ENGL120
Academic Writing II
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Course Overview
Academic writing is a particular style used for various purposes in today’s business world in order to display a clear understanding of a particular subject. It requires more formal and professional language, a logical structure, and is supported by evidence. In this academic writing II course, the focus is writing in a business context where students will develop and enhance their writing skills using processes effectively to plan, research, outline, and present the final document, including business letters, e-mail/memos, reports, and other channels used in written business communication.
Upon completion of this course, students will learn how to effectively compose a paragraph and ultimately an essay in an organized manner.
Prerequisites
No prerequisite to this course.
Course Details
- Communicating in a Digital-age workplace
- Business Message
- Business Presentation
- Avoiding Plagiarism
- Designing and Reporting Surveys
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- Describe and practice communicating in the workplace demonstrating effective listening and non-verbal skills and building intercultural workplace skills.
- Plan and write various business messages from e-mail and memos to messaging and texting, podcasts and wikis, blogging, and social networking.
- Plan, organize, and write letters for positive, negative, and persuasive messages with effective sentence structure and strong paragraph construction.
- Analyse and prepare outlines for proposals, reports, and essays.
- Read using various methods demonstrating their development of critical approaches, finding key points and taking notes.
- Demonstrate using the effective elements of paraphrasing, summarising, using references and quotations, combining sources, organising paragraphs, writing introductions and conclusions, and re-writing and proofreading.
- Analyse and practice various elements of writing: argument and discussion, cause and effect, cohesion, comparison, definition, examples, generalisations, numbers, problems and solutions, academic style, visual information, and working in groups.
- Write properly and accurately demonstrating use of abbreviations, academic vocabulary, parts of speech, caution, caution, synonyms, punctuation, and time words.
- Design and conduct surveys, and questionnaires using appropriate survey language, question forms and proper tenses.
Learning Methods
- Lecture/presentation
- Discussion
- Individual assignments and research (facilitate)
- Facilitated group work