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Shaw, A.M. – English Language Teaching Journal, 1982
Introduces a project in syllabus design for English as a second language at the elementary level undertaken by the British Institute of Madrid. Discusses the principles on which the framework for the experimental syllabus was constructed and explains the rationale for attempting to make it both "notional" and "structural."…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Course Descriptions, English (Second Language), Instructional Design
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Estaire, Sheila – English Language Teaching Journal, 1982
Describes two core syllabi, a communicative one and a grammatical one, and a modular syllabus for elementary ESL courses, with hints for introducing out-of-sequence items. Explains how the syllabi have been designed, what they offer to teachers, and how they have affected first-year teaching as a whole. (Author/MES)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Course Descriptions, English (Second Language), Instructional Design
Krahnke, Karl – 1987
An examination of foreign language syllabus design reviews current literature on six syllabus types and discusses the process of choosing and integrating syllabi for classroom use. The six syllabus types are structural, notional-functional, situational, skill-based, task-based, and content-based, characterized as differing by increasing attention…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Course Content, Course Descriptions, Course Organization
Rutherford, William E. – 1983
Past perceptions of the role of grammar in the second language syllabus have been limited by the attitude that grammatical content should be addressed directly in the language classroom and that it is limited to language items and rules with definable boundaries. However, language has properties crucial to its use for communication that are not…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Classroom Techniques, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Design
Duda, Richard – 1976
The immediate objective of this course in technical English was to enable French-speaking mechanics and technicians to read the instructions for the installation, operation and upkeep of American-made machinery. Although the learners knew very little English, available British and American technical documents were used because of their…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Course Descriptions, Decoding (Reading), English for Special Purposes