Technical English for Engineering: Course Book (Take-off!): 1

Technical English for Engineering: Course Book (Take-off!): 1

by David Morgan (Author), NicholasRegan (Author)

Synopsis

Take-Off: Technical English for Engineering Course Book Take-Off has been designed for non-native speakers of English who are studying Engineering NVQ Level 2 and above. The aeronautical context is particularly aimed at technicians and engineers who are going on to work in the aeronautics industry. Take-Off is an ESP course for intermediate-level students. Unlike many ESP courses, it teaches genuine transferable skills and is ideal for students who need to further their technical training in English. The focus is on skills development, using relevant contexts, with grammar taking a strong supporting role. Reading and listening development is dealt with in the context of understanding instructions and information in technical manuals. Students develop the speaking skills of asking for and giving factual information, and the writing skills necessary to complete workplace documentation, such as accident reports and safety assessments. Take-Off uses a communicative methodology, with graded tasks that are careful scaffolded to involve and motivate the students, providing them with a clear sense of achievement. The wide variety of texts and task types will appeal to a broad range of ages and nationalities. There are also comprehensive word lists and a glossary of terms for student reference. A bank of tests are provided online. Please contact us if you have purchased the book and would like access to these tests. Key Features * Practical skills developed for dealing with oral and written instructions and documentation * Task-based approach ensures achievable lesson outcomes * Variety of texts and tasks on a wide range of aeronautical topics * Two review sections to consolidate skills and vocabulary knowledge * Glossary and electrical appendix * Audio CDs for further self-study and homework Accompanying Workbook, Teacher's Book and Interactive Media Book also available.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 321
Edition: 1st
Publisher: Garnet Education
Published: 01 Jan 2008

ISBN 10: 1859649742
ISBN 13: 9781859649749

Media Reviews
The twelve chapters - sometimes with an aeronautical industry slant - are more than sufficient to form a useful, comprehensive and certainly interesting all-round course, or just to dip into as needed. Richard Tily, Sprachkom, Germany Take-off: Technical English for Engineering describes itself as an ESP course for intermediate-level students. It is particularly aimed at 'technicians and engineers who are going on to work in the aeronautics industry' but would also be useful for anyone heading in the mechanical engineering direction. Students heading for civil, chemical and electrical engineering, however, may well be turned off by the aeronautical examples and the strong mechanical bias. The text is also based on the premise that English teachers may have little or no technical background knowledge of engineering, so authentic texts have been modified to make them more accessible, and tasks are designed to focus on language development, not technical understanding. As a core text for students entering the aeronautics industry it works well, having a strong practical emphasis and a clear goal of enabling students to function well in the training and work environment. Since listening is a critical skill for maintenance crew members, for example, there is a higher proportion of listening exercises than one would expect in a more general course book. The recordings introduce a number of regional English accents and some Australian and American accents, and the exercises for training students in listening strategies are well thought out. The reading and writing exercises are similarly well balanced, seeking to enable students to deal with texts that will be required in the workplace. The reading texts, for example, have a heavy focus on extracting data from dense technical texts, interpreting diagrams and labeled drawings, and working with bullet-pointed manual instructions, whilst the writing tasks include transferring data from listening text to pictures, from diagrams to instructions and filling in forms. The teacher's book and workbook are well-structured, and the teacher should be confidence that answers are comprehensively supplied, with explanation if necessary. The workbook provides welcome extra practice, and is clearly linked back to the course book. The glossary, word list and electrical symbols list at the back of the course book are a useful addition. Since we do not have students who are seeking to enter the aeronautics industry, but we do prepare students for entry into undergraduate and postgraduate engineering and physics programmes, we were interested to see whether we could use parts of this course to supplement our current texts and to expand our range of readings to suit the more technically-minded of our students. Texts of a suitable level on purely scientific matters can be difficult to find, and are a welcome addition to a portfolio of texts with an arts/commerce/environmental focus. Whilst this course is necessarily very rich in technical language, we nevertheless found a number of lessons - which were sufficiently general in terms of vocabulary to be relevant and useful to all students - on subjects such as robots, the power of water, skeletons, etc. and which could be easily exploited in the EAP classroom. All in all, whilst this text does have a limited audience, it is nevertheless one that we will find useful to keep on our shelf. Laura Hasely, in consultation with Peter Reynolds and Dr Alison Adams, Bridging Programmes, Universi Take-Off would make great supplementary material to an already existing programme. Alternatively, it would suit a course based on selected units/lessons for students from mixed technical fields or aeronautics engineers only. Vicki Hayden for IATEFL Voices, Issue 229, November / December 2012 Take-Off provides the engineering students with the appropriate tools and training they need to acquire, remember and use the engineering English language with confidence. The obvious merit of this textbook lies in the fact that all the texts are carefully and meticulously put together to cut down on teacher-planning time, thus making the learning process more memorable for students. In addition to this, the logically staged grammar points and carefully controlled engineering vocabulary ensures the students, future engineers, that they are equipped and provided with the most frequently employed vocabulary they will one day use. Step-by-step academic skill development helps students learn how to organise engineering information, make connections and think critically. Appealing and appropriate range of topics and themes stimulate discussion and provide clear directions for speaking and writing, while multiple realistic engineering models include authentic step-by-step demonstrations which display how revision is essential to effectively completing an engineering assignment in English. In a nutshell, the Take-Off textbook helps students to prepare for the world of engineering, whilst focusing on systematic development of their communicative abilities and increasing their engineering employment opportunities. Bearing all the above said, Take-Off is an absolute must-have for any teacher of technical English for Engineering. The Journal of Teaching English for Specific and Academic Purposes, Vol. 1, No 1, 2013
Author Bio
David Morgan, BA Cert Ed., co-authored the Take-Off students book. He has spent most of his teaching career in Further Education and Industry, teaching general English, EFL and ESP. He has completed numerous specialist projects, such as teaching short courses to air traffic control personnel and producing a 200-hour intermediate ESP course for a leading Middle Eastern electricity supply company. Until 2003, he was in charge of the English Language programme at the on-site training centre of a major oil company in Libya, where national employees from all technical fields followed courses in General English and subject-specific ESP. During this time, he pioneered the establishment of the UCLES examinations in order to produce an externally validated objective yardstick by which courses and teaching could be judged. He has retired from full-time teaching but is still interested in working on materials writing and editing projects which involve producing reading and listening passages based on specific subject areas. Nicholas Regan is an ELT writer and teacher trainer. Since 2002, he has worked as an independent consultant for teacher development in the primary and secondary sectors, covering teaching in under-resourced and crowded classrooms, and working with Ministries of Education, Universities and schools in China, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America and the EU. He has also been involved in the evaluation of state provision of English teaching. For several years he taught English at secondary school level in Latin America. For Garnet Education, he has co-authored the ESP course Take-Off, and has also contributed to ESAP: Mechanical Engineering, Progressive Skills in English, New Skills in English, UAE English Skills series and the English for Libya series. He has also written materials for ELT training at Diploma level. His other work includes examining and assessment design for ESOL teaching qualifications; pre- and in-service training; and supervision of dissertations for MA TESOL students at the University of Birmingham. He holds the Trinity College London LTCL DipTESOL and an MA in Applied Linguistics from the University of Reading, UK.