Postgraduate Courses
LANG
Language
- LANG 5000Foundation in Listening & Speaking for Postgraduate Students[0-3-0:1]Previous Course Code(s)LANG 500DescriptionFor students whose level of spoken English is lower than ELPA Level 4 (Speaking) when they enter the University. The course addresses the immediate linguistic needs of research postgraduate students for oral communication on campus using English. To complete the course, students are required to attain at least ELPA Level 4 (Speaking). Graded P or F.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Use more accurate pronunciation and more appropriate features of connected speech for effective communication.
- 2.Express views about academic and social topics with more appropriate topic development and coherence.
- 3.Show progress in their skills in listening for features in English texts to improve their own development of speaking skills.
- LANG 5001Postgraduate English for Engineering Research Studies[0-3-0:1]Previous Course Code(s)LANG 501Corequisite(s)LANG 5000DescriptionThis course aims to help research students in engineering communicate their research effectively. It highlights the characteristics of academic discourse, and provides training in the production of research-type documents, including abstracts, journal papers and theses. The course also gives extensive practice in the presentation and seminar skills necessary for academic study. Students who fail to fulfill the spoken English language requirement of the University are advised to take LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course (for students admitted in 2009/10 and onwards). Graded P or F.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Apply appropriate methods such as summarizing and paraphrasing to avoid plagiarism in their research writing.
- 2.Identify the organization, conventions and functions of different sections of a research paper or thesis.
- 3.Structure a research paper or thesis appropriately in line with the accepted norms of the field.
- 4.Produce a critical review of the literature for their research.
- 5.Explain their research effectively in an oral presentation to a mixed audience.
- 6.Lead, and actively participate in, academic seminars and contribute to the discussion as well as participate in self-assessment, leading to autonomous learning.
- LANG 5002Postgraduate English for Business and Social Science Studies[0-3-0:1]Corequisite(s)LANG 5000DescriptionThis course is intended to provide RPG students of SBM and SOSC with essential training in academic writing, speaking and critical reading relevant to the study of a research postgraduate degree. Students who fail to fulfill the Spoken English language requirement of the University are advised to take LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course (for students admitted in 2009/10 and onwards). Graded P or F.
- LANG 5005Communicating Research in English[0-3-0:1]Corequisite(s)LANG 5000Exclusion(s)LANG 5001, LANG 5002, LANG 5010, LANG 5071, LANG 5080, LANG 5081Mode of Delivery[BLD] Blended learningDescriptionThis course aims to help research degree students to develop skills they need to understand how to successfully communicate research in English to academic, cross-disciplinary and non-specialists audiences. The course is offered for RPG students at both Clear Water Bay (CWB) and Guangzhou (GZ). Students who fail to satisfy the university's English language requirement are advised to complete LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course. Graded P or F.
- LANG 5010Postgraduate English for Science Studies[0-3-0:1]Corequisite(s)LANG 5000DescriptionThis course teaches common skills postgraduate science students need to write and speak about their research. The course is compulsory for all RPG students of SSCI (for students admitted in 2012/13 and onwards). Students who fail to fulfill the English language requirement of the University are advised to take LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course (for students admitted in 2009/10 and onwards). Graded P or F.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand academic, stylistic and rhetorical conventions of spoken and written research in the sciences.
- 2.Understand the importance of critique, argument and contribution in spoken and written research in the sciences.
- 3.Develop an engaging and appropriate style of academic writing and speaking suitable for potential audiences.
- 4.Communicate their own research persuasively to academic and non-specialist audiences by applying this learning.
- LANG 5030English Communication for Postgraduate Engineering Studies[0-3-0:1]Previous Course Code(s)LANG 504DescriptionThis is an English for Academic Purposes course specially designed to assist postgraduate students in addressing linguistic challenges while pursuing a MSc in Engineering. It aims to enhance students’ academic presentation, discussion and writing skills. Students will also learn how to make use of existing electronic resources and various English dictionaries for effective and life-long learning. Graded P or F.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Make effective presentations, and be able to evaluate their fellow classmates’ presentation skills.
- 2.Participate effectively in and conduct seminar discussions.
- 3.Develop strategies for effective listening and speaking in academic contexts.
- 4.Develop strategies for writing accurately in academic contexts.
- LANG 5070Advanced Critical Writing for Academic Purposes[0-3-0:3]Exclusion(s)LANG 5070H (prior to 2017-18)DescriptionFor students of the MSc in Global China Studies. The course aims to develop students' ability to produce written texts of a range of genres, appropriate to the academic context, and demonstrating adequate control of syntax, lexis and style.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Write a range of academic texts demonstrating appropriate control of syntaz.
- 2.Recognize and produce the essential features of different written genres, including critical reviews, summaries and abstracts.
- 3.Distinguish clearly between facts and opinions and extract salient points in written texts.
- 4.Develop written arguments with reference to different sources.
- 5.Demonstrate critical awareness of accuracy in written English, including texts written by peers.
- LANG 5071Postgraduate English for the Humanities[0-3-0:1]Corequisite(s)LANG 5000DescriptionThis course explores rhetorical, academic and stylistic conventions common in humanities disciplines, so that RPG humanities students can effectively communicate their research to academic audiences in spoken and written formats. The course is compulsory for all RPG students of HUMA. Students who fail to fulfill the English language requirement of the University are advised to take LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course (for students admitted in 2013/14 and onwards). Graded P or F.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand rhetorical, academic and stylistic conventions of spoken and written humanities texts.
- 2.Understand how persuasive argument is the core feature and organizing principle of humanities research texts.
- 3.Communicate their own research persuasively to academic audiences by applying this learning.
- LANG 5072English Academic Writing on Chinese Culture[0-3-0:3]DescriptionThe course is intended to provide students with essential training in academic writing, with a focus on the language used in the context of Chinese culture. This is a compulsory foundation course for all students in the MA program in Chinese Culture.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Identify the common genres of academic writing, including abstract, literature review, argument essay and research article.
- 2.Identify the common referencing format and referencing skills, including quoting, paraphrasing and summarizing.
- 3.Describe how academic texts are structured and how various devices are used for improving the coherence and cohesion of academic writing.
- 4.Recognize how hedging and qualifying language strengthens and weakens arguments and common fallacies in academic writing.
- 5.Explain the importance of identifying purposes and audience before writing, which affects the writing style and tone.
- 6.Distinguish specific language and vocabulary for academic writing.
- LANG 5080English Seminar and Presentation Skills[0-3-0:3]Corequisite(s)LANG 5000DescriptionThis one-term course aims at enhancing the spoken English of research postgraduate students in the Interdisciplinary Programs Office. The course focuses on developing appropriate English skills for participation in academic seminars and giving effective presentations of the students' own research. Students who fail to fulfill the spoken English language requirement of the University are advised to take LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course (for students admitted in 2009/10 and onward).Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Engage confidently and fluently in seminar discussion on a range of topics related to Environmental Science, Policy and Management.
- 2.Explain and defend their own positions on a range of issues related to their subject.
- 3.Provide an effective oral critique of others’ positions and proposals.
- 4.Ask appropriate question in seminar discussion.
- 5.Use a wide range of subject-related vocabulary in oral interaction.
- 6.Deliver effective presentations based on their own research topics.
- 7.Demonstrate skills in referring to empirical data in oral presentations.
- 8.Make appropriate use of supporting visual material in oral presentations.
- 9.Handle audience questions skilfully.
- LANG 5081Research Writing Skills[0-3-0:3]Corequisite(s)LANG 5000DescriptionThis one-semester course aims at enhancing the research writing skills of the research postgraduates in the Interdisciplinary Programs Office to help them meet the specific demands of their academic work. It particularly focuses on developing students' abilities in writing a wide spectrum of research genres, including proposal abstracts, papers and theses. Students who fail to fulfill the spoken English language requirement of the University are advised to take LANG 5000 before enrolling for this course (for students admitted in 2009/10 and onward).Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand the specific discourse features of the writing of their own discipline and individual research interest, and internalize these into their research writing.
- 2.Identify the overall structure of a thesis or research paper, as well as the functions and conventions of its different sections (abstract, introduction, literature review, method, results, discussion and conclusion.
- 3.Use language effectively to write succinct and persuasive abstracts according to their specific purposes (for acceptance by conferences/journals, summarizing their thesis).
- 4.Integrate the introduction with the overall organization of a paper or thesis, and engage readers right from the start.
- 5.Include citations and quotations seamlessly in the literature review, and effectively synthesize different viewpoints to form a coherent argument.
- 6.Meet the linguistic challenges in writing papers and thesis chapters based on quantitative data, and in describing experimental designs and formulating research questions.
- 7.Present results accurately and clearly, and discuss their essence by making use of linguistic devices such as hedging.
- 8.Adopt rhetorical devices in the conclusion, and to make meaningful connections with earlier parts/chapters of a paper or thesis.
- LANG 5101Basic Chinese for International Management[0-6-0:3]DescriptionThis is a course restricted to students in the MSc in International Management program with no previous knowledge of Chinese. It aims to offer them a foundation in language so that they can communicate effectively and appropriately in spoken Putonghua and written Chinese in undemanding contexts. Basic mastery of the Chinese phonological and syntactic systems by students is also expected.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Pronounce and produce words or sentences with a fair degree of accuracy.
- 2.Achieve communicative tasks relevant to business contexts in relatively simple terms.
- 3.Understand simple, familiar, brief and clear discourse related to personal or everyday life.
- 4.Produce simple sentence structures, provide descriptions, and exchange some ideas on familiar and common topics.
- 5.Develop confidence and interest in learning the Chinese language.
- 6.Gain basic Chinese cultural knowledge and acquire a degree of cultural awareness.
- 7.Understand and use familiar everyday expressions and basic phrases aimed at the satisfaction of concrete needs of business professionals.
- 8.Introduce themselves and others and ask and answer questions about personal details such as where they live, people they know and things they have.
- 9.Interact in a simple way provided the interlocutor talks slowly and clearly and is prepared to help.
- LANG 5330Basic Spanish for International Management[0-5-0:2]DescriptionThis is a course restricted to students in the MSc in International Management program with no previous knowledge of Spanish. It aims to offer them a foundation in the language so that they can communicate appropriately in Spanish on a variety of relevant topics, and integrate more comfortably into a study environment in which knowledge of a European language other than English is assumed.Intended Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- 1.Understand, make, and respond appropriately to everyday conversational enquiries.
- 2.Understand basic instructions, notices or information.
- 3.Take part in a basic factual conversation.
- 4.Understand short reports or descriptions.
- 5.Take and pass on simple messages.
- 6.Make factual summaries and requests based on notes taken, including times, dates and places.
- 7.Understand and give straightforward opinions and explanations.
- 8.Understand and produce short texts relating to people's lives and interests.
- 9.Demonstrate sufficiently accurate pronunciation and grammatical structure to be understood by native speakers of Spanish.
- 10.Show confidence when dealing with Spanish-speaking people and Spanish-language materials in their study and in business contexts.