory (1)

There are lots of major errors in the student's written expression and problems with the fluency of text. Their text is simple but coherent and intelligible. There are lots of mistakes and mispronunciations in the student's oral expression and the pronunciation differs from that of the target language. Despite the problems, the message is mainly intelligible. If the text is read directly from written notes or slides, the maximum grade is 1 to 2. The students masters the basic vocabulary and key grammatical structures in a limited way.

Assessment criteria, good (3)

There are some minor errors in the student's written expression, but the message is still conveyed without problems. Their text is fluent and consistent, as well as written using basic structures correctly. There are some mispronunciations and grammatical errors in the student's oral expression, but they do not disturb the conveying of the message. Good, fluent basic language skills, presented relatively spontaneously, yet based to some extent on notes. Hesitation slows down the student's speech. The students masters the basic vocabulary and field-specific vocabulary quite well. The student uses key grammatical structures quite faultlessly.

Assessment criteria, excellent (5)

The student's written expression is faultless, very fluent, and the student pays attention to stylistic matters required by professional-life communication situations. They also use complex syntactic structures in their text. There are no mistakes in oral expression; the student's pronunciation is authentic and their speed of speech is appropriate. Overall, their speech is spontaneous, fluent narration, which the listener can easily follow. The student reacts in an adequate way in interactive situations. The students masters a large vocabulary and uses grammatical structures fluently and in a varied way.

Assessment methods and criteria

Spoken and written exam at the end of the course.

Further information

Prerequisite: English studies at an upper secondary school or corresponding knowledge gained otherwise.