BA In English Language And Literature (Major/Minor) 2020

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BA in English Language and Literature (Major/Minor) 2020Program ComponentsCRDCourse TypeUniversity Requirement (UR)College Requirement (CR)Major Support Requirement (MSR)Major Requirement (MR)Major Elective (ME)1General Studies Elective2 (freeelective)Minor3Internship4Total Credit (CRD)1118057933001281Student should select three courses from Major Elective (ME) List.Student should select one course from free elective courses list offered by any University Department.3Student should take 10 courses as Minor track from one of the following specializations: American Studies, French,Translation, Linguistics, or Literature.4Translation Minor only2Teaching Language: EnglishDetailed Study PlanYear 1 - Semester 1Course HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeLanguage Development I303CR------YesENGL124Basic Writing Skills303CR------YesARAB110Arabic Language Skills303UR------NoISLM 101Islamic Culture303UR------NoHIST 122Modern History of Bahrain and Citizenship303UR------NoCourse CodeCourse TitleENGL1231PrerequisiteMajorGPA

Year 1 - Semester 2Course HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeIntroduction to Literature303MRENGL106Language Development II303CRENGL128Language Development III303MRGSE XXXFree Elective303GSE------NoSTAT 105Elementary Statistics ( Arts Stud. Only )303CR------NoCourse CodeCourse TitleENGL130PrerequisiteENGL123 &ENGL124ENGL123 &ENGL124ENGL123 &ENGL124MajorGPAYesYesYesYear 2 - Semester 3Course es in the Novel303MRENGL130YesENGL221Language Development IV303MRENGL209Essay Writing303MRENGL240Introduction to Linguistics I303MRHRLC 107Human Rights202UR------NoITBIS 105Elementary Computing033CR------NoCourse CodeCourse TitleENGL235ENGL106 &ENGL128ENGL106 &ENGL128ENGL106 &ENGL128YesYesYesYear 2 - Semester 4Course age Syntaxes303CRARAB110NoENGL215Introduction to Drama303MRENGL235YesENGL223Academic Writing303MRENGL209YesMinorMinor 1XX3MinorAs per MinorlistNoMinorMinor 2XX3MinorAs per MinorlistNoCourse CodeCourse TitleARAB2102

Year 3 - Semester 5Course duction to Linguistics303MRENGL240YesENGL308English Grammar303MRENGL240YesENGL306English Speech303MRENGL221YesENGL309Introduction to Poetry303MRMinorMinor 3XX3MinorMinorMinor 4XX3MinorPrerequisiteMajorGPAENGL215YesCourse CodeCourse TitleENGL340ENGL215 &ENGL235As per MinorlistAs per MinorlistYesNoNoYear 3 - Semester 6Course HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeEnglish Literature and Culture I303MRENGL342English Morphology and Syntax303MRENGL345Applied English Phonology303MRMinorMinor 5303MinorMinorMinor 6XX3MinorENGLXXXMajor Elective 1303MECourse CodeCourse TitleENGL313ENGL340 &ENGL308ENGL340 &ENGL308As per MinorlistAs per MinorlistAs per MElistYesYesNoNoYesYear 4 - Semester 7Course HoursCourse CodeCourse 03MRENGL340YesENGL314English Literature and Culture II303MRENGL313YesENGLXXXMajor Elective 2303MEMinorMinor 7XX3MinorMinorMinor 8XX3Minor3As per MElistAs per MinorlistAs per MinorlistYesNoNo

Year 4 - Semester 8Course ct writing303MRCompletionof 110 CRDYesENGLXXXMajor Elective 3303MEAs per MElistYesMinorMinor 9XX3MinorAs per MinorlistNoMinorMinor 10XX3MinorAs per MinorlistNoPrerequisiteMajorGPACourse CodeCourse TitleENGL450Major Elective Courses ListStudent should select three courses from Major Elective (ME) ListCourse HoursCourse CodeCourse TitleLECPRACCRDCourseTypeENGL319Literary Masterpieces of the ModernWorld303MEENGL331Commonwealth 1Literary Criticism303MEENGL435Special Author(s)303MEENGL440Contrastive Linguistics and Error Analysis303MEENGL 340YesENGL445Stylistics303MEENGL 340YesENGL449Discourse Analysis303MEENGL 340Yes4ENGL 215 &ENGL 309ENGL 215 &ENGL 309ENGL 340ENGL 215 &ENGL 309ENGL 215 &ENGL 309YesYesYesYesYes

Free Elective Courses ListStudent should select one course from free elective courses list offered:Course HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeFrench I303GSEnoneNoCHL 101Introduction to Chinese Language303GSEnoneNoPHEDE 214Principles of Educational Statistics303GSEnoneNoEDTC 100Teaching and Learning Technology303GSEnoneNoEDPS 144Psychology of Learning and Memory303GSEnoneNoART 133Fundamentals of Music and Itsappreciation303GSEnoneNoART 141Drawing and Painting213GSEnoneNoART 221Traditional Music of Bahrain and ItsApplication303GSEnoneNoEDAR 126Playing on Piano and Org 1303GSEnoneNoJAPN 101Japanese Level I303GSEnoneNoGERM 101Introduction to German303GSEnoneNoKL 101Korean Language303GSEnoneNoTL 101Turkish Language303GSEnoneNoPSYC 103Introduction to Psychology303GSEnoneNoPSYC 120Psychology of Marriage303GSEnoneNoPSYC 211Educational Psychology303GSEnoneNoSOCIO 161Introduction to Sociology303GSEnoneNoSOCIO 181Introduction to Anthropology303GSEnoneNoSOCIO 191Citizenship, Identity and Globalization303GSEnoneNoSOCIO 224Sociology of Health303GSEnoneNoSOCIO 226Sociology of Arabian Gulf303GSEnoneNoHISTO 212Contemporary History of The ARAB World303GSEnoneNoHISTO 281Landmarks of Islamic Civilisation303GSEnoneNoARAB141Modern Arabic Literature303GSEnoneNoARAB242Arabic Poetry In The Renaissance Period303GSEnoneNoCourse CodeCourse TitleFREN 1415PrerequisiteMajorGPA

ISLM 114Quranic Sciences303GSEnoneNoISLM 136Biography of The Prophet303GSEnoneNoISLM 141Introduction to Shari'a303GSEnoneNoISLM 252Islamic Doctrine303GSEnoneNoLAW 101Introduction to Legal Studies303GSEnoneNoLAW 102History of Law303GSEnoneNoECON 140Microeconomics303GSEnoneNoLAW 106Constitutional Law I303GSEnoneNoGSE XXXOther electivesXX3GSEDepartmentApprovalNo6

Minor ProgramsMinor in LinguisticsCourse HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeWriting Systems and Literacy303MinorENGL240YesLING202Language and Media303MinorENGL240YesLING301Corpus Linguistics303MinorENGL240YesLING311Second Language Acquisition303MinorENGL340YesYesYesCourse CodeCourse TitleLING201PrerequisiteMinorGPAXXXXxxxForeign Language303Minorsee list offoreignlanguagesbelowLING312Applied Linguistics303MinorENGL 340LING4XXMinor Elective 1303MinorLING4XXMinor Elective 2303MinorLING4XXMinor Elective 3303MinorLING4XXMinor Elective 4303MinorPrerequisiteMinorGPASee list ofelectivesbelowSee list ofelectivesbelowSee list ofelectivesbelowSee list ofelectivesbelowYesYesYesYesStudents should choose four minor elective courses from the following list :Linguistics Minor ElectivesCourse HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeLanguage and Speech Disorders303MinorENGL342YesLING412Systematic Functional Grammar303MinorENGL342YesLING413Cognitive Linguistics303MinorENGL342YesLING414Advanced Sociolinguistics303MinorENGL447YesLING415Critical Discourse YesCourse CodeCourse TitleLING411Students should choose one of the following foreign languages:Linguistics Minor Electives*Course CodeCourse TitleFREN 141French ICourse Hours7LECPRACCRDCourseType303Minor

FREN 142French II303MinorFREN 141YesGERM 101Introduction to German303Minor----YesGERM 102Introduction to German II303MinorGERM 101YesJAPN 101Japanese Level 1303Minor----YesKL 101Korean Language I303Minor----YesKL 102Korean Language II303MinorKL 101YesTL 101Turkish Language303Minor----YesCHL 101Introduction to Chinese I303Minor----YesCHL 102Introduction to Chinese II303MinorCHL 101Yes8

Minor in LiteratureCourse HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeStudies in Short Fiction303MinorENGL130YesLITR236Studies in Modern Fiction303MinorENGL235YesLITR311Rise of Novel303MinorLITR236YesLITR335Studies in Modern Poetry303MinorENGL309YesLITR336Studies in Modern Drama303MinorENGL215YesLITR419Renaissance Drama303MinorLITR336YesLITRXXXMinor Elective 1303MinorLITRXXXMinor Elective 2303MinorLITRXXXMinor Elective 3303MinorLITRXXXMinor Elective 4303MinorCourse CodeCourse TitleLITR234PrerequisiteMinorGPAAs per MinorElective listAs per MinorElective listAs per MinorElective listAs per MinorElective listYesYesYesYesLiterature Minor ElectivesStudents choose 4 Courses from the Minor Elective ListCourse HoursLECPRACCRDCourseTypeEnglish Literature and Culture III303MinorENGL314YesLITR318Literary masterpieces of the Ancient World303MinorENGL309YesLITR319Literary Masterpieces of the Modern World303MinorENGL235YesLITR331Studies in World Literature303MinorENGL235YesLITR415Studies in American Literature303MinorENGL309YesLITR416Contemporary Literature303MinorENGL309YesLITR41219th Century British Fiction303MinorENGL235YesLITR431Literary Criticism303MinorLITR335YesLITR435Special Author303MinorENGL309YesLITR436Special Topic in Literature303MinorLITR311YesLITR438Comparative Studies in Literature303MinorLITR335YesCourse CodeCourse TitleLITR3159PrerequisiteMinorGPA

Minor in FrenchCourse HoursCourse CodeLECPRACCRDCourseTypeCourse TitlePrerequisiteMinorGPAFREN 141French I303Minor----YesFREN 142French Il303MinorFREN 141YesFREN 231Intermediate French I303MinorFREN 142YesFREN 232Intermediate French Il303MinorFREN 142YesFREN 310Advanced French I303MinorFREN 231YesFREN 312Advanced French I l303MinorFREN 232YesFREN 313Advanced French Ill303MinorFREN 310YesFREN 411Specialised French I303MinorFREN 312YesFREN 412Specialised French I l303MinorFREN 313YesFREN 413Specialised French Ill303MinorFREN 411YesMinor in TranslationCourse mentals of Arabic Syntax Minor------YesTRAN208Introduction to Translation303MinorENGL106YesTRAN303Business Translation303MinorTRAN304Journalistic Translation303MinorTRAN305Legal and Government Translation303MinorTRAN401Literary Translation303MinorTRAN403Scientific and Technical Translation303MinorTRAN404Consecutive se CodeCourse TitleARAB22710ARAB328 &TRAN208ARAB328 &TRAN208TRAN303 &TRAN304TRAN303 &TRAN304TRAN303 &TRAN304TRAN303 &TRAN304Completionof 119 CRDYesYesYesYesYesYesYes

Minor in American StudiesCourse duction to American Studies 1303Minor------YesAMST 212Introduction to American Studies 2303Minor------YesAMST 213American Fiction303Minor------YesAMST 214American Poetry and Drama303Minor------YesCourse CodeCourse TitleAMST 211AMST XXXMinor Elective 1303MinorSee listbelowYesAMST XXXMinor Elective 2303MinorSee listbelowYesAMST XXXMinor Elective 3303MinorSee listbelowYesAMST XXXMinor Elective 4303MinorSee listbelowYesAMST 3/4XXMinor Elective 5303MinorSee listbelowYesAMST 3/4XXMinor Elective 6303MinorSee listbelowYes*Students should select 6 courses (18 credit hours) of the following courses, AT LEAST two of them MUST beupper division (3/4 XXX courses):Course CodeCourse HoursCourse TitleLECPRACCRDCourseTypePrerequisiteMinorGPAList A: Lower DivisionAMST 201US History 1303Minor------YesAMST 202US History 2303Minor------YesAMST 205American Government 1303Minor------YesAMST 206American Government 2303Minor------YesAMST 221Multicultural Literature in America303Minor------YesAMST 222American Cultural Criticism303Minor------YesAMST 223American Social History303Minor------YesAMST 224History of Us-Middle East Relations303Minor------YesAMST 225Geography of the United States303Minor------YesAMST 250American Law and Institutions303Minor------YesList B: Upper DivisionAMST 312Themes in American Literature303MinorAMST 211 &AMST 212YesAMST 313American Popular Culture of the 20Century303MinorAMST 211 &AMST 212YesAMST 315Literature of Latin America303MinorAMST 211 &AMST 212YesAMST 411Minority Cultures in America303MinorAMST 211 &AMST 212YesAMST 413Topic-Oriented Seminar303MinorAMST 211 &AMST 212YesAMST 420America's Role in International Affairs303MinorAMST 211 &AMST 212Yes11

Course DescriptionsCollege RequirementCourse Code:ENGL123Course Title:Language Development IThis course is designed to help students refine their accuracy and fluency and build effective oral communicationskills in both academic and non-academic contexts through practicing active and critical listening skills includingnote-taking, practicing in group discussions, debates, and giving oral presentations. It also expands students’knowledge in the grammar, vocabulary, idioms, phrasal verbs and colloquialism that are necessary for effective andaccurate oral communicate. In addition, it also integrates reading skills related to listening comprehension toimprove students’ search for and focus on key points. The three institutional credits awarded for this course counttoward graduation requirements and are, thus, calculated into the general as well as the major GPA (MCGPA).Course Code:ENGL124Course Title:Basic Writing SkillsThis course aims at improving students’ writing skills and strategies. It helps students write good paragraphsincluding good topic sentences, supporting details and concluding sentences. In addition, it transfers students fromwriting at the paragraph level to the essay level, introducing them to the basic structure of an essay. This courseapplies a step-by-step approach that focuses on the essential processes and organizational strategies, and exposesstudents to a wide range of writing models employing a variety of rhetorical styles that provide practice in workingwith the writing process to develop a final piece of writing.Course Code:ENGL106Course Title:Language Development IIThis course builds on ENGL123 and ENGL124 and is designed to provide an integrated skill instruction but the mainfocus is on reading and writing in relation to reading at B level (CEFR). It covers active as well as critical readingskills including identifying main topic, supporting detail, using annotation to highlight key points, working outmeaning from context, making inferences, and drawing conclusions. The students will synthesize information to giveoral and written summaries. The course will also expand students’ knowledge of grammar and vocabulary to helpoptimize students’ reading comprehension and improve accuracy in their writing. The three credits awarded for thiscourse count toward graduation requirements and are, thus, calculated into the general as well as the major GPA(MCGPA).Course Code:ARAB 210Course Title:Language Syntaxes، وأنواع التراكيب واستعماالتها ، دراسة تحليلية لنصوص من األجناس األدبية قديمها وحديثها يعنى فيها بمستويات النظام اللغوي وأنماط الجمل ووظائفها . وبراعة اإلبداع ، وبيان ما تحمله النصوص من روعة األداء . مع االهتمام بالنواحي الجمالية واإلبداعية Course Code:ITBIS 105Course Title:Elementary ComputingThis course introduces students to computers topics: components of the system unit, storage, internet, world wideweb www, and briefly explore multimedia concepts. It covers topics that illustrate how computers are being used inbusiness, science, engineering, medicine, economics and social areas of human activity. It explores commonsoftware applications used in problem solving, communication, and making informed decisions, including wordprocessors, presentation software, and electronic spreadsheets.Course Code:STAT 105Course Title:Elementary StatisticsFrequency distribution. Graphical presentation. Measures of central tendency and dispersion. Possibilities andprobabilities, some Rules of probability. Binomial and normal probability distributions. Central limit theorem andsampling; estimation of mean for small and large samples. Tests of hypotheses. Correlation and Regression.12

Major CoursesCourse Code:ENGL128Course Title:Language Development IIIThis course is a continuation of ENGLU 203. It integrates skill instruction with emphasis on reading skills at C1 level(CEFR). It provides practice in active and critical reading skills including identifying topic, details, and key points;annotating; synthesizing information from one long text and a set of related texts to give oral and writtensummaries; distinguishing fact and opinion; and making inferences. The course also provides instruction in grammarand vocabulary to help students better understand linguistically complex texts. The three institutional creditsawarded for this course count toward graduation requirements and are, thus, calculated into the general as well asthe major GPA (MCGPA).Course Code:ENGL130Course Title:Introduction to LiteratureThis course is an introduction to literature in English. It involves the reading and discussion of selected short stories,poetry, and drama. Lectures deal with topics related to the understanding and appreciation of literature, includingthe study of character, plot, theme, setting, structure, style, and figurative languageCourse Code:ENGL209Course Title:Essay WritingThis course provides genre-based instruction and extensive practical exercises and activities in essay writing at thehigh-intermediate level (CEFR level B2). It offers practice in both working with the writing process and developing afinal product. Stress is laid on writing topic sentences, supporting ideas, note-taking, editing, coherence, gatheringinformation and exploring ideas. It is geared towards promoting students' critical thinking skills. To achieve this aim,academic writing topics related to students' own life, knowledge and environment are emphasized.Course Code:ENGL223Course Title:Academic WritingThis course provides guided instruction and extensive practical exercises and activities in extended essay writing atthe advanced level (CEFR level C1). It aims at developing students’ writing skills such as summarizing, paraphrasingand synthesizing of academic and non-academic articles. It also prepares students to carry out mini researchprojects in which they are provided with opportunities to practice their research skills in terms of finding and citingrelevant sources, gathering, evaluating and analyzing data, and mastering the use of referencing systems. Besides, itimproves students’ critical reading skills of authentic academic and non-academic articles.Course Code:ENGL221Course Title:Language Development IVThis course is designed to help students improve their reading skills at C1-C2 level (CEFR) to become proficientreaders. The students will refine their critical reading skills including using annotation; synthesizing information togive oral and written summaries of long texts or a set of texts; distinguishing fact and opinion; articulating (orallyand in writing) details in figures and tables; interpreting data; drawing conclusions; and making inferences. Inaddition, it teaches grammar and vocabulary to help students better understand linguistically complex texts andproduce grammatically accurate writings and oral presentations with rich and relevant vocabulary. The course alsoprovides training in synthesizing information from a number of sources to prepare an oral presentation. The threeinstitutional credits awarded for this course count toward graduation requirements and are, thus, calculated into thegeneral as well as the major GPA (MCGPA).Course Code:ENGL240Course Title:Introduction to linguistics IThis course covers the microprocessor and microcontroller architectures and peripherals. Topics covered include:µP and µC Architectures, Instruction Set, Assembly language programming, high-level language programming,Timers, ADC, USART, Interrupt, Interfacing with sensors and actuators.Course Code:ENGL235Course Title:Studies in the NovelThis course deals with the novel as a genre. It presents a selection of masterpieces which will provide the basis forboth oral and written discussion and analysis. Emphasis will also be on text analysis, social, historical and politicalcontexts, as well as literary theories.Course Code:ENGL215Course Title:Introduction to DramaAn examination of the elements of drama through the study of selected plays; tragedy and comedy, romance andrealism; aspects of production.13

Course Code:ENGL306Course Title:English SpeechPlanning, organizing, and delivering from ten to twelve primarily informative, extemporaneous talks, includingintroductions, demonstrations, definition, illustration, analysis, comparison/contrast, cause/effect and problemsolution; other types of presentations will include oral interpretation and impromptu, argumentative, andpersuasive speechesCourse Code:ENGL308Course Title:English GrammarThis course reviews problematic areas of English grammar and provides intensive practice with structures that areknown to be common sources of error.Course Code:ENGL309Course Title:Introduction to PoetryThis course seeks to provide students with an understanding and appreciation of poetry through the study of itsvarious aspects, including persona, attitude and tone, imagery, diction, form and prosody. Selections will introducestudents to a variety of different types of poetry as well as to a wide range of poets and poetic styles.Course Code:ENGL313Course Title:English Literature and Culture IA study of English Literature from the Medieval period to the Renaissance (1340-1660), focusing on variousrepresentative literary texts within their historical and cultural contexts.Course Code:ENGL314Course Title:English Literature and Culture IIThis course continues from ENGL313, studying English literature and culture from the Restoration Period to thebeginning of the Victorian period (1660-1832), focusing on various representative literary texts within their historicaland cultural contexts.Course Code:ENGL319Course Title:Literary Masterpieces of the Modern WordReading in World literature in translation, both in prose and verse, since the Middle Ages.Course Code:ENGL331Course Title:Commonwealth LiteratureRepresentative selections of Commonwealth literature; study of such themes as nationalism, exile, identity andcolonialism.Course Code:ENGL340Course Title:Introduction to Linguistics IIIntroduces students to basic concepts and terms in linguistics and develops an awareness of language as amultifaceted phenomenon through the analysis of contextualized English language data.Course Code:ENGL342Course Title:English Morphology and SyntaxSentence types and functions; basic sentence patterns; constituent structure analysis of simple sentences; clausestructure analysis of complex sentences; major structural transformations; functional categories and participantroles; inflectional and derivational morphology; lexical categories and their grammatical properties; verbalcategories; tense, aspect, voice, modality; sentence connection.Course Code:ENGL345Course Title:Applied English PhonologyThe speech organs; vowel and consonant articulation; consonant clusters; phonemic transcription; the relationbetween English sounds and spelling; word stress; weak and strong forms; rhythm groups; assimilation and elision;basic intonation patterns.Course Code:ENGL346Course Title:PsycholinguisticsChild Language development theories: prelinguistic and linguistic stages; acquisition processes and understanding ofutterances; relationship of language to cognition, perception and physiology; metalinguistic abilities in middle andlater childhood; language and the brain; literalism versus localization; role of memory; aphasia; animalcommunication; theories of second language acquisition and learning.Course Code:ENGL431Course Title:Literary CriticismStudies in criticism: historical backgrounds, critical theories, functions and types of criticism; exercises in practicalcriticism.14

Course Code:ENGL435Course Title:Special AuthorIntensive study of the works of a major literary figure (to be announced).Course Code:ENGL440Course Title:Contrastive Linguistics and Error AnalysisCritical differences between English and Arabic; the constructive analysis hypothesis; the predictive values of thehypothesis as far as ARAB learners of English are concerned; other causes of errors; practical work involving theidentification and correction of learners’ errors; the significance of corrective feedback; the problem of pre-emptingerrors.Course Code:ENGL444Course Title:SemanticsDifferent kinds of meaning; the meaning of words and their use; sense relations; exploiting sense relations todevelop vocabulary; word formation: pragmatic aspects of meaning.Course Code:ENGL445Course Title:StylisticsVarieties and elements of style; analytical approaches; relational aspects: linguistic elements, style features, voices,affects; stylistic analysis of selected texts.Course Code:ENGL447Course Title:SociolinguisticsThe relationship between language and society; accent and dialect; bilingual and multilingual societies;codeswitching; diglossia; language varieties; standard languages and vernaculars; lingua francas, pidgins and creoles;style, context and register.Course Code:ENGL449Course Title:Discourse AnalysisA practical course in discourse analysis with particular emphasis on coherence and the development of discoursecontent, textual cohesion, and varieties of style.Course Code:ENGL450Course Title:Project WritingIntroduces students to standard stylistic practices in the writing of academic papers. Students are required toresearch a topic approved by the instructor and to write a project of not less than 5000 words, with abstract andbibliography, documenting their research findings. Students will also be required to deliver an assessed oralpresentation of their research and to sit a final examination which will test their knowledge and application of thetechniques employed in documenting academic research.15

Minor ProgramsMinor in LinguisticsCourse Code:LING201Course Title:Writing Systems and LiteracyAn introduction to how human speech and thought are recorded in visual form; the origins of writing systems andhow they spread through space and time; the various types of writing; the process of decipherment; how we learnto read and write; printing and spelling; the cultural impact of writing and literacy; the phenomenon of text andinstant messaging as a new writing system.Course Code:LING202Course Title:Language and MediaIntroduction to media; types of media; news language; methods of media language analysis: discourse analysis,pragmatics, CDA, ethnography, SFG; practical media analysis.Course Code:LING301Course Title:Corpus LinguisticsAn introduction to language corpora as a source for linguistic analysis and language teaching; a survey of existingcorpora and their different uses; the use of variety of corpus tools to search for concepts; how to apply centralconcepts and methods of corpus linguistics in a number of investigations into the lexis and grammar of English; aswell as how to construct a corpus of a given target language and where linguistic data can be retrieved from.Course Code:LING311Course Title:Second Language AcquisitionThis course covers the basic principles of second language acquisition; explores current theories of how people learna second or foreign language; provides current views on second language acquisition; and explores major conceptsof SLA including aptitude, motivation, attitude, age and critical period, learning grammar, and classroom learning.Course Code:LING312Course Title:Applied LinguisticsAn introduction to applied linguistics; the nature and scope of Applied Linguistics; the use of linguistic knowledgeand methods of analysis in interdisciplinary fields; language acquisition; language teaching; language in use includingsocio-cultural aspects (workplace communication); lexicography; collecting and analyzing original data illustrating areal-life language-based problem.Course Code:LING411Course Title:Language and Speech DisordersThis course covers common and uncommon language and speech disorders in children and adults which may resultfrom genetics, injury, surgery, aging, and other factors; explores disorders such as aphasia, stuttering, stammering,autism, and other language disorders in light of current neurolinguistics research; and sheds light on the linguistic,social, emotional, psychological, and academic ramifications on the lives of patients and their caretakers.Course Code:LING412Course Title:Systematic Functional GrammarFormal and functional grammar; communicative and systemic functional grammar; analysis of the English structureof clauses and phrases; nominalization; the structure of verbal groups; register; genre; and metafunctions.Course Code:LING413Course Title:Cognitive LinguisticsAn introduction to cognitive and construction grammars; conceptualization; categorization; construal; imageschemas; frame/domains/semantic fields; prototypes; mental spaces; conceptual metaphors; and conceptualblending.Course Code:LING414Course Title:Advanced SociolinguisticsAn introduction to language variation and social inequality: motivations, conditions, and social consequences ofmorphosyntactic and phonetic variation; Historical sociolinguistics including Language contact, dialect contact,language change; Language policy and planning; Language and gender; Language and identity; Language and culture.16

Course Code:LING415Course Title:Critical Discourse AnalysisThis course addresses the theoretical and practical principles of critical discourse analysis (CDA). CDA examines howsocial and power relations, identities, and knowledge are constructed through written, visual, and spoken texts insocial settings (e.g. local, institutional and societal domains). This course is designed to foster critical understandingof how language is encoded and loaded with different cultural and ideological values and the different ways in whichlanguage can be used to mediate ideological representations and constructions of different socio-political andcultural categories, constructs and issues. The course will provide students with a working knowledge of CDA and itsapplication to qualitative and quantitative research and analysis of different public discourses.Minor in LiteratureCourse Code:LITR234Course Title:Studies in Short FictionThis course deals with the novella, a distinctive and well-established genre in literature. It introduces world- famousnovellas by the great pillars of this genre, like D. H. Lawrence, James Joyce, Henry James, Virginia Woolf, JohnSteinbeck, Leo Tolstoy, and others. And

BA in English Language and Literature (Major/Minor) 2020 Program Components Detailed Study Plan . 2 Year 1 -Semester 2 Course Code Course Title Course Hours Course Type Pre requisite Major LEC PRAC CRD GPA ENGL130 Introduction to L

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