Showing posts with label Syllabus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Syllabus. Show all posts

19 August 2018

Syllabus for the post of Junior Lecturers of English in TS Residential Educational Institutions Societies



Gurukul Recruitment Board

Syllabus for the post of Junior Lecturers of English in TS Residential Educational Institutions Societies 



Scheme of Examination 
Written Examination (Objective Type)                              No. of Questions Duration (Minutes) Marks 
Paper-I General Studies,General Abilities and 
             Basic Proficiency in English                                 100                      120                           100 
Paper-II Pedagogy Across the Curriculum 
              (Common Syllabus)                                             100                       120                           100 
Paper-III Concerned Subject (PG Level)                           100                       120                           100 
                                                                      Demonstration                                                              25 
                                                                                                                                       Total           325



Syllabus Paper-I 

General Studies, General Abilities and Basic Proficiency in English 

Section-I: General Studies 

1. Current Affairs – Regional, National & International. 
2. Indian Constitution; Indian Political System; Governance and Public Policy. 
3. Social Exclusion; Rights issues such as Gender, Caste, Tribe, Disability etc. and inclusive policies. 
4. Society Culture, Civilization Heritage, Arts and Literature of India and Telangana 
5. General Science; India’s Achievements in Science and Technology 
6. Environmental Issues; Disaster Management- Prevention and Mitigation Strategies and Sustainable Development. 
7. Economic and Social Development of India and Telangana. 
8. Socio-economic, Political and Cultural History of Telangana with special emphasis on Telangana Statehood Movement and formation of Telangana state. 

Section-II: General Abilities 

9. Analytical Abilities: Logical Reasoning and Data Interpretation. 
10. Moral Values and Professional Ethics in Education. 
11. Teaching Aptitude 

Section – III: Basic Proficiency in English

i) School Level English Grammar: Articles; Tense; Noun & Pronouns; Adjectives; Adverbs; Verbs; Modals; SubjectVerb Agreement; Non-Finites; Reported Speech; Degrees of Comparison; Active and Passive Voice; Prepositions; Conjunctions; Conditionals. 
ii) Vocabulary: Synonyms and Antonyms; Phrasal Verbs; Related Pair of Words; Idioms and Phrases; Proverbs. 
iii) Words and Sentences: Use of Words; Choosing Appropriate words and Words often Confused; Sentence Arrangement, Completion, Fillers and Improvement; Transformation of Sentences; Comprehension; Punctuation; Spelling Test; Spotting of Errors.

Syllabus Paper-II Pedagogy Across the Curriculum (Common Syllabus) 


I. The History and Nature of liberal disciplines of knowledge. Importance of Cognitive and Non-Cognitive areas in Education. 
II. Values, Aims and Objectives of Teaching Liberal and Creative Disciplines of Knowledge including Vocational subjects, Crafts, Performance and Fine arts etc. 
III. Psychology of Human Development; Psychology of Teaching and Learning. 
IV. Curriculum: Construction, Organization and Development 
V. Approaches, Methods and Techniques of Teaching Disciplines of Knowledge 
VI. Planning for Effective Instruction: Different Plans and Designing Learning Experiences. 
VII. Learning Resources and Designing Instructional Material; Labs; Teaching Aids; Textbooks; ICT integration; OERs (Open Educational Resources). 
VIII. Measurement and Evaluation: Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation (CCE); Tools and Techniques of Evaluation; Achievement and Diagnostic Tests. Critical approach to assessment and evaluation. 
IX. Learning Disabilities; Learning Difficulties and Education of Exceptional and Disabled Children 
X. Disciplines of Knowledge and Everyday Life; Non-formal Education in the Institutions of Learning. 
XI. Pedagogical Concerns: Quality and Academic Standards; Teaching and Its relationship with Learning and Learner, Learners in Contexts: Situating learner in the Socio-Political and Cultural Context ; Managing Behavior problems, Guidance & Counseling, Punishment and Its legal implications, Rights of a Child, Time Management, Distinction between Assessment for Learning and Assessment of Learning, School Based Assessment, Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation; Understanding Teaching and Learning in the context of NCF and Right to Education Act.


Paper – III: English 


I. Genres, Movements, Schools, Concepts. 
• Renaissance-Reformation, Metaphysical poetry, Neo-classicism, Puritanism, Restoration, Romanticism, Victorian Age, Realism-Naturalism, Expressionism, Symbolism, Modernism, Postmodernism. 
• Structuralism, Post structuralism, Feminism, Post colonialism, Diaspora, Race Gender and Caste. 
• English Literary Criticism from Philip Sydney to Matthew Arnold 
• New Criticism, Formalism, Archetypal criticism, New Historicism, Psychoanalytical criticism, Reader response criticism. 
• Literary Genres: Poetry, Fiction, Prose, Drama (origins and development, elements, forms, types) 

II. Writers and Texts 
• Christopher Marlowe Doctor Faustus 
• William Shakespeare Hamlet 
• John Milton Paradise Lost-Book 1 
• William Wordsworth “Immortality Ode”, Tintern Abbey 
• Robert Browning “My Last Duchess”, “Andrea del Sarto” 
• Thomas Hardy Tess of the d’ Urbervilles 
• TS Eliot The Waste Land 
• G.B. Shaw Saint Joan 
• Virginia Woolf “A Room of One’s Own” 
• William Golding Lord of the Flies 
• Walt Whitman “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomd”,”Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” 
• Arthur Miller Death of a Salesman 
• Toni Morrison Beloved 
• Mulk Raj Anand Untouchable 
• Kamala Das “An Introduction”, “The Old Playhouse” 
• Girish Karnad Hayavadana 
• Salman Rushdie Midnight’s Children 
• Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart 
• Margaret Atwood Edible Woman 
• Derek Walcott Dream on Monkey Mountain 

III English Language Teaching 

1. ELT in India: (History and status of English in India; English as Second Language, English as Foreign Language, and English as Global Language). 
2. Methods and Approaches: (Grammar Translation method, Direct method, Audio-Lingual method; Structural approach, Communicative language teaching) 
3. Teaching of Language Skills: (Teaching of Listening, Speaking, Reading, and Writing Skills; Teaching of Grammar and Functional English; Teaching of Vocabulary; Classroom techniques; Use of authentic materials) Teaching literature.
4. Testing and Evaluation: (Principles, Types, Objectives of testing and evaluation) 
5. Phonetics and Phonology; Syntax and Structure. 


IV. Literary comprehension - (Excerpts from poetry and prose for comprehension

Syllabus for the post of Degree College Lecturers of English in TS Residential Educational Institutions Societies

GOVERNMENT OF TELANGANATELANGANA RESIDENTIAL EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS RECRUITMENT BOARD (TREI-RB)



Syllabus for the post of Degree College Lecturers of English in TS Residential Educational Institutions Societies 

Scheme of examination for the post of Degree College Lecturers in Residential Educational Institutions Societies 


Scheme of Examination  Examination (Objective Type)   No. of Questions Duration (Minutes) Marks Paper-I General Studies, General Abilities and 
Basic Proficiency in English                                                 100                      120                           100 
Paper-II Subject Discipline Knowledge 
/ Concerned Subject (P.G.Level)                                           100                      120                           100 
                                                                                     Demonstration                                                 25 
                                                                                                                                                   Total 225 


Written Examination Syllabus for the post of Degree College Lecturers in Residential Educational Institutions Societies 

Syllabus Paper - I 

Section-I: General Studies 

1. Current Affairs – Regional, National & International. 
2. Indian Constitution; Indian Political System; Governance and Public Policy. 
3. Social Exclusion; Rights issues such as Gender, Caste, Tribe, Disability etc. and inclusive policies. 
4. Society Culture, Civilization Heritage, Arts and Literature of India and Telangana 
5. General Science; India’s Achievements in Science and Technology 
6. Environmental Issues; Disaster Management- Prevention and Mitigation Strategies and Sustainable Development. 
7. Economic and Social Development of India and Telangana. 
8. Socio-economic, Political and Cultural History of Telangana with special emphasis on Telangana Statehood Movement and formation of Telangana state. 

Section-II: General Abilities 

9. Analytical Abilities: Logical Reasoning and Data Interpretation. 
10. Moral Values and Professional Ethics in Education. 
11. Teaching Aptitude 

Section – III: Basic Proficiency in English

 i) School Level English Grammar: Articles; Tense; Noun & Pronouns; Adjectives; Adverbs; Verbs; Modals; SubjectVerb Agreement; Non-Finites; Reported Speech; Degrees of Comparison; Active and Passive Voice; Prepositions; Conjunctions; Conditionals. 
ii) Vocabulary: Synonyms and Antonyms; Phrasal Verbs; Related Pair of Words; Idioms and Phrases; Proverbs. 
iii) Words and Sentences: Use of Words; Choosing Appropriate words and Words often Confused; Sentence Arrangement, Completion, Fillers and Improvement; Transformation of Sentences; Comprehension; Punctuation; Spelling Test; Spotting of Errors.

Paper – II: English 

I. Genres, Movements, Schools, Concepts: 

 Renaissance-Reformation, Metaphysical poetry, Neo-classicism, Puritanism, Restoration, Romanticism,Victorian Age, Realism-Naturalism, Expressionism, Symbolism, Modernism, Postmodernism. 
 Structuralism, Poststructuralism, Feminism, Postcolonialism, Diaspora, Race Gender and Caste.  English Literary Criticism from Philip Sydney to Matthew Arnold 
 New Criticism, Formalism, Archetypal criticism, New Historicism, Psychoanalytical criticism,Reader response criticism. 
 Literary Genres: Poetry, Fiction, Prose, Drama (origins and development, elements, forms, types) 

II. Writers and Texts: 

 Christopher Marlowe Doctor Faustus 
 William Shakespeare Hamlet 
 John Milton Paradise Lost-Book 1
 William Wordsworth “Immortality Ode”, Tintern Abbey 
 Robert Browning “My Last Duchess”, “Andrea del Sarto” 
 Thomas Hardy Tess of the d’ Urbervilles 
 TS Eliot The Waste Land 
 G.B. Shaw Saint Joan 
 Virginia Woolf “A Room of One’s Own” 
 William Golding Lord of the Flies 
 Walt Whitman “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomd”,”Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” 
 Arthur Miller Death of a Salesman 
 Toni Morrison Beloved 
 Mulk Raj Anand Untouchable 
 Kamala Das “An Introduction”, “The Old Playhouse” 
 Girish Karnad Hayavadana 
 Salman Rushdie Midnight’s Children 
 Chinua Achebe Things Fall Apart 
 Margaret Atwood Edible Woman 
 Derek Walcott Dream on Monkey Mountain 

III. English Language Teaching: 

1. ELT in India : (History and status of English in India; English as Second Language, English asForeign Language, and English as Global Language). 
2. Methods and Approaches: (Grammar Translation method, Direct method, Audio-Lingual method;Structural approach, Communicative language teaching) 
3. Teaching of Language Skills : (Teaching of Listening, Speaking, Reading, and Writing Skills;Teaching of Grammar and Functional English; Teaching of Vocabulary; Classroom techniques; Useof authentic materials) Teaching literature. 
4. Testing and Evaluation: (Principles, Types, Objectives of testing and evaluation) 
5. Phonetics and Phonology; Syntax and Structure. 

IV. Literary comprehension - (Excerpts from poetry and prose for comprehension) 

28 January 2017

TS Gurukul PGT English Syllabus 2017


TS Gurukul PGT English Syllabus
Scheme and Syllabus for the post of Post Graduate Teacher in
Residential Educational Institution Societies


Preliminary (Screening Test)

Scheme of Examination

Written Examination (Objective Type) No. of
Questions
Duration
(Minutes)
Marks
PaperGeneral Studies, General
Abilities and Basic Proficiency
in English
150 150 150

Syllabus
Paper: I General Studies, General Abilities and Basic Proficiency In English

Section-I: General Studies

1. Current Affairs – Regional, National & International.
2. Indian Constitution; Indian Political System; Governance and Public Policy.
3. Social Exclusion; Rights issues such as Gender, Caste, Tribe, Disability etc.and inclusive policies.
4. Society Culture, Civilization Heritage, Arts, and Literature of India and Telangana
5. General Science; India’s Achievements in Science and Technology
6. Environmental Issues; Disaster Management- Prevention and Mitigation Strategies and Sustainable Development.
7. Economic and Social Development of India and Telangana.
8. Socioeconomic, Political and Cultural History of Telangana with special emphasis on Telangana Statehood Movement and formation of Telangana state.



Section-II: General Abilities

9. Analytical Abilities: Logical Reasoning and Data Interpretation.
10. Moral Values and Professional Ethics in Educati
on.
11. Teaching Aptitude
.

Section – III: Basic Proficiency in English 

i) School Level English Grammar:
Articles; Tense; Noun & Pronouns; Adjectives; Adverbs; Verbs; Modals; Subject-Verb Agreement; Non-Finites; reported speech; Degrees of Comparison; Active and Passive Voice; Prepositions;
Conjunctions; Conditionals.

ii) Vocabulary:
Synonyms and Antonyms; Phrasal Verbs; Related Pair of Words; Idioms and Phrases; Proverbs.


iii) Words and Sentences:
Use of Words; Choosing Appropriate words and Words often Confused; Sentence Arrangement, Completion, Fillers and Improvement; Transformation of Sentences; Comprehension;
Punctuation; Spelling Test; Spotting errors
Proverbs.






Scheme of Main Examination for the post of Post Graduate Teacher in Residential Educational Institution Societies
Written Examination (Objective TypeNo. of
Questions
Duration
(Minutes)
Marks
Paper – I Pedagogy of Concerned 150 150 150
Paper – IISubject Discipline
Knowledge/Concerned
Subject
150 150 150
Total 300

PGT English Main Examination Syllabus

Main Examination Syllabus for the post of Post Graduate Teacher in Residential Educational Institution Societies

Paper-I: Pedagogy of English Language
1. The Nature of language and its Historical Development; First Language; Second Language and Third Language; Different Types of Languages; Mother Tongue; Languages of Different Professions; Importance of languages across School Curriculum; Contributions of Creative Writers.
2. Values, Aims, and Objectives of Teaching Languages
3. Child Development; Psychology of Teaching and Learning Languages; Language, Thinking and Creativity.
4. Language Curriculum: Construction, Organization and Development
5. Language Skills; Planning for Effective Instruction in Language Classrooms: Different Plans and Designing Learning Experiences.
6. Approaches, Methods, and Techniques of Teaching Languages with special reference to School Content (Prose/Fiction /Poetry/Drama/Essay)
7. Teaching and Learning Resources and Designing Instructional Material for Languages; Language Labs; Teaching Aids; Textbooks; ICT in Language Teaching and Learning
8. Measurement and Evaluation in Languages: Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation (CCE); Tools and Techniques of Evaluation; Achievement and Diagnostic Tests.
9. Learning Disabilities/Difficulties and Education of Exceptional/ Disabled Children in Languages
10. Language and Everyday Life; Language Issues and Policies. National and  State Curriculum frameworks.




Paper –II: English Language & Literature
Part-A
I. Reading Comprehension of unseen passage. 
II. Grammar and Vocabulary
1. Parts of Speech;
2. Subject and predicate
3.Types of sentences - transformations
4. Conjunctions (Linkers; connectors; cohesive devices);
5. Verbs (Regular and Irregular) and modals;
6. Time and Tense



7)Prepositions;
8) Adverbs – types and their order in sentences; 
9)Adjectives including Degrees of Comparison and also Quantifiers; 
10) Articles – Determiners. 
11) Clauses; (Noun Clauses – Adjective clauses; adverbial clauses); 
12)Voice; 
13) Direct and Indirect Speech;
14) Infinitives; gerunds; participles; 
15) Phrasal verbs; Idioms; prepositional phrases ; (Noun phrases; verb phrases; adverbial phrases); 16) Forming Questions and Question Tags.;
17) Correction of Sentences.; 
18) Figures of Speech;
19)Antonyms; 
20) Synonyms; 
21) Homophones; 
22) Homonyms ; 
23) Affixation;
24) Spelling; 

25) Vocabulary in context; 
26) Proverbs; 
27) One word substitutes;
28) Composition: Paragraph, essay, expansion, précis, Letter writing, message, notice, article and report writing.
III. Aspects of pronunciation:
1. Vowel and consonant Sounds and phonemes
2. Stress: word and sentence stress.
3. Intonation: Four basic patterns of intonation.

IV. Punctuation.


Part-B
Literature:) Comprehension of
1) Literary prose passage and
2) A poem
II) Study of Literary forms:
1) Poetry: Sonnet, ode, elegy, Ballad, Lyric, Dramatic Monologue
2) Prose:
a) Drama (Structure, Characters, dialogues, Soliloquy, tragedy, comedy, Tragi-comedy)
b) Fiction: - (point of view, setting atmosphere; style; Technique of Narration.)
c) Essay Detailed study of English Literature from 1798 to 1900 with special reference to Wordsworth, S.T. Coleridge, John Keats, Shelly, Lord Byron, Charles Lamb, Charles Dickens, William Hazlitt, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Robert Browning, Mathew Arnold, George Eliot,
Thomas Carlyle and John Ruskin.


III. Poetry
Name of the Poet Title
Sarojini Naidu In The Bazaars of Hyderabad
Rw Emerson A Nation’s Strength
RL.Stevenson My Shadow
Alfred Tennyson Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead
Elizabeth Barrett Browning The Cry of Children
Rabindranath Tagore My Mother; Freedom.
C A Bowels The River
Gabriel Okara Once Upon A Time
Medora Chevalier Or Will The Dreamer Awake?
Dr. SurayaNasim Abandoned
Khalil Gibran On Friendship
Shiv K.Kumar Mother’s Day
William Wordsworth Anecdote For Fathers
Edwar Lear The Duck And The Kangaroo
Harry Behn Trees
Lily Usher Grabbing Everything On The Land
HarindranathChatopadhyaya The Earthen Goblet
Don Marquis A Spider And A Fly

Prose
Name of the Essayist/ Writer/Novelist Title
APJ Kalam Wings Of Fire
RK.Narayan Swami And Friends
Charles Dickens Oliver Twist
Jonathan Swift Gulliver Travels
Sudha Murthy 1.Gender Bias
2. How I Taught My Grandmother
ToRead And Other Stories
Isaac Asimov Robots And People
O.Henry After Twenty Years
R.K. Laxman The Gold Frame
E.V.Lucas The Face On The Wall
Oscar Wilde The Nightingale And The Rose
Satyajit Ray BepinChoudhury’s Lapse of Memory
A.G. Gardiner On Umbrella Morals
Stephen Leacock How To Live To Be 200
George Orwell Animal Farm

Drama / Play
Name of the Writer Title
J.B. Priestley Mother’s Day


William Stanley Houghton The Dear Departed
Cedric Mount The Never Never Nest
Fritz Karinthy The Refund
G.B.Shaw Saint Joan
Shakespeare Julius Caesar

The Candidates are expected to have a thorough knowledge of the above-mentioned poets, essayists, novelists and dramatists and their respective works mentioned at the level that is expected of a student of literature.

 TS Gurukul PGT English Syllabus



Click here For Gurukul PGT English Material 


Click here For Gurukul PGT English Material 

18 July 2015

TS DEECET D.Ed. Exam Syllabus and Exam Pattern

Government of Telangana

Department of School Education

TS DEECET D.Ed.Exam Syllabus and Exam Pattern


Diploma in Elementary Education (D.El.Ed.) Entrance Syllabus in Telangana state

Scheme of Entrance Test:

Part I
          (a) General Knowledge         5 Questions      5 Marks
          (b) Teaching Aptitude Test    5 Questions      5 Marks
Part II
          (a) General English               10 Questions     10 Marks
          (b) Telugu/Urdu/Tamil          20 Questions     20 Marks
Part III
           (a) Mathematics                  20 Questions     20 Marks
           (b) Physical Sciences          10 Questions     10 Marks
           (c) Biological Sciences        10 Questions     10 Marks
           (d) Social Studies                20 Questions     20 Marks
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
                                  Total           100 Questions  100 Marks
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

The subject and syllabi of the test shall be of the standard of Classes VIII to X of Telangana State Syllabus for Part-II & Part III of the test.

13 December 2014

Graduate Record Examination (GRE) Syllabus

Graduate Record Examination (GRE) Syllabus


The GRE is the qualifiying examination conducted at the national level to get admission in the different graduate colleges of United States and other foreign countries. Many students appear for these exams every year to take admission in various foreign universities. 

GRE Examination Pattern/Scheme

The Graduate Record Examination is an online test held as per the difficulty level of questions. The GRE exam is conducted in the following subjects:
Mathematics
Physics
Psychology
Chemistry
Biology
Biochemistry
Cell and Molecular Biology and
English Literature

Subject Wise Questions

Physics:                     100
Chemistry                  130
Biology                      194
Molecular Biology      170





30 September 2014

B.Pharm. I Year English syllabus from 2013-14

B.Pharm. I Year English syllabus from 2013-14
JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY HYDERABAD
I Year B.Pharm.                                                                                           L T/P/D C  2 -/-/- 4
                                                                         ENGLISH
1. INTRODUCTION:
In view of the growing importance of English as a tool for global communication and the consequent emphasis on training students to acquire communicative competence, the syllabus has been designed to develop linguistic and communicative competencies of Engineering students. The prescribed books and the exercises are meant to serve broadly as students’ handbooks.
In the English classes, the focus should be on the skills of reading, writing, listening and speaking and for this the teachers should use the text prescribed for detailed study. For example, the students should be encouraged to read the texts/selected paragraphs silently. The teachers can ask comprehension questions to stimulate discussion and based on the discussions students can be made to write short paragraphs/essays etc.
The text for non-detailed study is for extensive reading/reading for pleasure. Hence, it is suggested that they read it on their own the topics selected for discussion in the class. The time should be utilized for working out the exercises given after each section , as also for supplementing the exercises with authentic materials of a similar kind for example, from newspaper articles, advertisements, promotional material etc.. However, the stress in this syllabus is on skill development, fostering ideas and practice of language skills.

2. OBJECTIVES:
a. To improve the language proficiency of the students in English with emphasis on LSRW skills.
b. To equip the students to study academic subjects more effectively using the theoretical and practical
components of the English syllabus.
c. To develop the study skills and communication skills in formal and informal situations.

SYLLABUS:
Listening Skills:
Objectives
1. To enable students to develop their listening skill so that they may appreciate its role in the LSRW skills
approach to language and improve their pronunciation
2. To equip students with necessary training in listening so that they can comprehend the speech of people of
different backgrounds and regions Students should be given practice in listening to the sounds of the language to be able to recognise them, to distinguish between them to mark stress and recognise and use the right intonation in sentences.
• Listening for general content
• Listening to fill up information
• Intensive listening
• Listening for specific information
Speaking Skills:
Objectives
1. To make students aware of the role of speaking in English and its contribution to their success.
2. To enable students to express themselves fluently and appropriately in social and professional contexts.
• Oral practice
• Describing objects/situations/people
• Role play – Individual/Group activities (Using exercises from all the nine units of the prescribed text: Learning
English : A Communicative Approach.)
• Just A Minute(JAM) Sessions.
Reading Skills:
Objectives
1. To develop an awareness in the students about the significance of silent reading and comprehension.
2. To develop the ability of students to guess the meanings of words from context and grasp the overall
message of the text, draw inferences etc.
• Skimming the text
• Understanding the gist of an argument
• Identifying the topic sentence
• Inferring lexical and contextual meaning
• Understanding discourse features
Scanning
• Recognizing coherence/sequencing of sentences

NOTE : The students will be trained in reading skills using the prescribed text for detailed study.
They will be examined in reading and answering questions using ‘unseen’ passages which may be taken from
authentic texts, such as magazines/newspaper articles.
Writing Skills :
Objectives
1. To develop an awareness in the students about writing as an exact and formal skill
2. To equip them with the components of different forms of writing, beginning with the lower order ones.
• Writing sentences
• Use of appropriate vocabulary
• Paragraph writing
• Coherence and cohesiveness
• Narration / description
• Note Making
• Formal and informal letter writing
• Describing graphs using expressions of comparison

TEXTBOOKS PRESCRIBED:

In order to improve the proficiency of the student in the acquisition of the four skills mentioned above, the
following texts and course content, divided into Eight Units, are prescribed:

For Detailed study

1 First Text book entitled ‘Skills Annex’ -Functional English to Success' Published by Orient Black Swan, Hyderabad

For Non-detailed study

1. Second text book “Epitome of Wisdom”, Published by MaruthiPublications, Hyderabad.

The course content and study material is divided into Five Units.

Unit –I:
1. Chapter entitled ‘Wit and Humour’ from ‘Skills Annex’ -Functional English to Success Published by Orient Black Swan, Hyderabad
2. Chapter entitled ‘Mokshagundam Visvesvaraya’ from “Epitome of Wisdom”, Published by Maruthi
Publications, Hyderabad. and
L-Listening For Sounds, Stress and Intonation
S-Greeting and Taking Leave, Introducing Oneself and Others (Formal and Informal Situations)
R- Reading for Subject/ Theme
W- Writing Paragraphs
G-Types of Nouns and Pronouns
V- Homonyms, homophones synonyms, antonyms

Unit –II
1. Chapter entitled “Cyber Age” from “Skills Annex -Functional English for Success” Published by Orient Black Swan, Hyderabad.
2 Chapter entitled ‘Three days To See’ from “Epitome of Wisdom”, Published by Maruthi Publications, Hyderabad. and
L – Listening for themes and facts
S – Apologizing, interrupting, requesting and making polite conversation
R- for theme and gist
W- Describing people, places, objects, events
G- Verb forms
V- noun, verb, adjective and adverb

Unit –III
1. Chapter entitled ‘Risk Management’ from “Skills Annex -Functional English for Success” Published by
Orient Black Swan, Hyderabad
2. Chapter entitled ‘Leela's Friend’ by R.K. Narayan from “Epitome of Wisdom”, Published by Maruthi
Publications, Hyderabad and
L – for main points and sub-points for note taking
S – giving instructions and directions; Speaking of hypothetical situations
R – reading for details
W – note-making, information transfer, punctuation
G – present tense
V – synonyms and antonyms

Unit –IV
1. Chapter entitled ‘Human Values and Professional Ethics’ from “Skills Annex -Functional English for
Success” Published by Orient Black Swan, Hyderabad
2. Chapter entitled ‘The Last Leaf’ from “Epitome of Wisdom”, Published by Maruthi Publications, Hyderabad and
L -Listening for specific details and information
S- narrating, expressing opinions and telephone interactions
R -Reading for specific details and information
W- Writing formal letters and CVs
G- Past and future tenses
V- Vocabulary - idioms and Phrasal verbs

Unit –V
1. Chapter entitled ‘sports-and-health’ from “Skills Annex -Functional English for Success” Published by
Orient Black Swan, Hyderabad
2. Chapter entitled ‘The Convocation speech’ by N.R. Narayanmurthy’ from “Epitome of Wisdom”, Published by Maruthi Publications, Hyderabad and
L- Critical Listening and Listening for speaker’s tone/ attitude
S- Group discussion and Making presentations
R- Critical reading, reading for reference
W-Project proposals; Technical reports, Project Reports and Research Papers
G- Adjectives, prepositions and concord
V- Collocations and Technical vocabulary
Using words appropriately

* Exercises from the texts not prescribed shall also be used for classroom tasks.

REFERENCES :
1. Contemporary English Grammar Structures and Composition by David Green, MacMillan Publishers, New Delhi. 2010.
2. Innovate with English: A Course in English for Engineering Students, edited by T Samson, Foundation Books.
3. English Grammar Practice, Raj N Bakshi, Orient Longman.
4. Technical Communication by Daniel Riordan. 2011. Cengage Publications. New Delhi.
5. Effective English, edited by E Suresh Kumar, A RamaKrishna Rao, P Sreehari, Published by Pearson
6. Handbook of English Grammar& Usage, Mark Lester and Larry Beason, Tata Mc Graw –Hill.
7. Spoken English, R.K. Bansal & JB Harrison, Orient Longman.
8. Technical Communication, Meenakshi Raman, Oxford University Press
9. Objective English Edgar Thorpe & Showick Thorpe, Pearson Education
10. Grammar Games, Renuvolcuri Mario, Cambridge University Press.
11. Murphy’s English Grammar with CD, Murphy, Cambridge University Press.
12. Everyday Dialogues in English, Robert J. Dixson, Prentice Hall India Pvt Ltd.,
13. ABC of Common Errors Nigel D Turton, Mac Millan Publishers.
14. Basic Vocabulary Edgar Thorpe & Showick Thorpe, Pearson Education
15. Effective Technical Communication, M Ashraf Rizvi, Tata Mc Graw –Hill.
16. An Interactive Grammar of Modern English, Shivendra K. Verma and Hemlatha Nagarajan , Frank Bros & CO
17. A Communicative Grammar of English, Geoffrey Leech, Jan Svartvik, Pearson Education
18. Enrich your English, Thakur K B P Sinha, Vijay Nicole Imprints Pvt Ltd.,
19. A Grammar Book for You And I, C. Edward Good, MacMillan Publishers

For B.Tech I year English Syllabus
















B.Pharm. I Year English syllabus from 2013-14

14 April 2014

TOEFL Exam Syllabus






TOEFL iBT® Test Content

The TOEFL iBT® test is given in English and administered via the Internet. There are four sections (listening, reading, speaking and writing) which take a total of about four and a half hours to complete.

Combining All Four Skills: Listening, Reading, Speaking and Writing

During the test, you are asked to perform tasks that combine more than one skill, such as:
  • Read, listen and then speak in response to a question
  • Listen and then speak in response to a question
  • Read, listen and then write in response to a question

TOEFL iBT Test Sections

SectionTime LimitQuestionsTasks
Reading*60–80 minutes36–56 questionsRead 3 or 4 passages from academic texts and answer questions.
Listening60–90 minutes34–51 questionsListen to lectures, classroom discussions and conversations, then answer questions.
Break10 minutes
Speaking20 minutes6 tasksExpress an opinion on a familiar topic; speak based on reading and listening tasks.
Writing50 minutes2 tasksWrite essay responses based on reading and listening tasks; support an opinion in writing.
The test you take may include extra questions in the Reading or Listening section that do not count toward your score. These are either questions that enable ETS to make test scores comparable across administrations or new questions that help ETS determine how such questions function under actual testing conditions.
Please read the timing instructions for the Reading Section carefully. The instructions will indicate how many passages you will receive and the amount of time you have to respond to questions for those passages. Be sure to pace yourself so that you have time to answer all the questions.
A standard English language (QWERTY) computer keyboard is used for the test. We recommend that you practice typing on a QWERTY keyboard before taking the test.

Native-speaker English Accents

Beginning in March 2013, the Listening and Speaking sections of the TOEFL iBT test include other native-speaker English accents in addition to accents from North America. You may hear accents from the United Kingdom, New Zealand or Australia.
ETS is adding these accents to better reflect the variety of native English accents you may encounter while studying abroad.
Below are examples similar to what you might hear in the Speaking and Listening sections.

Listening Section

Listen to a talk about the greenhouse effect (MP3). The lecturer is from Great Britain.

Speaking Section

In the Speaking section, only items 1 and 2 of the six tasks may have accented speech. Below are two examples similar to what you might hear. The speakers are from Great Britain. In each instance, the example is 15 seconds long, and you would have 45 seconds to respond.
Audio FileTranscript
Item 1 (MP3)If friends from another country were going to spend time in your country, what city or place would you suggest they visit? Using details and examples, explain why.
Item 2 (MP3)Some people enjoy taking risks and trying new things. Others are not adventurous; they are cautious and prefer to avoid danger. Which behavior do you think is better? Explain why.

TOEFL® Testing Location

The TOEFL® test is offered in two formats: the TOEFL iBT® test, administered via the Internet, or the TOEFL® PBT test, administered in a paper-based format. The format you take depends on the location of your test center.
  • The TOEFL iBT test is offered more than 50 times a year at more than 4,500 authorized test centers throughout the world. Most test takers take the test via the Internet.
  • The TOEFL PBT test is being phased out. It is currently offered only in areas where testing via the Internet is not available

The TOEFL iBT is offered in this location.

The list below shows available test locations in twin cities and dates as of April 09, 2014, but availability may change when you register. Fees are shown in US$ and are subject to change without notice. Please see the online registration system for the most up-to-date information and for test times.
HyderabadTOEFL iBT$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
Sat., Apr 12, 2014
Sat., Apr 19, 2014
Sun., Apr 27, 2014
Sun., May 11, 2014
Sat., May 17, 2014
Sat., May 24, 2014
Sun., May 25, 2014
Sun., Jun 15, 2014
Sat., Jun 21, 2014
Sat., Jun 28, 2014
Sun., Jun 29, 2014
Sun., Jul 06, 2014
Sat., Jul 12, 2014
SecunderabadTOEFL iBT$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
$165
Sat., Apr 12, 2014
Sat., Apr 19, 2014
Sun., Apr 27, 2014
Sun., May 11, 2014
Sat., May 17, 2014
Sat., May 24, 2014
Sun., May 25, 2014
Sun., Jun 15, 2014
Sat., Jun 21, 2014
Sat., Jun 28, 2014
Sun., Jun 29, 2014
Sun., Jul 06, 2014
Sat., Jul 12, 2014

How to prepare for Test 

These products help reinforce the skills your students need to succeed on the TOEFL® test.
  • TOEFL Online Prep Course — This test-prep course helps students do their best on the TOEFL test by creating a personalized learning path with more than 80 hours of content. The course includes diagnostic tests, robust exercises, automated scoring, structured self-assessments and a grade book. Management tools allow institutions to create and manage instructor-led classes. For more information, email toeflprepcourse@ets.org.
  • Lexile® Measures — ETS and MetaMetrics® offer an easy-to-use, free service that matches TOEFL Reading section scores with Lexile measures. A Lexile measure puts reading ability and the text difficulty of reading materials on the same scale to help students find reading materials at the appropriate reading level. The Lexile site contains a searchable database to help students find books that match their reading level and interests.
  • TOEFL® Practice Online — The only official practice test that gives students the experience of taking the real TOEFL iBT® test administered via the Internet. Students get same-day scores and performance feedback and can practice anytime — in or out of the classroom, 24/7.
  • Official TOEFL iBT® Tests with Audio — This TOEFL iBT® prep book has five real past TOEFL iBT tests and all of the audio passages on disc. It also includes the TOEFL® Test Prep Planner with a sample eight-week plan to help students prepare for the test.
  • The Official Guide to the TOEFL® Test, Fourth Edition — Newly updated, this bestselling guide has three full-length tests plus hundreds of valuable tips students can use in your language lab or at home. Available in eBook and paper book format.
  • TOEFL iBT® Quick Prep — A free practice tool that has real TOEFL iBT test questions from past tests with downloadable audio files.

Tips

Teachers and students can find a wide variety of resources to help prepare for the TOEFL test in our Download Library. The TOEFL Test Prep Planner (PDF) is an eight-week guide to the TOEFL test created to help students as they prepare for test day. Online you can get access to the latest information about the TOEFL test, test content, registration, scoring information and related topics.
Be sure to visit the TOEFL® TV Channel on YouTube® to view instructional videos posted by English language learning teachers.

For more details click here 

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