Difference between revisions of "HIEC"
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+ | ====Music genres==== | ||
+ | Discuss the following genres and subgenres. What are their typical or defining characteristics? Where did they come from? What are some typical examples of each subgenre? Which are your favorites – and why? Feel free to add other genres or subgenres to this list. | ||
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+ | {| | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Classical | ||
+ | # Renaissance | ||
+ | # Baroque | ||
+ | # Classical (classical proper, of the 18th/19th century classical period) | ||
+ | # Romanticism | ||
+ | # Modern classical (e.g., experimental styles, twelve-tone) | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Jazz | ||
+ | # Jazz: Ragtime, Big Band, smooth / lounge jazz, progressive jazz, fusion, acid jazz, vocal jazz, experimental jazz | ||
+ | # Blues | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Rock (rock & roll) / pop | ||
+ | # Folk rock | ||
+ | # Rock / pop | ||
+ | # Punk, new wave, alternative | ||
+ | # Hip-hop / rap | ||
+ | # R&B (rhythm & blues) | ||
+ | # Urban | ||
+ | # Metal (heavy metal, thrash metal) | ||
+ | # K-pop, J-pop... | ||
+ | # Others: | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Folk music | ||
+ | # Celtic | ||
+ | # Bluegrass (western) | ||
+ | # Bluegrass (Cajun – French Louisiana) | ||
+ | # Country (country & western) | ||
+ | |||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
==Assignments== | ==Assignments== |
Revision as of 01:36, 24 July 2021
Intermediate Conversation 2 (High Intermediate)
- Pukyong National University (Daeyeon Campus)
- Fall 2020
- Course #109819
- Syllabus (revised 2020.08.31)
- Room: C25 #522, 530, 531 (allotted rooms, but not likely used)
- Instructional medium: This course will be conducted with a blend of live Zoom sessions and some uploaded, pre-recorded videos in the LMS. It is unlikely that we will hold live classes in our classroom.
Prof. Kent Lee
- Office: C25-1103
- Office hours: By appointment
Contents
1 Course description
This course deals with academic English for your college studies, including (1) better English learning strategies, and (2) basic academic English speaking skills for college life. This course is what we call English for academic purposes (EAP), and so this course will be quite different from your past high school and 학원 courses (at least in normal times, it would be quite different; the online format will affect this).
We are assuming that there will be no live in-person classes this semester. Thus, this course will be conducted with a blend of live Zoom sessions and pre-recorded lecture videos via the LMS.
1.1 Readings and materials
The textbook for this course is a course packet, which will be made available in a PDF file in the LMS. Other materials will be available in the LMS and at the course website
2 Tentative schedule
This is tentative, so you can expect changes and other activities, including readings, online forms, video discussion tasks, and other short assignments. GF = Google Form assignment; V = video discussion assigment (via LMS)
week | date | topics | assignments |
---|---|---|---|
01 | 01 Sept. | Course intro; learning strategies | GF#1: Basic info # survey form |
02 | 07 Sept. | Pronunciation: Stress, rhythm | Video #1 |
03 | 14 Sept. | Pronunciation: Rhythm; presentation skills; determiners | |
04 | 21 Sept. | Genres in literature & media | Video #2 |
05 | 28 Sept.* | Presentation media (PPT, Prezi) | |
06 | 05 Oct. | Presentation skills; determiners | Video #3 |
07 | 12 Oct. | Midterm prep; genres & tropes | |
08 | 19 Oct. | Midterm week | Presentations |
09 | 26 Oct. | Style issues | |
10 | 02 Nov. | Pragmatics: Linguistic politeness | |
11 | 09 Nov. | Pragmatics: Implicature | |
12 | 16 Nov. | Making pitches | |
13 | 23 Nov. | Pitches; Video production | |
14 | 30 Nov. | Video production; Presentation preparation | |
15 | 07 Dec. | Finals week | Presentations |
3 Units
Extra contents for some units are posted here, which are not in the book.
3.1 Genres
3.1.1 Introduction: Visual arts genres
In your group, choose one particular visual arts genre (TV/film) or literary genre to discuss. For your genre, what are common genre elements? Discuss this, and write some notes or answers to these questions below.
- Defining features or typical features (“ingredients”)
- Typical elements (plot / plot elements, setting / scene, characters / actors, protagonists, antagonists, contents, film techniques)
- Audience: target audience, audience expectations
- Appeal: reasons for its appeal
- Important subgenres
- Social value - what is the social value or utility of this?
- Vocabulary - important terms that you need to know to discuss this genre
3.1.2 Vocabulary
Discuss the following terms. If none of you knows the word, then go on to the next one. Please don’t spend your time looking up words that you don’t know.
- vicarious
- emulate : imitate
- parody, spoof
- cheesy
- sappy
- box office
- B movie
- flop
- flick
- chick flick
- rom-com
- sit-com
- gag
- slapstick
- cringe
- sidekick
- banter
- rivalry, love triangle
- slasher film
- jump scare
- film noire
- plot twist
- a reveal [noun]
- foreshadowing
- flashback
- trailer
- spoiler
- producer & director (What’s the difference?)
- plot: protagonist, antagonist, climax, resolution
3.1.3 Music genres
Discuss the following genres and subgenres. What are their typical or defining characteristics? Where did they come from? What are some typical examples of each subgenre? Which are your favorites – and why? Feel free to add other genres or subgenres to this list.
Classical
|
Jazz
|
Rock (rock & roll) / pop
|
Folk music
|
4 Assignments
- Google Form #1
- GF#1 Basic info # survey form
4.1 Video assignments
You will meet your group members in Zoom, record your conversation, and upload it here. These are minor assignments, worth 10 points each.
Arrange a Zoom meeting, and discuss the questions above. At least one person should record it (it's better if two or more people record it, in case of technical problems). Each person should say his/her name before starting to talk, and each person should speak for a total of at least 1.5 minutes throughout the video. You can do a discussion style, where people go back and forth and share their thoughts, or some other format. You should turn on your video (unless you have network connection problems).
Then at least one person should upload the video in the assignment space below. The other group members do not have to upload the same video; instead, you can enter comments below (like "I am in __'s group").
These are minor assignments, worth 10 points for each person. I will grade you based on your effort (so you don't have to speak eloquent English). Each person should talk for at least 1.5 minutes, so for a group of 4 people, for example, the video should be at least 6 minutes long.
- Video #2
- This video assignment is similar to the first one, except that you have the option of doing this as a group, or solo (alone). If you do it alone, you can record yourself via Zoom, smartphone, or however you like.
Topic:
- What is your favorite video genre, that is, your favorite genre of TV or film? Why? (It can be a type of TV show and/or movie, since these are generally the same.)
- Why do you like it?
- What is your favorite example of this genre, and why do you like it?
Length: If you do this solo, the bare minimum is 1.5 minutes of speaking time. If you do this as a group, then each person needs to speak for at least one minute.
This is due by Monday, and you should turn on your video for this.
- Video #3
For your third video assignment, you can do this solo (by yourself) or in a group, and you can form a group on your own of 3-5 people. As before, you can post the video in the assignment space below. Your speaking time should be at least 1.5 minutes if you do this solo, or 1 minute in a group conversation. You will discuss the following.
- If you were to produce your own film or TV show (or write your own book), which genre would you do?
- Why do you like that genre?
- What are the typical elements of that genre (in film, TV or books)?
- What kinds of tropes, plot and characters would you use? Are there some tropes that you would not want to use? (And why not?)