This course aims to consolidate and to extend language and cultural skills, listening, writing, and speaking at intermediate level.
The second part of the course will have a broadly economic, political, and socio-cultural focus on key issues of employment under neoliberalism.
Learning materials (including essays and films/videos) will be made available on Moodle. These include a “Dispensa” with key texts that will be discussed throughout the course.
Learning Objectives
Upon successful completion of the course, students should be able to:
1) Interact in most everyday social situations with confidence and fluency in their use of the English language;
2) Understand the development of a range of texts and vocabulary (including Business English);
3) Understand and be able to discuss and reflect on cogent issues of the world of employment and neoliberalism in an Anglo-Saxon context;
4) Vary the tone and register of the oral and written texts they produce;
5) Read and be able to discuss academic and non-academic texts.
Prerequisites
3 CFU English Language (Centro Linguistico di Ateneo online Test)
Teaching Methods
A variety of teaching approaches will be used in this course: lecture and tutorials (including
listening and viewing activities); workshops; research activities; role plays.
The teaching focuses on student-centred learning. This teaching and learning approach provides facilitated learning, practical exploration and peer learning. Participation in class and effort in speaking English are strongly encouraged.
Further information
Important notice – The following requirements are mandatory to be admitted to the Exam:
--- Completion of five Moodle activities;
--- Submission and successful completion of the Vlog (video blog).
Type of Assessment
Vlog (video-blog) and written exam.
Course program
For the language component, students will study: 1) pronunciation, grammar (tenses, syntax, and structures) of English for all purposes (Intermediate level); 2) vocabulary for professional purposes (CV, cover letter); 3) vocabulary of Business English.
Seminar-based classes will consist of readings and discussions of texts, as well as videos exploring interlocking oppressions (of class, race, gender, and sexualities) in the labour market, focusing comparatively on the UK, Australia, the US, and Italy.
Bibliography (TBC):
--- Ahmed, Sara. 2012. “Institutional Life.” In On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life, 19-50. Durham: Duke University Press.
--- Bhopal, Kalwant. 2018. White Privilege: The Myth of a Post-racial Society. (Chapters 4: “Intersectionality: gender, race and class,” 47-64; and 8: “Racial inequalities in the labour market,” 121-142).
--- Coin, Francesca. 2018. “When Love Becomes Self-Abuse: Gendered Perspectives on Unpaid Labor in Academia.” In Feeling Academic in the Neoliberal University: Feminist Flights, Fights and Failures, edited by Yvette Taylor, and Kinneret Lahad, 301-320. London: Palgrave.
--- Crimmins, Gale. 2019. “A Structural Account of Inequality in the International Academy: Why Resistance to Sexism Remains Urgent and Necessary.” In Strategies for Resisting Sexism in the Academy: Higher Education, Gender and Intersectionality, 3-16. London: Palgrave.
--- hooks, bell. 1990. “Reflections on Race and Sex.” In Yearning: race, gender, and cultural politics, 57-64. Boston: South End Press.
--- Rumens, Nick. 2018. “Teaching Gender in a Postfeminist Management Classroom.” In Feeling Academic in the Neoliberal University: Feminist Flights, Fights and Failures, edited by Yvette Taylor, and Kinneret Lahad, 321-343. London: Palgrave.
Textbook: Trappe, Tonya and Tullis, Graham. 2011. Intelligence Business (Intermediate) Coursebook, Pearson Longman.