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English Language IV

Code: LRE2227    Acronym: LIIV

Subject: 2018/2019 - 2S

Teaching Area: Modern Languages

Programmes

Acronym Study plan Curriculum Years ECTS Contact hours Total Hours
LRE Aviso nº 9881/2017 4 ECTS 38 106

Hours Effectively Taught

TRE2

Theoretical-Practical: 36,00
Other: 0,00

Teaching - Hours

Theoretical-Practical: 2,00
Other: 0,53

Teaching Language

Inglês

Aims, Skills and Learning Outcomes

Course description
This curricular unit aims at the progressive acquisition of grammatical, lexical, semantic and pragmatic knowledge by increasing both active and passive comprehension and written and oral expression, so that the student, by the end of the semester, will have achieved level B2 of the Common European Framework of Reference for languages.

Objectives
The general objectives of this curricular unit are to develop the student's skills in intermediate comprehension and communication, as well as develop the students' capacity to research, obtain and manage information so that a continuous, autonomous pattern of learning is established which will be of future use both in the learning of English and in a socio-cultural context.

Skills and expected results
Aural comprehension
Understand real English spoken by native speakers of the various English speaking countries and extract specific information from any given aural text.
Reading comprehension
Extract specific information from real English texts related to the world and the student's experiences.
Oral expression
Be able to give presentations in English, interact with the class teacher and colleagues in English with a degree of flexibility in terms of verb tenses and structures.
Written expression
Be able to write reports and other texts related to the world of the student.

Programme

Themes

1. Checking out.
1.1 Quality standards.
1.2 Check-out procedures.
2. Tourism today
2.1 Current trends
2.2 Skills of a tourism manager
3. Hotel management
3.1 Success and Rewards
4. Quality in tourism
4.1 Giving and receiving feedback
4.2 Dealing with complaints
5. Tomorrow's tourism
5.1 Managing yourself -  personal review, personal ambitions

Grammar

The tense system:
* simple
* continuous
* perfect
* future
* conditional
Comparisons

Vocabulary

Front office duties
Graphs and charts
Skills and personality
Quality assurance and techniques
Security and surveillance

Main literature

Robin Walker & Keith Harding;Tourism 2 - Encounters, Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN: 978-0-19-455103-8
Robin Walker & Keith Harding;Tourism 3 - Management, Oxford University Press, 2009. ISBN: 978-0-19-455106-9

Supplementary Bibliography

http://www.cambridge.org/
http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/
http://www.world-tourism.prg/
www.britishcouncil.org/

Learning Methods

Developing themes and organising activities with the priority on dynamic oral and written communication. The process involves exposing the theme for any given week, with the student then being given the opportunity for controlled and free practice.
Work outside of the classroom will include research on the following week's topic as well as extended practice of prior themes.


Assessment Components

Avaliação distribuída com exame final

Assessment Components

Description Type Time (hours) Conclusion Date
Attendance (estimated)  Lessons  30
 Teste/Exame  3
 Participação Presencial  8
 Projectos  10
 Study  56
  Total: 107

Continuous Assessment

Written tests (2) - (35% + 35%)
Group work presentation: 30%


The groups should prepare and present a Project related to the topic: " Tourism / Management Strategy for...", a city / region / company ". They should use the Power Point or a similar platform to present their projects.
The projects will be evaluated according to the following criteria:
- Submission of the project plan through the e-learning plataform
- Level of English: project presentation and defense

Under the terms of the Bachelor's Regulation:

1. The students' attendance in classes will be recorded and, if the number of absences per student exceeds 30% of the total number of lessons scheduled for each course unit, the student will be automatically transferred to the final evaluation (regular season).

2. In the written tests and other assessment elements mentioned in paragraph 2 of Art. 39 it is necessary to obtain a minimum grade of 7.5 (seven point five) points.

3. If the student misses a test or receives a grade lower than 7.5 points in the tests or in another assessment element mentioned in the previous number, the student will be automatically transferred to the final evaluation (regular season).

4. If the student misses or obtains less than 7.5 in the second written test, held in the same date of the final exam in the regular season, they may apply for further evaluation in the Appeal season.

Final Exam

Individual test: 100%

The practical projects referred to in sub-paragraph b) of paragraph 2 of Art. 39 can also be considered, with half of the percentage defined for the continuous assessment, as long as the teacher is informed about this decision by the student through a specific document handed by the teacher in the moment the written test takes place.

Demonstration of the coherence between the teaching methodologies and the learning outcomes

The teaching methodologies proposed are directly related to the learning outcomes of the curricular unit since the several activities are conducive to the acquisition and development of the language skills, namely the oral and written comprehension and communication.
The group projects will also allow the students to develop their capacity to research, obtain and manage information.