The aim of the Language and Literacy course is to equip student teachers with skills for building a strong foundation for teaching learners in primary schools to read in familiar Zambian languages before transitioning to learning to read the official language, English.
In addition to strengthening the teaching of Early Grade Reading, the course is designed to equip student teachers with teaching skills that will enable them to effectively inculcate the knowledge, skills and values into the learners.
This course will therefore equip student teachers with skills for teaching literacy and language that will help learners in schools to read fluently and write clearly in order to communicate, gain knowledge, interpret the world and make sense of their experiences through their own social and cultural traditions.
At the end of the course, students should be able to:
STUDY AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Orientation to College studies: time and resource management
Use of the Library.
Improvising Reading and Listening Efficiency (Summary Skills)
Oral communication.
Improving academic writing skills.
PHONOLOGY
Language and Communication
The Organs of Speech
Consonants
Consonant Clusters
Vowels
The Syllable
Some types of Articulation
GRAMMAR (SYNTAX)
The concept of language
The units of language
Inflections, affixes and derivations
Forms of the English verb
Word classes (Parts of Speech)
Punctuation in direct and reported speech
The basic simple sentence elements
The simple sentence: The five basic sentence (verb) patterns, transitivity and intransitivity.
The Passive
Primary and modal auxiliary verbs.
Question tags and short form answers.
Nouns, pronouns and pro-forms.
Adjectives and determiners.
Adverbs and Intensifiers.
LISTENING AND SPEAKING
Public Speaking Skills.
What is speaking?
What is listening?
Purposes of Communicative Activities.
Oral Fluency.
READING SKILLS
Extensive Reading: The class library and reader.
Intensive Reading.
Extensive Reading: Literal comprehension; (Re-organisation; Inferential comprehension; Text Analysis; Evaluation and Appreciation.
Efficient Reading and Rapid Reading Techniques.
The Reading Syllabus: objectives and lesson planning.
Reading problems and Remedial strategies.
Designing Reading Materials, exercises and Tests.
Controlled Writing.
Guided Writing.
Free Writing.
Creative Writing.
Situational Composition.
LITERATURE
The concept of literature: what Literature is, and-what it aims to achieve; kinds of Literature and culture.
Literary forms (Novel, Poem and Drama/Play) and concepts; e.g. theme, plot, audience, symbolism, assonance stature etc.
Introduction to Oral Literature: e. g. myths and legends riddles and fable, story and song, proverbs and parable etc.
Short stories and the Novel, author, structure; setting, plot, characters, theme, chapter summaries.
Literature at the Junior Secondary School level: the class reader and the class Library.
The Senior Secondary School Literature Syllabus: aims and objective: set books.
Start anyone novel prescribed in the syllabus for Senior Secondary School.
Introduction to Sociolinguistics
Functions of Language- M.A.K Halliday’s Micro functions.
Varieties of Language accent, Dialect and Idiolect
Speech networks, Style and social relationships
Language dichotomic linguistic rules and social conventions, restricted codes and elaborated codes, Competence “and’ Performance, use and usage.
Language-situation policies and planning.
Language use and needs in Zambia
Ll, L2 and foreign language situations.
Monolingualism, Bilingualism, Multilingualism and Parity of Status.
Lingua franca, Official and national language.
Language engineering and diglossia.
The English Medium and the role of indigenous languages
Continuous Assessment 50%
Two assignments per year 30%
One test per year 20%
Examination 50%
Total 100%
Prescribed readings
Bainbridge, J. A. & Heydon, R.. (2017). Constructing meaning. Teaching language and literacy K-8 (6th ed.). Toronto: Nelson Education.
Leech, G. (1994), A Communicative Grammar of English: London: Longman.
Roach, P.(1991),English Phonetics and Phonology: Cambridge: Cambridge
Richards, J.C. and Rodgers, T.S. (1986), Approaches and Methods in Language Teaching: A Description and Analysis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Tomlinson B. and Ellis R.,(1991), Teaching Secondary English: London: Longman
Yule,G.(1977), The Study of Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
RECOMMENDED READINGS
Christophersen, P.(1979), An English Phonetic Course: London: Longman.
Croft Steve and Cross Helen, (2000), Literature, Criticism and Style. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Johnson K. and Brumfit C. (1979) The Communicative Approach to Language Teaching.Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Krashen S.(1982), Second Language Acquisition and Learning. New York: Pergamon.
Quirk R., (1980), A Grammar of Contemporary English. London: Longman.
Quirk R. and Green Baum (1978), A University Grammar of English. London: Longman.
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