Degrees incorporating this pedagocial element :
Description
- Public Speaking: Master students can choose to take an optional course in English, which is adapted to their level of English. However, since the minimum requirement for Master students is to be competent in giving a talk (with the aid of a visual support), to be able to take notes and summarise the contents of a lecture and to be able to read with ease, obligatory lessons are provided for those students who have not mastered these skills at the B2 level of the Common European Framework.
While the "rules" of public speaking are simple, actually integrating all the "good ideas" to the point at which they become one's own, in order to successfully transmit any information to any audience is not as simple as it might seem. The public speaking course is firmly anchored in the English as a Foreign Language (EFL) department - thus the transferable public speaking techniques, which are the main focus of the lessons, are in fact a pretext for improving the English of the participants. This follows the Dogme school of EFL, where the language work is based entirely on the "emergent language" of the participants.
Lessons contents
The 24 hours public speaking class, with a maximum number of 12 participants, provides the participants with a step-by-step hands-on experience of the importance of:
- using the visual channel to its full potential
- body language and eye contact
- the construction of the presentation
- markers and transitions
- pacing the talk
- the importance of rehearsing beforehand
- the impact of the conclusion
- tips and tricks to boost confidence
- handling questions from the audience
The integration of these techniques is reinforced by the observation of each other, of themselves - the participants are repetitively filmed for this purpose - and of professional speakers.
The students are invited to use the pretext of these classes to either review in depth some specific aspect of their instruction or on the contrary, to look into some subject more loosely connected with their main subject in order to inform and entertain their colleagues in the class.
- French as a Foreign Language: Master students can choose to take this optional course to learn, speak and write in French, which is adapted to their level of French. The objectives are to improve the student’s command of language and to learn to communicate in everyday life situations. This course also allows to discover French culture and to get familiar with the French way of life.
In this course, different aspects will be covered: grammar, phonetics, oral and writing comprehension exercises, notions of French culture. For the lessons, various supports are used: articles, schoolbooks texts, broadcasts from the Internet, short films, film extracts; and the activities include presentations, debates, writing, role-plays and lab works.
Assessment:
- French as a Foreign Language: Written or oral exam with duration.
- Public Speaking: The course requirements include the submission of a courselog, in which the student has recorded each week what they have individually learnt from the lesson, with a record of the new vocabulary encountered and how it is used. The final exam consists of a talk given in the presence of the class, the English teacher and a subject specialist teacher.
Recommended prerequisite
- French as a Foreign Language:
- Beginners: no prerequisite,
- Intermediate: having followed the fundamentals in French (level A2),
- Advanced: reading and practicing everyday language (level B2).
- Public Speaking:
- Intermediate: having followed the fundamentals in English (level A2),
- Advanced: reading and practicing everyday language (level B2).