| Unit convenor and teaching staff |
Unit convenor and teaching staff
Unit Convenor
Sue Spinks
Contact via sue.spinks@mq.edu.au
C5A 517
Friday 11am-1pm
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| Credit points |
Credit points
3
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| Prerequisites |
Prerequisites
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| Corequisites |
Corequisites
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| Co-badged status |
Co-badged status
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| Unit description |
Unit description
The English language is used in many different ways: to inform, to question, to report, to regulate, to express emotions, to advertise products, to create images, to construct works of literature. Drawing on a view of language as a 'social semiotic', this unit moves from some basic and traditional concepts in English grammar to looking at the grammatical choices users of English make in a variety of contexts, with lectures covering both theory and practice. The theoretical lectures provide an introduction to some basic concepts of, and tools for, a functional approach to grammar and its application to context. The practical lectures, conducted as interactive workshops, invite students to explore the relationship between grammar and meaning in texts – both spoken and written – drawn from many different social contexts.
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Information about important academic dates including deadlines for withdrawing from units are available at https://www.mq.edu.au/study/calendar-of-dates
On successful completion of this unit, you will be able to:
| Name | Weighting | Due | Groupwork/Individual | Short Extension | AI assisted? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exam | 40% | University examination period | No | ||
| Short essay | 10% | 10 am Wednesday March 19 | No | ||
| Grammar excercise 1 | 10% | 10 am Wednesday April 30 | No | ||
| Grammar exercise 2 | 10% | 10 am Wednesday May 21 | No | ||
| Major essay | 30% | 10am Wednesday May 28 | No |
Due: University examination period
Weighting: 40%
Groupwork/Individual:
Short extension 3: No
AI assisted?:
This is a compulsory exam held in the formal Univesrity examination period.
Due: 10 am Wednesday March 19
Weighting: 10%
Groupwork/Individual:
Short extension 3: No
AI assisted?:
In this short essay students analyse the context of a text (500 words)
Due: 10 am Wednesday April 30
Weighting: 10%
Groupwork/Individual:
Short extension 3: No
AI assisted?:
This grammar exercise is based on Lectures 4-10.
Due: 10 am Wednesday May 21
Weighting: 10%
Groupwork/Individual:
Short extension 3: No
AI assisted?:
This grammar exercise is based on Lectures 11-14
Due: 10am Wednesday May 28
Weighting: 30%
Groupwork/Individual:
Short extension 3: No
AI assisted?:
This 1200-1500 word essay will require you to compare two texts using both experiential and interpersoanl meanings as your analytical tools.
Unit delivery
We deliver this unit through lectures, tutorials and on-campus days (for external students). We use ilearn for uploading notes and other materials and for the recording of the lectures.For other more detailed information once you have enrolled in the unit, please see the ilearn site.
This unit runs over the full 13 weeks of Session 1, except that tutorials do not begin until week 2 of classes. In Session 3 it runs in compressed format over 5 weeks.
Changes to the unit for 2014.
1. There has been a small chnage in the assessment schedule, with the removal of the 5% for participation in Department of Linguistics research projects. The short essay set as diagnostic task in Week 3 is now worth 10%, rather than 5% as in past years.
2. There has been some rescheduling of lectures but no change in lecture topics.
LECTURES:
TUTORIALS: Weekly classes for internal students; weekly homework for external students.
Tutorials are run weekly, starting in week two of semester.
For external students there are two on-campus sessions: Saturday May 3 and Saturday June 7.
Lecture Schedule |
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Week 1. 1. Introduction 2. Traditional grammar |
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Week 2. 3. Functional grammar 4. Constituency and rank |
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Week 3. 5. Functional constituents of a clause 6. Groups and their structure |
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Week 4. 7. Clauses as processes 8. “Being” processes |
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Week 5. 9. Circumstances 10. Workshop: experiential meanings |
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Week 6. 11. Interpersonal meanings: the Finite 12. Interpersonal meanings: interaction |
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Week 7. 13. Interpersonal meanings: opinion 14.Workshop: interpersonal meanings |
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Week 8. 15. Essay assignment workshop 16 Clause complexes |
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Week 9. 17. Textual meanings: Theme and Rheme 18 Workshop: textual meanings |
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Week 10. 19. Context of situation 1 20. Context of situation 2 |
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Week 11. 21. An aspect of Tenor: Appraisal 22. An aspect of Mode: Cohesion |
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Week 12. 23 Functional grammar & multi-modality 1 24. Functional grammar & multi-modality 2 |
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Week 13. 25. Exam preparation: revision 26. Exam preparation: (continued) |
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Academic Honesty Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/academic_honesty/policy.html
Assessment Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/assessment/policy.html
Grading Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/grading/policy.html
Grade Appeal Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/gradeappeal/policy.html
Grievance Management Policy http://mq.edu.au/policy/docs/grievance_management/policy.html
Disruption to Studies Policy http://www.mq.edu.au/policy/docs/disruption_studies/policy.html The Disruption to Studies Policy is effective from March 3 2014 and replaces the Special Consideration Policy.
In addition, a number of other policies can be found in the Learning and Teaching Category of Policy Central.
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Learning Skills (mq.edu.au/learningskills) provides academic writing resources and study strategies to improve your marks and take control of your study.
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This graduate capability is supported by:
| Date | Description |
|---|---|
| 23/02/2014 | The lecture days and times were wrong and have now been corrected |