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Do EAP Teachers Require Knowledge
of Their Students' Specialist Academic Subjects?
Author: Timothy Bell
Published December 17 1996
To what extent do EAP trainers require a specialized
knowledge of the academic subjects their students
wish to pursue at tertiary level? This paper describes
the English Language Training component of the Inter-University
Centers project at Bogor Agricultural University
and Bandung Institute of Technology in Indonesia
in 1995 and 1996. This development project, entitled
'Biodiversity for Biotechnology', was supported
by the British Council and Overseas Development
Administration. The program consisted of content-based
English Language and study skills training in the
field of Biotechnology. Analysis of a number of
critical incidents that occurred during the training
leads to a discussion of the importanceof subject-content
knowledge in EAP.
Introduction The aim of this paper is
to explore the issue of how much, if any, subject
content knowledge is required for EAP (English for
Academic Purposes) teachers to successfully prepare
their learners for academic study at tertiary level.It
will begin by considering the research evidence for
the effectiveness of subject content-based 1
courses, and then proceed to describe two EAP programs
given at Universities in Indonesia. Selected aspects
of this training will be analyzed, leading to suggested
answers to the following two key questions:
- What level of subject content knowledge is necessary
to train students preparing to enter undergraduate
(i.e. first degree programs) in Biological Sciences?
- What level of subject content knowledge is necessary
to train students preparing to enter postgraduate
(i.e. higher degree programs) in Biological Sciences?
Let us first consider the rationale for asking these
questions. In traditional, skill-based 2
EAP courses, it has generally been thought that the
trainer does not require specialized academic knowledge
of the learners' major subject of study. This is because
such training focused on developing language and study
skills and not on the academic subject itself. The
learners, it is often argued, can deal with complexities
of terminology and ambiguities of subject content
that may be beyond the trainer's knowledge of the
specialist subject. EAP trainers were typically told
to exploit queries about subject content, so as to
provide opportunities for the students to develop
their fluency, produce extended spoken discourse,
and effectively share their knowledge of the subject,
even if this knowledge goes beyond the trainer's command
of the subject. This strategy however, involves a
high degree of risk for the trainers, particularly
in terms of their credibility with the learners.
The emergence of subject content-based (as opposed
to skill-based) EAP courses in the 1980s (c.f. Brinton,
Snow & Wesche 1989) raises the issue of which
types of skills and knowledge are necessary for EAP
trainers to deliver effective and professional courses
for ESL/EFL students intending to follow college degree
programs in English speaking countries. Krashen (1982:172,
1985:70) identified what he calls a 'transition problem',
which refers to a perceived gap in the English Language
and study skills abilities of learners who have passed
through traditional language classes, and those required
for study purposes within universities. He argues
that subject content-based courses can impart both
subject knowledge and language competence at the same
time, and points to evidence from the Canadian immersion
programs at the University of Ottawa (Edwards et al,
1984; Wesche 1984).
More recently, the work of Kasper (1994a, 1994b,
1995a, 1995b, 1995c, 1995/96, 1996, 1997) has greatly
strengthened the evidence for the effectiveness of
content-based courses. She has reported both improved
language and content performance among students exposed
to content-based EAP programs, higher scores on measures
of reading proficiency, and higher pass rates on ESL
courses. She also provides quantitative evidence that
such students establish and retain a performance advantage
over students exposed to non-content based EAP training.
Her work also supports the views of Benesch 1988,
Guyer & Peterson 1988, and Snow & Brinton
1988, that content-based programs facilitate ESL students'
transition to academic mainstream college courses,
increasing the likelihood that such students will
gain a college degree.
The trend towards content-based EAP training presents
a clear challenge to EAP instructors. How much longer
will EAP training be done by instructors who may lack
specific background knowledge of their learners' specialist
academic disciplines? How much longer will the traditional
emphasis on training in language and study skills
be regarded as adequate in the face of the growing
body of persuasive evidence for the effectiveness
of subject content-based programs? It may therefore
be necessary for EAP trainers to possess a certain
level of background knowledge in their students' academic
subjects in order to meet this challenge. We shall
now examine the delivery of two EAP programs at Indonesian
universities to provide evidence for this view.
Biodiversity for Biotechnology: English Language
and Study Skills Training
Two distinct EAP programs were provided to students
at the Inter-University Centers in Indonesia. The
first was held at Bogor Agricultural University in
1995 and the second at Bandung Institute of Technology
in 1996. Allstudents were postgraduates at Masters
and Doctoral level, courses being divided into classes
of twenty participants. A wide range of research interests
were represented, covering the following major fields
of Biology and Biotechnology:
- Genetic engineering, including gene sequencing
- Microbial facilitation of polymer biosynthesis
- Crop research, including yields and crop storage
- Lipid biosynthesis and related metabolic pathways
- Histology and pathology of the liver
- Microbial action in fermentation
- Enzyme isolation and purification
- Genetic manipulation of bacteria
- Physiology of aquatic mammals
- Plant growth factors
The courses at each of the participating universities
involved 160 hours of training (20 hours per week
over a two-month period. The participants on each
course included Faculty members from the departments
of Biotechnology at each institution, and a number
of laboratory assistants and technicians also participated.
Most of the students were at intermediate level, with
a number at pre-intermediate and post-intermediate
levels. All were motivated by the desire to learn
English for professional and academic purposes.The
programs attempted to meet students' expressed needs
and interests, which were determined through pre-course
needs analysis questionnaires.Two types of program
were offered, one directed at the Faculty lecturers
and researchers and the other at the laboratory assistants
and technicians.
Program for Faculty Lecturers and Researchers
The teaching objectives for the lecturers and researchers
included:
- Grammatical and lexical input for biological sciences
in specific fields of interest
- Seminar presentation skills to develop students'
ability to describe their research
- Listening to lectures and seminars and taking
effective notes
- Reading sections of textbooks and published research
papers (e.g. abstracts)
- Discussion and interpretation of visual material
(graphs, charts, diagrams etc.)
- Writing summaries of texts presented aurally or
in written form
- Oral fluency for discussion of themes related
to developments in biotechnology
- Self-study component based on individual research
completed in the library
The modes of input on the courses varied from lectures,
through group work to individual student presentations
and self-study assignments based on material selected
from Wallace (1980) and Waters & Waters (1995).Language
input work utilized concepts common to biological
description, such as process, sequence, cause and
effect, along with quantity, size, shape and proportion,
as detailed in Adamson & Bates (1977). Major blocks
of time and attention were devoted to developing participants'
reading skills. This work focused on identifying key
topics, themes and issues, relating texts to visuals
and vice versa, identifying specific content in a
text in relation to a pre-set reading purpose, evaluating
and criticizing published research, and critical discussion
of papers read. The emphasis was firmly on accurate
description and interpretation of text and accompanying
visual material. Listening skills training focused
primarily on listening to, and taking notes on lectures,
using a variety of published sources (e.g. Mountford
1977; Pearson 1978; Adkins & Mckean 1983; Yates
1989). Written work concentrated on the writing of
scientific abstracts, preparing short summaries of
research projects, and editing research papers intended
for publication.
Course participants chose research presentation topics
early in the course and were given extensive input
and practice in the skills required to present their
research work orally. Input included how to structure
a talk, give an introduction, present methodology,
describe results, interpret results and conclude.
In the Bogor program in 1995, students gave individual
presentations, but because this proved to be very
time consuming it was decided to place students in
groups for presentation work in the programs held
in Bandung. Seminar skills training formed a major
component of the courses; students formed groups and
presented published research to the whole class. This
was followed by discussion and evaluation of the methodology
and findings of major researchers working in the students'
specific fields of interest. This proved a highly
popular component of the training because it engaged
students' critical faculties and permitted them to
extend their grasp, both of their own fields of interest,
and of work going on in related areas. This component
was organized around individual and group assignments
in the library, followed by open discussion in class.
Program for Laboratory Assistants and Technicians
The courses for laboratory assistants and technicians
differed from the above described program because
of their different professional and academic needs
and their generally lower language proficiency level.
These programs had the following objectives:
- Basic oral fluency for speaking with visitors
to the laboratories
- Study skills; reading, writing and listening
- Specific lexis for identifying and describing
laboratory equipment
- Reading skills for comprehension of laboratory
manuals and procedure
These classes received language and skills input
sessions in the mornings, followed by laboratory practicals
3 in the afternoons. The innovative laboratory
sessions provided students with the opportunity to
practice language presented in the input sessions.
The 'practicals' involved the learners in realistic
everyday activities such as they might perform as
a normal part of their jobs as technicians and assistants
in the biochemistry, microbiology and genetic engineering
laboratories. In these laboratory sessions, course
participants were trained to:
- give guided tours of the laboratories for visiting
academics
- identify, describe and state the function of pieces
of apparatus
- describe specific experiments, their purpose and
outcomes
- read, write and interpret laboratory instructions
(e.g. for calibrating instruments such as spectrophotometers
and ph meters)
The course in English for the Medical Laboratory
(Swales & Fanning 1980), proved an invaluable
source of lexical and grammatical input for both oral
and written description of laboratory equipment and
procedure. Course participants appreciated the integration
of language and skills work into their professional
laboratory practice.
Analysis of Critical Incidents
Let us now return to the central questions established
in the introduction to this paper. During the two
training programs, students were involved in English
Language and study skills work at a range of levels
of difficulty. They were also fully engaged in subject
content work, both on their chosen fields of interest,
and on relevant academic themes selected by the trainer.
The programs therefore combined both skill-based and
subject content-based paradigms.
1. Dealing With Language Input
The traditional approach to language content and
subject content has been to treat them as separate
domains, and to advise EAP teachers not to attempt
to answer or handle questions arising from clarification
of facts related to the learners' academic discipline.
The assumption that language input and subject content
are separable is, of course, erroneous. While it is
true that much of the input is general facilitative
language (e.g. basic process verbs such as 'take',
'carry', 'pass', 'transport', 'flow'), even in this
genre there are terms which are specifically biological
in nature (e.g. 'diffuse', 'digest', 'dilate', 're-combine',
'mutate'). Prepositions may be used to describe biological
structures (e.g. 'above', 'below', 'between', 'beside',
'along', etc.), but equally there are similar terms
that are specifically biological (e.g. 'anterior to',
'posterior to','inferior to', 'superior to', 'medial
to', etc.). The latter group have specific meanings
when used to describe the structure of plants and
animals. If we accept that general facilitative language
(e.g. sequencers, quantifiers, logical connectives
etc.) cannot be separated from the more specifically
biological terminology (e.g. adjectives for modes
of nutrition; 'holozoic', 'holophytic', 'saprophytic'),
then it seems that we would also have to accept that
some degree of knowledge of the specific terminology
is required, if the EAP trainer is going to be able
to teach anything valuable to the learners. The above
examples all arose during input sessions using Adamson
& Bates (op cit.).
Following from the above argument is the question
of whether an EAP trainer with a non-relevant academic
background can adequately prepare to deal with language
points such as those cited above. Moreover, would
a trainer with, for example, a degree in music have
the confidence to handle such terms and therefore
win and hold the respect of the learners? If the trainer
is working with undergraduates, it should be possible
to anticipate such terminology and prepare adequately
using standard biological textbooks. However, even
at this level it represents a substantial investment
in additional preparation time, and would require
an individual with exceptional self-confidence and
a willingness to risk loss of face and embarrassment
in front of the class. Use of a standard pre-university
biology textbook, such as 'Biology: A Functional Approach'
(Roberts & King: Nelson, 1987) can significantly
reduce the trainer's burden. This text has excellent
summaries of the major fields of biological knowledge
at the beginning of each chapter, so that even trainers
without relevant background knowledge could obtain
an adequate grasp of such fields as Genetics, Evolution,
Nutrition, Histology and Reproduction.
2. Handling skills work
The provision of training in key skills such as selective
listening and note-taking requires specific background
knowledge of the subject matter, if it is to be successful.
Although most of the published comprehension courses
referred to previously do have answer keys to the
exercises, it is difficult to see how a trainer lacking
a relevant background knowledge of the subject could
deal with questions arising from a biochemistry lecture
on the 'Krebs Cycle', or explain to students how to
take notes on the complexities of the endocrine system
in mammals, without a grounding in the subject content
required. In order to succeed in training scientists
to take effective notes, it is necessary for the trainer
to advise the student on key words and concepts and
in particular to guide the student in identifying
key nouns, verbs and adjectives, the content words
that carry the central message in scientific discourse.
Separating key concepts from redundant language in
scientific discourse requires a knowledge of which
terms are key and which are not, and this comes from
an in-depth study of the subject matter. Without this
background knowledge the trainer may be unable to
interact effectively with the learners because of
unfamiliarity with the discourse that is unfolding
in class. This would lead to a serious loss of face
for the trainer and to a loss of respect from the
course participants. How would a trainer lacking relevant
background check a reading or listening comprehension
task, or prepare learners to write laboratory reports,
or research papers they might wish to publish? Even
for training undergraduates then, some relevant knowledge
of the subject content is at least desirable. For
training postgraduate biotechnologists, as we shall
see, it is all the more important.
3. Answering questions on terminology
In one particular class dealing with ecology in Bogor,
students asked for clarification of the differences
between the terms 'symbiosis', 'mutualism', 'predation',
'parasitism' and 'commensalism'. These terms describe
different types of relationship between organisms
and can only be distinguished by asking such questions
as:
- Do the organisms share the same habitat?
- Does one organism harm the other?
- Does one organism benefit from the other?
- Do both organisms benefit?
- Does one organism feed on the other?
It is not really sufficient just to look up these
terms in the dictionary; the trainer requires a knowledge
of the relevant clarifying questions to ask, and this
comes from a background
knowledge of the subject. Without this specific background
the trainer would be in the same position as the learners,
reaching for the dictionary. The use of the questions
above enabled the students to critically examine some
specific examples and decide precisely which term
was being illustrated.
4. Listening to lectures
In training learners to listen to lectures, again
background knowledge is invaluable. It enables the
trainer to identify likely sources of difficulty for
the students and anticipate problems in understanding
key words and concepts, frequently used formulae and
cause and effect relationships. A particular example
from the training in Bogor involved a lecture on 'Heat
Control and the Skin', from Adkins & Mckean (op
cit.). The students became confused about the precise
mechanism of thermoregulation in mammals. It proved
necessary to give a detailed explanation of how a
bacterial infection can 'short circuit' the body's
internal system of temperature control, which is normally
controlled by the hypothalamus, an organ situated
at the base of the brain. The trainer's background
knowledge of animal physiology enabled a clear picture
to emerge of the precise mechanism involved. Without
such background, the learners would have remained
confused and unable to comprehend the process involved.
Another lecture from Yates (1989) provided information
and required learners to take notes on five groups
of microorganisms. While a trainer lacking background
knowledge of microbiology might succeed in making
clear some of the differences between bacteria and
viruses, algae and protozoa would present a greater
challenge, and the fifth group, actinomycetes, would
probably confuse both the trainer and the learners.
At postgraduate level then, background knowledge of
the learners' specialist field would appear to be
essential to effective training. There is a risk that
without such knowledge, the trainer may be rendered
little more than a bystander in the classroom, unable
to deal with questions arising or to comprehend the
discourse that is unfolding in class.
5. Research Presentations and Seminar Skills Training
The final incident described here concerns the research
presentations and seminar training. In order for the
trainer to comment meaningfully on the extent to which
the students had effectively interpreted the results
and findings of their own and others' research studies,
a knowledge of the subject matter was required. In
Bandung, one class participated in a seminar on a
published paper entitled 'Two Australian Species of
Dinopid Spider'. Students were divided into groups;
one group presented methodology, another the results
section, and a third group presented the discussion
section. In the discussion that followed, the trainer
required a detailed understanding of ecology, of such
phenomena as habitat, range, distribution, feeding
behavior, competition, adaptation and the like. A
lack of background in ecology would have made it almost
impossible for the trainer to offer anything more
than an opportunity for the students to gain further
oral fluency practice.
Conclusion
It is worth recalling that on many pre-departure
EAP training programs, students are placed in groups
from mixed academic backgrounds, so that a biochemist
could be placed in the same class as an engineer or
an architect. In such situations it is obviously not
possible for the trainer to have an academic background
that is relevant to all the students' fields of study.
However, in cases like those described in this article,
where one academic field is common to all the students
(in this case biotechnology), the EAP trainer really
does require a background knowledge of a biological
subject. Our answer to the first question in the introduction
is that trainers without a relevant background should
be able to prepare themselves to teach undergraduate
biologists, though additional preparation time and
a willingness to take risks is required of the trainer.
For postgraduates, especially for research students,
a relevant background is all but essential for effective
training in the complex academic and language skills
required.
Notes
- Subject content-based courses use material drawn
from one or more mainstreamacademic disciplines
(e.g. biology or chemistry). They are designed to
increase language proficiency and to facilitate
academic performance (Kasper 1995a).
- Skill-based EAP courses use materials that are
not grounded in any one specific academic discipline,
but cover a range of topics (e.g. Òglobal warmingÓ
or Òhealth and fitnessÓ).
- The 'practical' sessions in the laboratories were
focused on the language required to describe and
demonstrate scientific experiments and procedures.
They involved students in carrying out scientific
experiments in the microbiology, biochemistry and
genetic engineering laboratories.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Ray Williams and Peter Bint for
their comments on earlier drafts of this article.
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Reprinted from: The Internet TESL Journal, Vol. V,
No. 10, October 1999 |