FACULTY
|
Faculty
of Education
|
PROGRAM
|
B. A in English Teaching
|
AREA
|
DISCIPLINE
TRAINING AREA
|
COURSE
|
PRAGMATICS
|
COURSE ID
NUMBER
|
BFE22B00A133
|
SEMESTER
|
Fourth
|
NUMBER OF
CREDITS
|
2
|
DATE
|
21/07/2014
|
HOURS OF IN-CAMPUS WORK
|
32
|
HOURS OF
INDEPENDENT WORK
|
64
|
PROFESSOR
|
CARLOS CARRILLO
|
E-mail
|
@ugc.edu.co
|
The Pragmatics course is designed to present the students the underlying
principles of the subject, especially those which are directly connected to the
interaction and the use of the language, which depends on the context where it
is used. It is important to elicit students’ cultural background knowledge, in
order to create discussions about how speakers use and understand language in different
contexts and also about how to apply those concepts in their daily life and in
their teaching practice.
At the end of the course, the students will be able, among other things,
to understand and reflect on the basic concepts related to Pragmatics, to
prepare them for simple analysis of communication and interaction in a second
language, based on different cultural backgrounds and leading them to develop
higher thinking processes, like problem solving and independent and reflective
learning. They will show this by generating a virtual product (Website).
On successful completion of this course, students will
be able to:
·
Identify
and reflect on the basic principles of linguistic pragmatics, and some other
important aspects related to successful linguistic communication.
·
Examine,
assess and apply the different theories attached to communication and cultural
backgrounds.
·
Develop
awareness of potential communication issues, given in different cultural
backgrounds.
·
Demonstrate
good understanding of the concepts related to the Speech Act theory.
·
Discuss
about pragmatic concepts like politeness, preference structure, discourse
analysis and others.
·
Display
in a creative way the products of the course in a website.
Which are the linguistic aspects of communication that
increase the students’ use of the English language in specific contexts, in order
to foster their awareness of it and to establish differences between those
contexts?
6.
COURSE DISCUSSION ISSUES.
|
·
What
are the differences between Semantics and Pragmatics?
·
Why
most of the subfields of linguistics, such as socio-linguistics or
psycho-linguistics, look for and inclusion of Pragmatics in different types of research?
·
Why is cultural
background and context important in Pragmatics?
·
How to state
objective differences on social contexts, in order to generate theories about
the use of English.
The students must develop the following competences:
·
Good autonomous learning habits, reinforced with
good verbal communication.
·
Deep analysis of theoretical concepts that allows
questioning them and suggesting new perspectives.
·
Discuss the cooperative principles in the study
of the English language.
·
Awareness of innovative instructional methods
which include information technologies.
·
Reflect about the best transformative educational
learning and teaching methods.
·
Apply new knowledge to daily life in order to
improve pronunciation.
·
Ability to transmit new knowledge to others.
|
|
|
WEEKS
|
TOPICS
|
INDEPENDENT WORK
|
1
|
What are the general principles
of the course?
What is the syllabus, the methodology
and evaluation criteria of the course?
|
Start the design of
the tool that will allow the student to present the final project that
comprises the work of the semester.
Finding information related to the Components of the
Language.
|
2
|
What is Pragmatics
and to what other fields of linguistics is it related?
|
Finding information
related to Deixis.
Creating a digital story where some deictical expressions are used in a specific context.
Finding information related to Speech Act Theory. Locutionary, illocutionary and perlocutionary acts.
|
3
|
Is Deixis attached
to cultural context? How can people from different cultural backgrounds
understand these types of words?
|
Socialize a digital story where some deictical expressions are used in a specific context.
|
4
|
Do we need to view pragmatic meaning in a
broader framework than that espoused in SAT(Speech Act Theory)? Which framework and
why?
|
Draw a chart that
includes at least five utterances and that shows the locutionary, illocutionary
and perlocutionary acts, their functions and examples.
Finding information related to Speech Act Theory II. Felicity conditions,
performatives, direct and indirect speech.
|
5
|
When can a speaker say that his message was
well transmitted and well received?
|
|
6
|
FIRST STRIKE EXAM
|
|
7
|
What is Grice's
motivation for discerning conventional implicature as distinct from
conversational implicature?
|
.
|
8
|
Which linguistic
forms enable a listener or reader to identify a referenced entity?
|
|
9
|
What is the
relation between sentence meanings and presuppositions?
|
|
10
|
What does it mean
to be polite? Does it have the same definition in different contexts?
|
|
11
|
How to analyze a
conversation?
|
|
12
|
SECOND STRIKE EXAM.
|
|
13
|
|
|
14
|
Whas aspects are
necessary to be coherent?
|
|
15
|
Why is cultural
background important in the study of Pragmatics?
|
|
16
|
|
.
|
17-18
|
FINAL EXAM AND FEEDBACK SESSION
|
Developing the
Exam.
|
Yule, George. Pragmatics.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.
- ASSESSMENT
CRITERIA.
|
TYPE OF ASSESSMENT:
|
PERCENTAGE%
|
DATE
|
ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES
|
PROFESSOR'
ASSESSMENT
|
90%
|
6th - 12th and 17th week
|
Continuous assessment of website design (60%)
1-hour written examination at the end of
Semester (40%)
|
SELF-ASSESSMENT
|
5%
|
6th - 12th and 17th week
|
Checklist with
established criteria.
|
PEER-ASSESMENT
|
5%
|
6th - 12th and 17th week
|
Checklist with
established criteria.
|
Core text: Yule, George. Pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1996.