Language skills: public speaking 1.S3.EP.18
Course objectives:
The objective of the course is to explore strategies for analyisng public speeches as texts by learning how to identify commonly used rhetorical devices and be familiar with how they construct meaning. The fundamental skill to be practiced will involve analysing how context helps shape the language and meaning of speeches.
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Course content:
1. Key Features: getting started - an introduction to rhetorical devices.
2. Key Features : appeal in speeches: ethos, pathos and logos.
3. Key Features: analyising Barack Obama's victory speech - 'This is your victory' - using key features of speeches.
4. Key Features: famous speeches in the English language and their key features.
5. Key features: analysing key fetaures of 'Statement on the assassination of Martin Luther King' by Robert F. Kennedy
6. Contexts: analysing cultural, political and social contexts of 'Statement on the assassination of Martin Luther King' by Robert F. Kennedy
7. Contexts: analysing the effects a speech can have using 'Chocolate Biscuits' by TeachingHeads.
8. Contexts: How cultural contexts influence how texts are written and received by analyisng Nelson Mandela's 'An ideal for which I am prepared to die for'.
9. Contexts: intertextuality - connecting texts Nelson Mandela's 'Inaugural Speech, Pretoria' (1994) versus Martin Luther King's 'I have a dream' (1963).
10. Contexts: references and allusions in 'I have a dream'
11. Putting it into practice: developing a written response using PEEL (writing solid introductions and developing body paragraphs)
12. Putting it into practice: developing a written response using PEEL (writing solid introductions and developing body paragraphs)
13. Putting it into practice: developing a written response using PEEL (writing conclusions)
14. Written commentary in class assessment
15. Reflections
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Methods of instruction/ forms of classroom activity:
power point presentations, group discussion, pair-work & small group activities (in breakout rooms when online), individual reflective activities, analytical tasks related to the texts; ICT tools - MS Teams
Kierunek studiów
Nakład pracy studenta
Poziom studiów
Profil kształcenia
Rodzaj przedmiotu
obowiązkowe
Semestr, w którym realizowany jest przedmiot
Tryb prowadzenia
Wymagania
Koordynatorzy przedmiotu
W cyklu 2023/24-Z: | W cyklu 2024/25-Z: | W cyklu 2022/23-Z: |
Efekty kształcenia
Learning outcomes acc to PQR 2019
Knowledge
1. The student knows the main methods of analysis and interpretation of culture products (pubic speeches), in the studied disciplines, including theories and research schools within English philology (k_W04/P6S_WG).
Skills
2. The student is able to recognize different types of public speech texts in order to perform their critical analysis and assess their relevance and impact in cultural processes (k_U02/P6S_UW).
3. The student is able to create English-language public speech texts and prepare elaborate presentations relating to their English studies of public speeches using formal sources (k_U04/P6S_UK).
4. The student is able to use English at the level of C1 of the Common European Framework for Languages (k_U05/P6S_UK).
Social Competences
5. The student is ready to critically evaluate and solve problems arising from the implementation of professional tasks such as public speaking (k_K02/P6S_KK).
6. The student is ready to participate in various forms of cultural life (k_K04/P6S_KO).
Kryteria oceniania
Forms of evaluation of learning outcomes:
1. Active participation - 40% of the final grade (outcome 1,2,3,4,5,6)
2. Writing and delivering your own public speech - 30% of the final grade (outcome 3,4,5,6)
3. A written commentary analysis of a public speech - 30% of the final grade (outcome 1,2,4,5,6)
Criteria of evaluation:
60% = 3
80% = 4
100% = 5
Literatura
Reading list:
A variety of public speeches which can be accessed in the public domain are to be used such as:
-President Obama 'This is your victory'
-President Kennedy 'Ask not what your country can do for you'
-Winston Churchill 'We shall fight on the beeches'
-Queen Elizabeth I - Tilbury Speech
-Tony Blair: eulogy at Princess Diana's funeral
-Martin Luther Kind - 'I have a dream'
-Robert F. Kennedy 'Statement on the assassinaion of Martin Luther King'
-Abraham Lincoln 'Gettysburg Address'
-William Wilberforce 'Abolirtion Speech'
-Chief Joseph 'Surrender Speech'
-Susan B. Anthony 'Women's right to the suffrage'
-Gandhi 'Quit India'
-Nelson Mandela 'A cause for which I am prepared to die for'
-Subhas Chandra Bose 'Give me blood and I will give you freedom'
-Barack Obama 'Yes we can'
-Teaching heads 'Chocolate Biscuits'
- William Faulkner 'Nobel Prize in Literature acceptance speech'
Further reading
'When they go low, we go high' by Philip Collins
'Speeches that Changed the World' by Simon Sebag Montefiore
'You Talkin' to Me? by Sam Leith
'The Penguin Book of Modern Speeches' Edited by Brian MacArthur
Więcej informacji
Dodatkowe informacje (np. o kalendarzu rejestracji, prowadzących zajęcia, lokalizacji i terminach zajęć) mogą być dostępne w serwisie USOSweb: